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Princess Raccoon (2005)

Princess Raccoon (2005)
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Veteran director Seijun Suzuki (Branded to Kill) takes a new direction with the colorful operetta-fairy tale, Princess Raccoon. When Azuchi Momoyama (Mikijiro Hira), the master of Grace Castle, is told by his soothsayer, Virgen the Old Maid (Saori Yuki) that his son, Amechiyo (Joe Odagiri), will soon usurp his place as "the fairest of them all," the king decides to banish the young man to Karasu Mountain, where the shape-shifting tanuki demons (raccoon-like canines native to Japan) live. Dropped at the mountain, Amechiyo is greeted by the beautiful Tanukihime (Zhang Ziyi), who speaks a strange language (Mandarin), and whom he soon learns is the ruler of Tanuki Palace. Amid colorful painted backdrops, lavish costumes, and eclectic musical numbers, the two fall into a forbidden and dangerous romance. After they frolic in the woods, Amechiyo is taken prisoner by tanuki, but Tanukihime's hand maidens, recognizing the princess' love for him, arrange for his escape. Azuchi is determined to end his son's life, however, and even Hagi (Hiroko Yakushimaru), Tanukihime's loyal henchwoman, is determined to separate the lovers, presumably to ensure the princess' safety. Princess Raccoon was shown at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival before having its North American Premiere at the 2005 New York Asian Film Festival, presented by Subway Cinema. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi

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Starring:
Zhang ZiyiJô Odagiri, (more)
Director(s):
Seijun Suzuki
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Princess Raccoon

Veteran director Seijun Suzuki (Branded to Kill) takes a new direction with the colorful operetta-fairy tale, Princess Raccoon. When Azuchi Momoyama (Mikijiro Hira), the master of Grace Castle, is told by his soothsayer, Virgen the Old Maid (Saori Yuki) that his son, Amechiyo (Joe Odagiri), will soon usurp his place as "the fairest of them all," the king decides to banish the young man to Karasu Mountain, where the shape-shifting tanuki demons (raccoon-like canines native to Japan) live. Dropped at the mountain, Amechiyo is greeted by the beautiful Tanukihime (Zhang Ziyi), who speaks a strange language (Mandarin), and whom he soon learns is the ruler of Tanuki Palace. Amid colorful painted backdrops, lavish costumes, and eclectic musical numbers, the two fall into a forbidden and dangerous romance. After they frolic in the woods, Amechiyo is taken prisoner by tanuki, but Tanukihime's hand maidens, recognizing the princess' love for him, arrange for his escape. Azuchi is determined to end his son's life, however, and even Hagi (Hiroko Yakushimaru), Tanukihime's loyal henchwoman, is determined to separate the lovers, presumably to ensure the princess' safety. Princess Raccoon was shown at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival before having its North American Premiere at the 2005 New York Asian Film Festival, presented by Subway Cinema. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
125 mins

Complete Cast of Princess Raccoon


Director(s):
Seijun Suzuki
Writer(s):
Yoshio Urasawa
Producer(s):
Satoru OguraIkki Katashima
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    Member Reviews
     
    Claudia R.

    This is the most ridiculous, low budget musical film I've ever seen!! It is made in a play-like stage setting, with horrible "special effects" (stuffed puppet-like raccoons hanging from visible threads) I love Ziyi Zhang, but what a disappointment!!! just a waste

    Yes   |   No

     
    Tina D.

    I rented because I had wanted to view all of Ziyi Zhang films. I was very disappointed and kept on trying to give it a fair chance but turned it off a quarter of the way. I love and can understand opera but this "operetta" failed and the connection to the "Virgen" Mary I just didn't get at all.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Karen F.

    I felt incredibly tricked after watching this movie. As a fan of the main actress, her name escapes me at the moment, I thought it'd be cool to see this movie, but I realized it wasn't cool to see this movie. Maybe if it was a theatrical production it would have been a little better, but since it wasn't, it wasn't. The entire thing seemed like a little bit of a joke with backdrops and awkward lighting and gradients. There was no way I could even get into this movie and believe it was something more than just people trancing around in a studio. I guess I should give it some credit though. I did like the costumes, and I thought the music was, for the most part, fantastically eclectically fantastic. I really wouldn't recommend it though, unless your the type of person who gets off on weird movies with somewhat silly plot lines.

    Yes   |   No

     
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