Swallowtail Butterfly | |||||
Native Name: |
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Director: | Shunji Iwai | ||||
Producer: | Shinya Kawai Kazutoshi Wadakura Osamu Kubota Hiroko Maeda | ||||
Starring: | Hiroshi Mikami Chara Ayumi Ito Yōsuke Eguchi Andy Hui Atsuro Watabe | ||||
Music: | Takeshi Kobayashi | ||||
Cinematography: | Noboru Shinoda | ||||
Editing: | Shunji Iwai | ||||
Distributor: | Kadokawa Herald | ||||
Runtime: | 148 minutes | ||||
Language: | Japanese English Mandarin |
is a 1996 Japanese crime film written, directed and edited by Shunji Iwai, starring Hiroshi Mikami, pop-singer Chara, and Ayumi Ito.
The film was shot on hand-held cameras using jump cuts and other visual techniques.[1] It covers a wide array of themes and genres, from social realism to coming-of-age to crime.
A theme song for the film under Yen Town Band, titled "Swallowtail Butterfly (Ai no Uta)", gained first place on the Oricon Weekly Singles Chart of October 7, 1996.[2]
The film is set in Tokyo at an unspecified point in the near future when the Japanese yen has become the strongest currency in the world. This attracts an influx of immigrants, legal and illegal, to work in the city. The immigrants give the city the nickname . The Japanese natives, however, despise the nickname, and in retribution call the immigrants by the homophone, anglicised as "Yentowns" in the film's English subtitles.[3]
The story centers around a sixteen-year-old girl (Ayumi Ito) whose mother has just died. The girl is passed on from person to person until she is taken in by a Chinese Yentown prostitute named Glico (Chara), who names her Ageha (Japanese for swallowtail). Under Glico's care, Ageha starts a new life.
The immigrant characters, who speak Japanese, English, Mandarin, or Cantonese, earn their living by committing petty crimes and/or engaging in prostitution. Ageha does not participate in many of these activities, but is protected by Glico and the other immigrants, including the Chinese auto mechanic scammer Fei Hong (Hiroshi Mikami), American ex-boxer Arrow (Shiek Mahmud-Bey), and the mysterious broker Ran (Atsuro Watabe). The film does not clarify Ageha's full background,[3] though she does tell a man in the film that she is originally from Japan.
Eventually, due to a sudden twist of fate involving the discovery of a rare cassette tape (containing Frank Sinatra's "My Way") that the mob is after, as well as a counterfeit money scheme strategy, the immigrants are given a chance to realize their various dreams. But in doing so, they impair their solidarity, and have to face most of their problems separately.
The film adopts a free-flowing structure, combining many slice-of-life narrative elements with tense, thriller components spliced in between. It covers the journey of Ageha and her other immigrant companions as they bond, try to survive in the cruel underworld that is Yentown, establish their very own music club, revel in fame and money, encounter the mob, and, above all, find a true identity for themselves.
The climax of the film sees Glico chased by the mob for the location of their prized cassette tape before Ran saves her, killing them all. Simultaneously, Fei Hong is brought in by the authorities after being caught with counterfeit bills, and is brutally beaten while being interrogated. In his cell, he sings Sinatra's "My Way" before succumbing to his fatal injuries. Ageha, Glico, and Ran hold a makeshift memorial service for Fei Hong where they burn all the money they had acquired. Ran fires off a gun salute. Mob boss Ryo Ranki plans his next move on a car ride before coincidentally re-encountering Ageha, whom he saved earlier in the film when she almost overdosed on heroin. Ageha is able to properly thank him now, and casually gifts him the cassette tape with "My Way" on it that, unbeknownst to Ageha, he had been searching for this whole time. Ryo asks her for her name, which she tells him was given to her by the now-famous Glico. Ryo stands there, stunned, as he was the one who gave Glico her name when they grew up together.
Swallowtail Butterfly was also nominated for but did not win the following awards: