Cat Soup
Cat Soup | |
---|---|
Japanese | ねこぢる草 |
Hepburn | Nekojiru-Sō |
Directed by | Tatsuo Satō |
Screenplay by | Masaaki Yuasa Tatsuo Satō |
Story by | Nekojiru |
Produced by | Yuji Matsukura |
Cinematography | Masaru Takase |
Edited by | Kan Onoshima |
Music by | Yutoro Teshikai |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Starchild Records |
Release date | 21 February 2001 |
Running time | 34 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Cat Soup (ねこぢる草, Nekojiru-sō, lit. Nekojiru Grass) is a 2001 Japanese animated short experimental film[1] directed by Tatsuo Satō, based on the manga created by Nekojiru.[2] The surreal film follows Nyatta, an anthropomorphic kitten, on his travel to the land of the dead and back in an effort to save his sister's soul. Cat Soup was released direct-to-DVD in Japan on 21 February 2001. Central Park Media licensed the film in North America under its Software Sculptors label and was released on DVD on September 9, 2003.
Plot[]
Nyāko (にゃーこ), the older sister of Nyatta (にゃっ太), lies very ill in her room. By accident, Nyatta drowns in the bathtub and, whilst being clinically dead, sees his sister leaving the house holding hands with the Japanese version of Ksitigarbha (known as Jizou in Japanese) and follows them. He tries to take his sister back from Jizou but it holds on to her refusing to let go. Nyāko splits in two leaving Jizou with half of her soul while her brother runs away with the other half. Jizou sends a clue about a flower they must seek to retrieve the lost half-soul, then walks away with it.
Meanwhile, Nyatta's father finds him in the bathtub and revives him. The whole family gathers in Nyāko's room to discover she is spiritually dead. Nyatta approaches carrying the half-soul and replaces it in her body through her nose. She awakens, now despondent and semi-catatonic. The siblings are sent by their mother to retrieve fried tofu. On the way, they attend the Big Whale Circus in time for the final act, in which a giant flightless bird containing various weathers causes an all-encompassing flood. The two find refuge on an ark with a pig, whom they consensually and partially eat by unzipping his abdomen and pulling out pre-cut slabs. God holds the world above his head to drain its water down his arm, leaving the three lost in a desert. As the cats beat the pig to death, he bites off Nyatta's arm. A local dollmaker soon appears to sew on a replacement salvaged from another cat.
Traveling across the desert, they are brought to a house by the smell of food, and are invited inside by a man. They are fed, and when full the man attempts to turn them into soup, attacking them with a pair of scissors. He ends up falling into the cauldron, Nyatta cuts him into pieces with the scissors and the cats escape. Wandering further across the desert dehydrated, Nyatta digs and finds an elephant made of water, which cools them off and travels with them, though the elephant eventually evaporates from the heat. God accidentally stops the flow of time and disrupts space, and the cats play with the time-frozen scenes. Father Time turns time back on, shooting it forward and reversing it, showing various scenes of random events either rapidly going forth in time or back. Eventually the cats find themselves back on their boat in the ocean. They drift into a marsh of metallic plants and creatures, coming across the flower they were seeking. Nyatta places the flower on Nyākos face, which restores her to normal. Together, they go back home.
In the end, the entire family of cats are gathered in their house leisurely watching TV. Nyatta leaves them to visit the toilet, and while he is gone, the other family members disappear one by one into thin air. The show on the TV also disappears, leaving only a flashing screen behind. Nyatta returns to find everyone gone. Outside the nearby lamppost extinguishes leaving the house in darkness. Finally the movie also "turns off", leaving behind a flashing screen of static before the credits roll.
Background[]
The characters of Nyāko and Nyatta first appeared in the June 1990 issue of the monthly manga magazine Garo. They also appeared in a series of 27 two-minute television episodes, collectively titled (ねこぢる劇場, Nekojiru Theatre). The series appeared in 1999 as a segment on TV Asahi's Bakushō-Mondai no Boss-Kyara-Ō (爆笑問題のボスキャラ王).
Nekojiru (the artist) was born on January 19, 1967 and died by suicide on May 10, 1998.[3][4] Her actual name was Chiyomi Hashiguchi (橋口 千代美, Hashiguchi Chiyomi, née Nakayama (中山)).
Awards[]
Cat Soup won an Excellence Prize (Animation Division) at the 2001 Japan Media Arts Festival,[5] the "Best Short Film" award at the 2001 Fantasia Festival and the Silver Award for Animation 2003 New York Exposition of Short Film and Video.[6]
References[]
- ^ McCarthy, Helen. 500 Essential Anime Movies: The Ultimate Guide. — Harper Design, 2009. — P. 515. — 528 p. — ISBN 978-0061474507
- ^ "New from Japan: Anime Film Reviews". Animation World Network. Archived from the original on 2020-05-15. Retrieved 2021-09-16.
- ^ Yoshinaga, Yoshiaki. "Yoshiaki Yoshinaga on Nekojiru - pt. 2". Anipages. Benjamin Ettinger. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
- ^ Patten, Fred (November 21, 2003). "New from Japan: Anime Film Reviews". Animation World Magazine. Retrieved 23 May 2009.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Excellence Prize Nekojiru-So". Japan Media Arts Festival. 2001. Archived from the original on 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
- ^ "Awards Winners". New York Expo Film and Video. 2003. Archived from the original on 2007-07-07. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
External links[]
- Cat Soup via Internet Archive
- Cat Soup at IMDb
- Cat Soup at AllMovie
- Cat Soup reviewed by Beyond Hollywood
- Cat Soup (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- 2001 anime films
- Adventure anime and manga
- Central Park Media
- Comedy anime and manga
- Anime short films
- 2000s animated short films
- J.C.Staff
- Japanese comedy films
- Japanese adventure films
- 2000s adventure comedy films
- Animated comedy films
- Animated adventure films
- Japanese films
- Fictional cats
- Japanese black comedy films