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Event: Breaking Boundaries: Alternative Approaches to Japanese Film symposium

Where: ICS Cinema, University of Leeds

When: 6th November 2010

‘Breaking Boundaries’ is an inter‐institutional project organized by postgraduate students at the universities of Leeds, Sheffield and York through the Mixed Cinema Network project and beyond. Its aim is to propose alternative approaches to Japanese cinema, moving beyond East-­West binary oppositions, thus encouraging the exploration of new and exciting critical avenues.

The organisers welcome proposals from researchers at any stage of their project, and will accept proposals from those within and beyond the academic field of film studies.

Please send a 400‐word abstract and 150­‐word biography to: bbconf2010@googlemail.com. The deadline for application is September 20th 2010.

Tony Rayns will be present at the event as the keynote speaker, and the symposium is included as part of Leeds Intentional Film Festival.

The symposium will  conclude with a screening of Hiroshi Shimizu’s Children of the Beehive (1948) organised in conjunction with Zipangu Fest.

The first UK-wide festival devoted to Japanese Film...

Japanarchy in the UK

The first UK‐wide festival devoted to Japanese cinema November 23‐28 2010 http://zipangufest.com

Monday October 18th 2010

New Japanese film festival Zipangu Fest warms up for the main event with a string of exclusive lectures and rare archive screenings across the country

The first Zipangu Fest is delighted to announce more details for its programme of events this autumn. The festival will run from November 23th to 28th 2010 in London’s East End before touring the country. The full programme will be announced by Festival Director Jasper Sharp at the Barbican’s Japanese Halloween Shlockfest Double Bill of RoboGeisha and Big Tits Zombie 3D + Augmented City 3D on October 29th. Tickets are almost sold out for these screenings, so be sure to book right away!

To whet audience appetites, Mr Sharp will be presenting a lecture exploring the history of independent jishu eiga filmmaking in Japan, followed by an exclusive screening of Annyong Kimchee (1999). The film is Japanese‐Korean filmmaker Tetsuaki Matsue’s personal enquiry into the importance of ethnic and cultural roots and what it means to be Japanese. This event will first be held at the Coventry University East Asian Film Society (CUEAFS) at 2pm on Wednesday October 20th in Room G34 of the university’s Ellen Terry Building, and then at the University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at 7pm on Friday November 12th, in the Brunei Gallery lecture theatre.

Tetsuaki Matsue's Annyong Kimchee screening at CUEAFS and SOAS

Zipangu Fest is also proud to announce a special presentation at the 24th Leeds International Film Festival of Hiroshi Shimizu’s rarely‐seen early classic of independent Japanese cinema, Children of the Beehive (1948). The film relates the journey of a group of war orphans (in real life all orphans taken in and raised by the director) as they are taken under the wing of a nameless soldier and set out across a shattered, post‐ war landscape in search of a more certain future. The film will be showing first on Saturday 6 November as part of a one‐day symposium, Breaking Boundaries: Alternative Approaches to Japanese Film, organised by the University of Leeds, and then at 7pm on Monday November 8th at the Hyde Park Picture House. Tickets are £6.50/£5.00.

Zipangu Fest has also put together a special programme of Japanese underground animation in collaboration with the Encounters 16th International Film Festival in Bristol. The Ero Guro Anime Night programme, a selection of nightmarishly morbid animations from the Japanese underground, will screen at the Cube Microplex on Friday November 19th at 8pm. Zipangu Fest festival director Mr Sharp and Man‐ Eater Mountain sound designer Takuro Kochi will be there to introduce the programme. The screenings will be followed by a Late Night Japanese Pink Double Bill of Sexy Timetrip Ninjas (1984) and Groper Train: Search for the Black Pearl (1984), two deliriously tasteless comic classics of the pink film genre directed by Yojiro Takita, now famous as the winner of the 2008 Best Foreign Film Academy Award for the drama Departures. Doors open at 11pm. The Late Night Japanese Pink Double Bill has been made possible by Pink Eiga.

