Tuesday, August 24, 2010

R.I.P. Satoshi Kon

Renowned anime director Satoshi Kon is reported to have died from cancer yesterday. I understand this to be a gigantic loss to the currently ailing (creatively, anyway, it is argued) anime industry.

While I myself have not seen most of Kon's works, the only one I've watched being the very enjoyable Tokyo Godfathers, Kon's work is beloved by many and will influence even more. He rarely dabbled in the world of realism, except for in the sole movie of his I've seen all-the-way through; thus, I would not call it his representative work. Instead, most would cite that to be Paprika, his last completed film, an incredibly surreal movie that took place in the world of dreams. Think Inception, except far stranger, and probably more true to the actual nature of the dream. It's an insane movie (I definitely don't mean that in a bad way), and perhaps a bit of an acquired taste, but it would be hard to argue that it isn't good.

Kon was also famed for Paranoia Agent, the similarly complex and stylized TV series. It aired on Adult Swim here in the U.S. 

The sudden loss will be hard for anime fans and fellow directors to recover from. He had a movie, called The Dreaming Machine, in the works, but it's unknown how far into production it was and whether it will ever reach completion now.

I guess all I can say is R.I.P. Satoshi Kon. I can't say there was or continues to be anyone more inspired than you.

6 comments:

  1. This is really nice info.Thanks for such a wonderful post.
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  2. Stela James, girl WHAT UP

    Re: Satoshi Kon
    He was a visionary. Paranoia Agent, Paprika, and Tokyo Godfathers are all worth watching (the former is one of my favorite anime series of ALL TIME), and I'm going to have to get on watching Millenium Actress and Perfect Blue. I'm an anime fan, but I find it sad how, in an industry w/ no shortage of animators, there has only been so many talents with distinct, extraordinary voices that have stepped up to deliver unique material.

    Kon was one of those talents, and with Miyazaki, Oshii, etc getting up there, it's truly upsetting to see him go so young. He was a director with so much to say and now his life has been cut short. And yet lesser directors will continued to be employed to work on the same old crap for years to come. It' really not fair.

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  3. Great. You had to bring up the possibility of Miyazaki dying. You wanna just remind me how old Bill Cosby is too, Alexa?

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  4. I'm not so concerned with the possibility of Miyazaki dying (oh wait, yes I am) as I am the probability of him retiring -- soon. I read this article recently where he was talking about retiring very soon, and he was even saying that with his retirement he's considering dissolving Studio Ghibli! I really hope that doesn't happen. That would be a tragedy.

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  5. FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU

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  6. How funny! I have a very poorly drawn FUUUUU picture that is perfect for this occasion: http://i36.tinypic.com/291onl4.jpg
    I just made this? WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT HOW DARE YOU

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