A ‘real’ movie fights back in anime-ruled Japan – World

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Pensioner Shizue Kato didn’t fancy the new “Demon Slayer” anime blockbuster and instead watched “Kokuho”, a rare live-action cinema hit in Japan, where animation rules.

“Many of our friends already watched the film, and they were amazed we hadn’t yet,” Kato told AFP as she emerged from a Tokyo cinema on a recent weekday.
“I read the original novel,” her husband Kuni said.

Lasting almost three hours, “Kokuho” is about two “onnagata”, male players of female roles in kabuki, a rarefied form of classical Japanese theatre.

Lee Sang-il’s film, shot by Tunisian cinematographer Sofian El Fan, follows the friendship and rivalry of the son of a slain yakuza gangster and a boy born into a kabuki family.

The plot is gripping but markedly more sedate than this summer’s other hit, the second movie from the “Demon Slayer” anime and manga mega-franchise.

That dark fantasy, the first of a trilogy, is about sword-swishing Tanjiro Kamado’s final showdown to slay demons and make his sister human again in a kaleidoscopic castle.
It has set records, just like its predecessor in the series and other anime films, becoming Japan’s fastest film to gross 10 billion yen ($67 million).

It overtook “Titanic” to become the third-highest-grossing film in Japan, behind the last “Demon Slayer” and Studio Ghibli’s more highbrow — but still animated — “Spirited Away”.

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