Midori: The Girl in the Freakshow, screening at Bristol's Cube Microplex

Leading up to Zipangu Fest’s much‐awaited London festival dates, Zipangu Fest has worked with Close‐Up to present the Nippon Year Zero programme of 1960s Japanese experimental films on Tuesday November 23th, at the Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club.

Zipangu Fest has confirmed the festival venues of Café 1001 in Brick Lane and the Genesis Cinema on Mile End Road. Guests can expect two full nights of entertainment from 6pm on November 24th and 25th, for the modest ticket price of £5.00 per evening. Zipangu Fest will launch into full swing for the weekend from November 26th to 28th at the Genesis Cinema in Whitechapel. Tickets will be £7.50/£5.00.

Zipangu Fest at the Genesis Cinema, Mile End Road, 26th-28th November

Following this, a selection of the Zipangu Fest festival programme will be screened at the Arnolfini in Bristol between December 16th and 19th, with further venues to be announced at a later date.

Jasper Sharp comments: “I’m really excited about these upcoming events across the country, because the goal with Zipangu Fest was always to reach out to new audiences and introduce Japanese cinema to as wide and diverse a crowd as possible. We’re really happy to be partnering up with so many respected film festivals and other organisations to this end, and I really hope this is something we will be able to expand on in the future. I also can’t wait to announce the main programme. We’ve got a really strong set of films and a host of guests already confirmed, and there’s going to be plenty more going on around the actual festival dates than just the screenings.”

For further press information please contact: michelle@zipangufest.com

Visit the Zipangu Fest website at http://zipangufest.com.

About Zipangu Fest

The first UK‐wide festival devoted to Japanese film, Zipangu Fest will introduce works new and old, previously unseen by mainstream UK film audiences, to demonstrate the many identities of Japan as depicted by some of the country’s most exciting and revered talents.

For its main event this year, Zipangu Fest will be holding around 15 screenings and other related events at venues across London’s vibrant East End. Cinema venues include the Barbican, Genesis Cinema in Whitechapel, Café 1001 in Brick Lane and the Working Men’s Club in Bethnal Green. The main body of film events will take place in London from November 23rd to 28th 2010, with regional events currently arranged in Bristol, Leeds and Coventry, and more to be confirmed.

The first of a series of rare UK screenings of Hiroshi Shimizu's Children of the Beehive (1948) begins in Leeds, organised by Zipangu Fest

This posting is one of a number that are going to appear on this website over the near future related to Zipangu Fest, the new Japanese film festival I am putting together here in the UK for November of this year (and beyond…!) We’ve been leaking bits about the festival by way of our Facebook and Twitter groups for a while now, but be prepared for the information to start coming thick and fast from now on, on the festival’s own website, and of course on this one here.

Anyway, here’s an event that we’re partially involved with, one which fits within the Zipangu Fest mindset of spreading knowledge and appreciation of Japanese cinema as far and wide within the United Kingdom as possible. It’s a symposium that will be taking place at the University of Leeds on 6th November 2010, about 3 weeks before the festival begins properly in London – there’s going to be a few other events in London and Bristol as well in the run up to the main Zipangu Fest dates 23-28 November, so keep your eyes peeled for more info about these too.

The symposium itself is being put together by Julian Ross of the University of Leeds as part of the 24th Leeds International Film Festival, which this year runs 4-21 Nov, and has always had a really good Japanese film programme. The symposium organisers are looking for anyone who is interested to deliver papers on their subjects of research, whatever stage this research might be at. If you’re interested, please send a 400-word abstract and 150-word biography to: bbconf2010@googlemail.com. The deadline for application is September 20th 2010. Tony Rayns will be in attendance as the keynote speaker.

