All About Lily Chou-Chou

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All About Lily Chou-Chou
Directed by Shunji Iwai
Produced by Koko Maeda
Written by Shunji Iwai
Starring Hayato Ichihara
Shugo Oshinari
Ayumi Ito
Takao Osawa
Miwako Ichikawa
Izumi Inamori
Yû Aoi
Cinematography Noboru Shinoda
Editing by Yoshiharu Nakagami
Distributed by Rockwell Eyes
Release date(s) 2001
Running time 146 min
Language Japanese
IMDb profile

All About Lily Chou-Chou (リリイ・シュシュのすべて Rirī Shushu no Subete?) is a 2001 Japanese film written and directed by Shunji Iwai. The film portrays the rough lives of high school children in Japan.

Contents

[edit] Plot

All About Lily Chou-Chou follows two childhood friends, Shusuke Hoshino and Yuichi Hasumi, from the end of their junior high school run until the beginning of high school. The film has a discontinuous storyline, starting midway through the story, just after high school begins, then flashes back to junior high and summer vacation, and then skips back to the present.

In junior high, Hoshino was the best student in school, but was picked on by his classmates. He was skilled at kendo, and had a good-looking young mom. Yuichi, on the other hand, was a quieter boy who fell in love with the music of the odd musician Lily Chou-Chou. During a group trip to Okinawa, Hoshino had a traumatic near-death experience and his personality changed from good-natured to dangerous and manipulative. In high school, he takes his place as class bully and shows his newfound power by ruining the lives of his classmates. An alternative voice, that of the character Yoko Kuno, attributes Hoshino's personality change to divorce and family ruin; this matches several scenes connecting the decline of Yuichi - who has had to change his name - to divorce.

Yuichi, the confused and shy former friend of Hoshino, finds himself sucked into his now-tormentor's gang. He is ridiculed and coerced into doing Hoshino's dirty work, and finds solace only in the ethereal music Lily Chou-Chou makes. Things become far worse for everyone when Yuichi is assigned to supervising Shiori Tsuda, whom Hoshino has blackmailed into enjo kōsai, and another girl is raped by Hoshino's lackeys after unwittingly offending the school's girl gang. The whole quagmire comes to a head when Yuichi heads to Tokyo to see a Lily Chou-Chou concert, and encounters the last person he thought would be there.

The story of Hoshino and Yuichi is paralleled by messages posted to a Lily Chou-Chou Internet message board. It is left up to the viewer to figure out which characters in the story are posting under what names.

[edit] Production

On April 1, 2000, Shunji Iwai went live with his internet novel, in the form of a website called Lilyholic, where he posted messages as several characters on the BBS. Readers of the novel were free to post alongside Iwai's characters and interact with each other, indeed this BBS is where some of the content from the movie comes from. After the main incident in the novel took place, posting was closed and the second phase of the novel started, about the lives of 14 year olds. (The novel is available on CD-ROM, but only in Japanese.)

Production on the film began in Ashikaga, Tochigi Prefecture on August 13, 2000 and ended on November 28, 2000. It premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 7, 2001, and opened in Japan on October 6, 2001.

Iwai was the first Japanese director to use the, at the time, completely new digital video camera, the "24 Progressive" to shoot the film.

It is thought that Iwai was inspired to shoot in digital by his friend, the anime and live-action film director Hideaki Anno, who shot his own digital film entitled Love & Pop, in 1998. Anno later cast Iwai as the lead in his second live-action film, Shiki-Jitsu.

[edit] Music

The soundtrack of Lily Chou-Chou was written and arranged by Takeshi Kobayashi, with vocals by the singer Salyu. It features a number of songs that are sung by the fictional rock star Lily Chou-Chou in the film. The soundtrack also makes heavy use of the classical music of Claude Debussy.

[edit] Cast

  • Shugo Oshinari as Shusuke Hoshino (星野修介 Hoshino Shusuke), the best student in school who, after a trip to Okinawa, becomes a bully.
  • Hayato Ichihara as Yuichi Hasumi (蓮見雄一 Hasumi Yūichi), Hoshino's former friend who becomes a reluctant member of his gang and will later on be bullied by Hoshino. Yuichi is the leading character in the movie. He admins an online Lily Chou-Chou BBS and is a great fan of the singer.
  • Ayumi Ito as Yoko Kuno (久野陽子 Kuno Yōko), a classmate and love interest of Yuichi's. A brilliant pianist, she is the envy of a clique of powerful girls, and therefore is also bullied. She is raped by Hoshino's gang and cuts off her hair as a way of avoiding Shiori Tsuda's fate.
  • Yû Aoi as Shiori Tsuda (津田詩織 Tsuda Shiori), a classmate of Yuichi who gets blackmailed into enjo kōsai by Hoshino. Yuichi befriends her later on, and introduces her to Lily. She commits suicide by jumping off an electric tower.
  • Yuki Ito as Kamino, one of the boys in the blue school uniforms at the train station when Kuno is introduced.
  • Izumi Inamori as Izumi Hoshino (星野いずみ Hoshino Izumi), Hoshino's mother. It is unknown if she is single. She loves her son very much and welcomes Yuichi with open arms during a junior high sleepover at the Hoshino household.
  • Salyu as Lily Chou-Chou, the enigmatic and ethereal singer that Yuichi, Tsuda and others in the film are fans of. She is hardly seen in the film, except on a video screen near the story's end, but her music is heard throughout the movie. She is said by her fans to channel what is called "the Ether", which is not unlike the invisible substance once thought by ancient philosophers to be the field that light travels through. This "ether" can be heard in the calm, melancholy songs she sings.

[edit] Details

  • Quentin Tarantino used the song "Kaifukusuru Kizu (Wounds that heal)" from the Lily Chou-Chou soundtrack in Kill Bill, in the scene where the Bride views Hattori Hanzo's sword collection.
  • The idea of Lily Chou-Chou the rock star was inspired by Hong Kong singer and actress, Faye Wong.
  • Extras at the concert scene were given an index card with extremely detailed information as to the thought process they should be going through during filming. There were hundreds of extras, partly made up of fans of the internet novel who had BBS meet ups during the day. Posters from the BBS are visible in the background of this scene and can be spotted by watching for clues from their posts.
  • Ayumi Ito spent weeks training on the piano in order to do all of her scenes without a double. She became so obsessed with Debussy's "Arabesque No. 1" that she made it her cell phone ringtone.
  • Originally, in the internet novel, Yuichi and Hoshino belong to the track team, not the kendo team.
  • Debussy wrote his famous Children's Corner Suite (1909) for his beloved daughter whom he nicknamed Chou-chou.
  • This movie made an impact and is the third highest grossing local film of 2001 in Japan (next to Visitor Q and Spirited Away). This is the highest grossing film made by Shunji Iwai, beating his previous work, Love Letter (1995).
  • The movie's original runtime was 157 minutes, but the original print of the 157 minute version no longer exists because it was burned. The extra 11 minutes was composed of extra and intense footages of the rape scene, a scene with Yuichi in the beach (similar to Hoshino's drowning scene) and an extended funeral scene.[citation needed]

[edit] Awards and nominations

[edit] Box office totals

  • Budget:¥150, 000, 000 ($1,249,656)

Local:

  • Japan: ¥3, 026, 188, 000 ($25,211,298)
  • Opening Week Gross: ¥514, 775, 000 ($4,288,612)
  • Date Released: October 6, 2001
  • In release: 15.7 weeks

International:

  • USA: $26,485 (¥3,179,328)

Rentals:

  • Japan: ¥810,340,000 ($6,750,436)

[edit] External links

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