Paprika (2006)
My guess: Miss Vicky - I know she's a big fan of Kon, I'm guessing she nominated this one.
First with Perfect Blue and now this, Satoshi Kon is proving to me that along with legends like Hayao Miyazaki and Pete Docter he is one of the most creative - and overall ingenious - animators out there.
This in a lot of ways reminded me of Akira (which I gave 3/5) and Ghost in the Shell (1/5)... my problem with those movies had to do with the fact that there were unmemorable characters and a lack of an interesting plot. Paprika surprised me, since I was expecting it to turn into the high tech, complicated-plot, high brow, sci-fi action like Akira and Ghost in the Shell - which it did. But it also takes the time to set up interesting characters and relationships that are developed to perfection.
Before we get into that, let me just say that the creativity and look of this movie is absolutely beautiful. When one of the greatest and innovative animators - like Kon - is given the opportunity to realize his visions of the dreamworld and what it might be like, now THAT is a ****ing dream come true. The parade scenes, the chase scenes (through paintings inside someone's house!), the merge of reality and dream - it's stunning to look at, truly some of the best animation I've seen, better even than Perfect Blue's unique world.
Granted, Paprika has a plot stuffed to the brim. You look away for a minute and you suffer the consequences. The movie doesn't stop to explain it's crazy twists and turns, we're along for the wild ride. Doctor Chiba is the clear main character of Paprika, and her alter ego - the title name of the movie, Paprika - can infiltrate dreams and basically magically navigate her way through any possible portal in the real world. Chiba's works closely with her partner - an obese genius who invented the whole damn DC Mini in the first place - Tokita. Honestly, although it's not very prevalent at the beginning, I think Tokita and Chiba's relationship is the most important in the film. The two, both likable characters, learn to truly bond with each other through fighting the evil menace of the dreamworld.
We have one of the most fascinating villains too, the power-hungry Doctor Inui who stops at nothing to be able to walk again, and to control the world. His assistant Osanai is madly in love with Chiba, and in one of the most disturbing scenes in the movie even peels Paprika's skin off to get to Chiba on the inside.
Much of Paprika is still a mystery by the end. What happens to the DC Mini? Is it still being developed? Is Chiba still a scientist? What happened to Inui in the real world? It's all a bizarre film that sort of feels like a nightmarish dream the entire time. Kind of a cross between those two anime's I mentioned above and Waking Life? I don't know, I guess I should stop making the comparisons since this is a film of its own type, something fresh and original from a master filmmaker who died too soon.
This only makes me more excited for Millenium Actress and Tokyo Godfathers.
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