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Paprika
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Groundbreaking animator Satoshi Kon (whose credits include Tokyo Godfathers, Millennium Actress, and Perfect Blue) directed this visually spectacular adaptation of a science fiction novel by Yatsutaka Tsutsui. Atsuko is a psychiatrist who uses advanced technology to study the human mind. Atsuko has developed a machine that will allow her to enter the dreams of her patients and study their psyches from the inside. Atsuko also does double duty as Paprika, a high-tech detective who uses this new innovation to find out the truth about what the people she's trailing really think. However, Atsuko falls victim to a thief who steals the one-of-a-kind machine, and Paprika sets out to find it as a wave of psychological instability tears through the city. Paprika received its world premiere at the 2006 Venice Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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Smooth_JSmooth_J Four movies I saw this weekend
by Smooth_J in Smooth_J Blog
liked it.
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"This was a good weekend for me in terms of movies...a few movies were ones that I've been trying to see for weeks but just haven't really gotten around to. However, one was a movie that I just happened to stumble on at my friends house. All of them were pretty good, and they are as follows: The Darjeeling Limited, [More]
monkingmonking An Animator's Dream
by monking in monking Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"The plot in Paprika could be summarized rather easily, twists and all. That is not to say that the plot is thin or contrived; much of the film flows from the previous event, and defies explanation, like a dream. In some films, the musical score carries the action, smoothing over any inadequacies. In Paprika, if there were any faults, they were carried lightly on the shoulders of the animation. The quality of the animation, specifically the design, timing, acting, and draftsmanship, is so excelle " [More]
DejaVecuDejaVecu An animated masterpiece
by DejaVecu in DejaVecu Blog
loved it.
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"The suspect has been cornered at the circus. After conferring with a clown, a blinding spotlight hampers all surveillance. Suddenly, trapped in a cage, he is helpless while an angry mob, identical in appearance, looking exactly like the man in the cage, struggle to grab him and tear him apart. At the last minute his entire body is sucked through the bottom of the cage, through other times, other places, until he emerges in a hallway. He sees the suspect aga " [More]
IndieFlixIndieFlix SIFF Film Review: “Paprika” : M ...
by IndieFlix in IndieFlix Blog
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"The Neptune was packed, and between the hardcore film-goers and anime otakus, there was a great deal to be excited about. Satoshi Kon, the director of Paprika, had gained a following by his previous works including “Tokyo Godfathers” and “Perfect Blue,” and has a reputation for dazzling visuals and innovative plotlines – the first five minutes into the film, and we knew this would be no different.“Paprika&rdquo ; explodes from the get-go, delv " [More]
aicnanimeaicnanime Kon's Disquieting Vision
by aicnanime in aicnanime Blog
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"Satoshi Kon is justifiably considered one the auteurs of anime, and his study of dreams, Paprika, is sure to reenforce that reputation. The movie is an animated triumph, and anyone who appreciates the medium should make it a point to see what Kon's imagination and study of the human subconscious has produced. Kon's work in animation has never been so creative or gorgeous, but the ideas at work in the film don't necessarily have the resonance of his previous efforts. Paprika might not be a Lynchi " [More]
KATTmanduKATTmandu What's new at the UICA
by KATTmandu in GR Movies and Happenings
"The UICA just finished showing the French comedy The Valet and Charles Burnett's film Killer of Sheep. Here is what's coming up for August. PAPRIKA In the lates " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
The huge popularity of anime in Japan has failed to translate in the United States, in part because the two cultures hold very different ideas about narrative structure and content. Americans tend to want a more grounded, linear approach, whereas the Japanese have historically been comfortable with fragmentation and fantasy. That Satoshi Kon's Paprika found a devoted audience in the United States is somewhat surprising, because it's as fragmented and fantastical as anime movies get, with almost everything that happens governed by dream logic. But it's also as visually decadent as they get. Dizzyingly imagined and confidently rendered, the images just pop off the screen. The basic thrust of the plot is not hard to follow. A device is created that allows therapists (or terrorists, if it falls into the wrong hands) to view the dreams of the subjects wearing it, and even insert a dream version of themselves as a character. Paprika stops making sense when the device starts commingling the dreams of people not wearing the device, as the movie basically throws out logical rules and gives itself over to a series of albeit compelling and disturbing recurrent images. Like many anime films, it builds toward a huge climax in which the fate of the entire world is in the balance, but you aren't really sure why. Still, Paprika makes it pretty easy to divorce yourself from the need for logic, as its approach is at least consistent, and the characters it introduces are easy to either cheer or hiss. The most literal-minded viewers are likely to reject it on some level, but Paprika wasn't intended for them anyway. It was intended for viewers who appreciate abstraction and grand-scale ambition, and those viewers will be pleased as pudding. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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