Hiroshi Shimizu's early classic of Japanese independent cinema, Children of the Beehive

I’ll be there delivering a paper myself, but Zipangu Fest’s main involvement is that we have organised the post-symposium screening of Hiroshi Shimizu’s Children of the Beehive (Hachi no su no kodomo-tachi), his 1948 classic of Japanese independent cinema, and the first film he directed following his departure from Shochiku. Readers of Midnight Eye will know what a huge fan we all are of Shimizu, me in particular, so you might want to get scouring the various reviews and articles we’ve had about his work over the past 7 years since Tokyo FILMeX held their retrospective of his works in 2003: for example, Sayon’s Bell, Mr Thank you, The Introspection Tower and a selection of his silent films.

Children of the Beehive was the film that stuck out the most for me during the FILMeX retrospective, and I’ve been meaning to bring it to the UK ever since. It will also be screened again for the general public on another day during the Leeds Film Festival, separate from this symposium, and I don’t think it is giving too much away if I say that this will be one of the titles playing at the main Zipangu Fest festival in the Genesis Cinema in London between 23-28 November – it will also be playing in Bristol in December, but more of this closer to the time.

Children of the Beehive focuses on the plight of ten war orphans hailing from different cities across Japan. With nowhere to go, they scavenge around train stations, scratching out an existence by means of black market work for a one-legged tramp whilst avoiding being picked up by the police for vagrancy. Soon however, they find a more inspiring role model in the figure of a nameless soldier just repatriated after the war. An orphan himself, the soldier also has no home to return to, and so sets out across the country with the kids in tow in search of work before settling on the goal of leading them to the orphanage where he himself grew up.

Anyway, I’m going to reproduce the Call For Papers notice from Breaking Boundaries in full here, in the hope that some of you reading this will want to get involved.

Call for Papers

White Rose University Consortium Mixed Cinema Network: University of Leeds, University of Sheffield, University of York

University of Leeds Symposium – Breaking Boundaries: Alternative Approaches to Japanese Film.

6th November 2010, ICS Cinema, University of Leeds.

Symposium Convenor: Julian Ross

Keynote Speaker: Tony Rayns

Post-symposium Screening: ‘Children of the Beehive’ (Shimizu, 1948) courtesy of Zipangu Fest.

The event has been coordinated as part of the 24th Leeds International Film Festival (4-21 Nov 2010). For more information on Leeds International Film Festival, please visit www.leedsfilm.com.

Please note that selected papers will be considered for publication in a special issue of Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema, edited by David Desser and published by Intellect. For more information on the journal, please visit here.

No other region is expected to have a more profound impact on the future global system and society than East Asia, and accordingly, understanding the culture and arts of the countries in this region is becoming increasingly vital to the work of academics. Japanese cinema, in particular, has recently experienced a resurgence of interest within and beyond academic confines. In the UK, recent major retrospectives of directors such as Nagisa Oshima, Yasujiro Ozu and Akira Kurosawa organized by the British Film Institute, among many other events across the country, have contributed to an increased awareness of this burgeoning subject area. The number of Hollywood remakes of Japanese texts and films and the recent trend of Western directors travelling to Tokyo to shoot their films are also indicative of an interest which cuts across theory and practice. It seems particularly timely to discuss the ways in which we can address Japanese cinema and its relevance to world cinema, film studies and other disciplines.

‘Breaking Boundaries’ is an inter‐institutional project organized by postgraduate students at the universities of Leeds, Sheffield and York through the Mixed Cinema Network project and beyond. Our aim is to propose alternative approaches to Japanese cinema, moving beyond East-­West binary oppositions, thus encouraging the exploration of new and exciting critical avenues.

Although all proposals will be considered, we particularly welcome papers that explore the following themes we have set up as panels:

• Japanese Cinema Within and Beyond the Nation

• Interdisciplinarity and Intertextuality in Japanese Cinema

• Questions of Gender in Japanese Film

• Reception of Japanese Films Home and Abroad

We welcome proposals from researchers at any stage of their project, and we will accept proposals from those within and beyond the academic field of film studies.

Please send a 400‐word abstract and 150­‐word biography to: bbconf2010@googlemail.com

The deadline for application is September 20th 2010. We look forward to hearing from you!