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Norika Fujiwara performed the stunts herself in China Strike Force. |
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MAKING THEIR MARK:
Japanese Movie Stars Take On the World
September 3, 2002
When people think of Japanese movie stars that have
appeared in foreign movies, fans of older films may remember Sessue Hayakawa
from The Bridge on the River Kwai. Recently,
a new generation of Japanese actors and actresses has been appearing in
foreign movies, and it seems that the world of movie stars is undergoing
globalization.
Popular Actresses Lead the Way
One movie that attracted a lot of attention was Wasabi,
a French production starring Ryoko
Hirosue (site is Japanese only) and Jean Reno that was released in
Japan in January 2002. Most of the other foreign films featuring Japanese
stars, however, have been made in other Asian countries. Actress Takako
Tokiwa appeared in two Hong Kong movies, Moonlight
Express in 1999 and A Fighter's Blues
in 2000. The popular Norika
Fujiwara appeared in China Strike Force,
a Hong Kong-American action movie featuring stunts reminiscent of Jackie
Chan. This movie was made in 2000 and released in Japan this summer. Rie
Miyazawa, meanwhile, won the Best Actress Award at the Moscow International
Film Festival for her role as a Kunqu opera singer in Peony
Pavilion, a Hong Kong movie that depicts the decadent lifestyle
of the upper class in 1930s Suzhou.
There have also been a number of joint South Korean-Japanese projects
of late. The abduction of current South Korean President Kim Dae-jung
in Japan in 1973 was made into a movie this year, titled KT.
While this film features a primarily Japanese cast, there are other such
efforts that rely on a mainly Korean cast. 2009 Lost
Memories is one such example, and co-star Toru Nakamura won the
Best Supporting Actor Award at the Daejong Awards, the South Korean equivalent
of Hollywood's Academy Awards.
And as for Chinese movies, Teruyuki Kagawa played a Japanese soldier during
World War II in Devils on the Doorstep, a
film that won the Grand Prize of the Jury at the Cannes Film Festival
for director Jiang Wen. Kiichi Nakai, meanwhile, plays a Japanese emissary
serving the Chinese emperor in the seventh century B.C. in Warriors
of Heaven and Earth, a film slated for release in 2003.
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Merit in Using Japanese
Actresses
Yuko Sekiguchi is the editor in chief of Kinema-Junpo,
a magazine that collects in-depth articles on movies. Sekiguchi, who has
recently presented in the magazine a feature on movies that cross borders,
says, "Hong Kong movies can't raise the funds needed to produce them
if they are just intended for a domestic audience, so they include Asian
actors and actresses from other countries. They are always considering
the market in neighboring countries. In Japan, however, enough money can
be scraped together for producing movies intended only for a Japanese
audience. This is why Japanese movie makers have not been proactive in
trying to expand their appeal abroad."
There are a number of different reasons why Japanese actors and actresses
are being used in foreign movies. Tokiwa and Fujiwara are already quite
popular in a number of Asian nations due to their appearances in TV dramas
that have aired there. When Miyazawa was hired by Hong Kong director Yonfan
to star in Peony Pavilion, however, the director
had only seen her picture before deciding that she had the elegant look
appropriate for the film. It is interesting that it is not necessarily
admiration for Japanese movies themselves that is behind the increasing
roles being offered to Japanese actors and actresses abroad. Sekiguchi
says, "When considering funding and the idea of expanding the market,
collaboration and exchanges of actors and staff have merit."
According to Sekiguchi, the international success of Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon, an Asian movie produced by Columbia Pictures,
a subsidiary of Sony Pictures Entertainment, has led Hollywood to begin
investing in Asian films. Warriors of Heaven and
Earth is such an example, as it is a Chinese movie produced with
backing from Sony Pictures Entertainment. The world of movies is undergoing
globalization as both capital and talent freely move across borders. The
trend of actors and actresses from different Asian countries working together
appears likely to grow, so Japanese stars may soon be coming to a theater
near you.
Copyright (c) 2002 Japan
Information Network. Edited by Japan Echo Inc. based on domestic Japanese
news sources. Articles presented here are offered for reference purposes
and do not necessarily represent the policy or views of the Japanese
Government. |
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