15th New York Asian Film Festival

Jun 22 - Jul 9, 2016

Photo: © 1996 Swallowtail Production Committee

U.S. Premiere

Swallowtail Butterfly

スワロウテイル

Occupying pretty much the same cultural territory in Japan that Pulp Fiction occupies in America, Iwai Shunji's Swallowtail Butterfly is a seismic shockwave of sci-fi cool that exploded onto the Japanese film scene and electrified a generation. Near-future sci-fi shot with handheld cameras and edited to a twitchy rhythm, the film posits an alternate history where an economically flush Japan has attracted millions of immigrants who live in the Yentown ghettos, working on the margins, always on the hustle, trying to score that yen. Pop star Chara plays, well, a pop star who achieves fame when her Yentown comrades co-opt a Yakuza cash scam and become rich enough to open a nightclub and release albums. Fueled by composer Kobayashi Takeshi's exuberantly moody J-pop soundtrack, the violent, propulsive, sexy film sheds ideas at the speed of light about identity, ethnicity, and how money builds and how it destroys. Seeing it today is like re-reading your high-school diary: the way it wears its heart on its sleeve can be cringe-inducing, but you have to admire its willingness to lay it all on the line. You watch Swallowtail Butterfly in awe and wish that today's filmmakers had this kind of courage, which you can have only when you're young and in love with film.

Director: Iwai Shunji
Cast: Doguchi Yoriko, Yamaguchi Tomoko, Otsuka Nene, Mickey Curtis, Momoi Kaori, Watabe Atsuro, Andy Hui, Eguchi Yosuke, Ito Ayumi, Mikami Hiroshi, Chara
Languages: Japanese with English subtitles
1996; 147 min.; 35mm

SCHEDULE:

Saturday June 25, 2:45pm
Film Society of Lincoln Center

Q&A with Iwai Shunji

Lifetime Achievement Award
Iwai Shunji
岩井俊二

"The path of Iwai Shunji's career is unique in Japan. He started out in television, making a dozen short- and medium-length films including 1993's Fried Dragon Fish, starring a young Asano Tadanobu, and Fireworks, Shall We See It From the Side or the Bottom?. The latter won an award from the Directors' Guild of Japan, something unprecedented for a TV movie. He found his next outlet at the 9pm \"late show\" screenings at theaters, where he exhibited his 47-minute Undo about the madness inherent in love. The hallmarks that defined his career - poetic works with fresh visuals, sensual soundtracks and Japan's most beautiful actors - were already evident. His first feature-length film was the 72-minute Picnic, starring Asano and singer Chara as escapees from an asylum, but the first to reach cinemas was his classic Love Letter in 1995. The parallel-timeline romance is about a young widow who sends a letter to her dead husband in his Hokkaido hometown, only to get a reply from his female classmate with the same name. The film brought Iwai legions of fans across Asia; while it sold out theaters in Japan for 14 weeks, it played in Hong Kong for 30 straight weeks and became the must-see film for students in South Korea where Japanese films were still banned. The first phase of Iwai's career came to a close with the release of his wildly ambitious Swallowtail Butterfly the following year. Set in an alternative Japan, home to millions of immigrants in shanty towns, it stars Chara as a wannabe pop star whose dreams are realized when her 'Yen Town' comrades get rich using the most ingenious currency scam ever committed to celluloid. Ahead of its time for its depiction of a multi-racial Japan, its adoption of world-class CGI in an extraordinary butterfly sequence, and its multi-media marketing campaign, it also marked Iwai's withdrawal from Japan's rigid film industry. Two years after the sprawling 146-minute Swallowtail, Iwai returned with his smallest movie yet, the perfectly-formed 67-minute April Story about a female student moving into her own apartment and experiencing first love. Iwai not only wrote, directed and edited the film, but also produced it, composed its music, and self-distributed it. It marked a new self-reliance and a necessary detachment that would later see him becoming his own cinematographer. He has since made films in New York, Vancouver and Paris, directed an animated feature, and set up a company in Shanghai where he is about to launch the next phase of his career."