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shinsedai 2009

Shinsedai Wrap Up

by Chris Magee on September 9, 2009

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It’s been a couple of weeks since the inaugural Shinsedai Cinema Festival took place at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre here in Toronto – time enough to take stock and for festival organizers and special guests to recover from post-festival exhaustion. Not that the whole weekend was work, not at all. We’re very happy to announce that the first ever Shinsedai Cinema Festival accomplished exactly what it set out to do: to introduce new and exciting independent Japanese filmmakers to North American audiences. Nearly 2,000 people made it out to catch everything from the harrowing Iraq War documentary “Little Birds” directed by Takeharu Watai, the subtle experimentation of films like Kei Shichiri’s “Hottentot Apron: A Sketch”, and the visual and musical works of video artist and composer Takagi Masakatsu, as well as crowd-pleasers like Yuki Tanada’s “Electric Button (Moon & Cherry)”, Yuya Ishii’s “Girl Sparks”, and the undisputed hit of Shinsedai Touru Hano’s “Thunderfish (Raigyo)”.

Another goal that we had for the Shinsedai Cinema Festival was to make it an event where young and emerging filmmakers who wouldn’t normally get a chance to meet and discuss their work could do just that. By the end of the festival contacts were established and our guests from Japan also got to meet and spend time with festival audiences and volunteers, something that we want to continue next year.

Next year? Yes, you heard that right. Keep checking back for the official dates of Shinsedai 2010, but until then make sure to check out Eric Evans’s,contributing writer for the Toronto J-Film Pow-Wow’s, take on days two and three of Shinsedai here and here.

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Shinsedai Cinema Festival: Day 1

by Chris Magee on August 22, 2009

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It’s been four months of solid work, but finally the Shinsedai Cinema Festival kicked off last night here at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre here in Toronto. All our guests were onhand: “Now, I…” director Yasutomo Chikuma, the crew of indie mystery/ thriller “Thunderfish”, director Touru Hano, cinematographer Tetsuhiro Kato, and lead actress Junko Kimoto, “Vortex and Others” director Yoshihiro Ito, artist and animator Akino Kondoh, and “Peaches!” organizer and producer Atsuko Ohno.  Joining them were festival co-programmers Chris MaGee and Jasper Sharp (below with “Thunderfish” actress  Junko Kimoto serving up sake to guests),  JCCC Executive Director James Heron and Nobuaki Yamamoto, the Vice Consul General of Japan and the Katsuhiro Yokoyama, CEO of Subaru Canada. Sake flowed at the traditional kagami biraki cask breaking ceremony and Subaru’s  Yokoyama related the story of how he made trips to the original ATG, Art Theater Guild, in Tokyo as a teenager and soaked up indie films not only from Japan but from around the globe. His short speech summed up precisely what Shinsedai is about: finding and fostering new film talent from Japan.
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Saturday will see our full day of programming, including our co-presentation along with the Reel Asian International Film Festival of Takagi Masakatsu’s concert documentary Aruongaku, and the highly anticipated screening of Touru Hano’s Thunderfish, so check back throughout this weekend to get updates and more images from the Inaugural Shinsedai Cinema Festival.

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Light, colour, and sound: An interview with video artist and composer Takagi Masakatsu

August 20, 2009

One of the most exciting aspects of the Shinsedai Cinema Festival, not just for guests but for its organizers as well, is the opportunity to highlight filmmakers and artists whose work may not immediately pop into the public’s mind when “Japanese cinema” is mentioned. A perfect example is 30-year-old video artist and composer Takagi Masakatsu. [...]

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Jasper Sharp talks about the Shinsedai Cinema Festival

August 13, 2009

We’re just a week away from The Shinsedai Cinema Festival at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre in Toronto. The build up here has coincided with the launch of author, film curator and Shinsedai co-programmer Jasper Sharp’s own website JasperSharp.com. On his new site Sharp goes into detail about the films he chose for the inaugural [...]

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