Helen the Baby Fox | |
Screenplay: | Masako Imai |
Story: | Minoru Taketazu (Memories of Helen the Fox) |
Music: | Yukie Nishimura |
Cinematography: | Takeshi Hamada |
Editing: | Takuya Taguchi |
Director: | Keita Kono |
Producer: | Takeo Hisamatsu |
Distributor: | Shochiku |
Runtime: | 109 minutes |
Country: | Japan |
Language: | Japanese |
Gross: | US$1,455,806[1] |
is a 2006 Japanese film. It was directed by director Keita Kono, and stars actors Takao Osawa, Yasuko Matsuyuki, Arashi Fukasawa and Ryoko Kobayashi in lead roles.[2] It was released in Japanese cinemas on 18 March 2006.
Helen the Baby Fox tells the story of Taichi and a fox cub, whom Taichi found by the side of the road. The cub is blind, deaf and mute and Taichi names it Helen, after Helen Keller who suffers from similar disabilities. They faced much skepticism and criticism from the people around them, and difficulties stemming from Helen's physical disabilities.
Leaving school for the day, seven-year-old Taichi finds a baby fox, abandoned by her mother alongside a road in rural Hokkaido. The two bond and Taichi decides to leave the cub with the police as a lost item. The policeman on duty takes a reluctant Taichi and the cub to the local Yajima Veterinary Clinic. It turns out that Taichi has begun to live with Ko, the vet, and his teenage daughter Misuzu after his free-spirited mother Ritsuko has gone to Micronesia to work as a photographer. Many people have abandoned animals with Ko, and paying customers are few with most of his income coming from frequently boarding a friendly dog that is almost part of the family. Taichi feels abandoned as well, and clashes with Ko when the vet sees the new arrival as a burden, especially after discovering that the cub is deaf and blind. However, Taichi names her Helen after Helen Keller and attempts to bring her back to full health while teaching her about the world as sort of a young Annie Sullivan. Even though Taichi gets her to eat, Helen suffers increasing fits stemming from her brain, which is the result of a tumor.
It was first released in Japanese cinemas on 18 March 2006.[3] It was also released in Singapore cinemas on 27 July 2006 by local distributor Shaw Organization.[4]
The South China Morning Post described the film as "the film for animal lovers."[5]