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METROPOLIS

TRISTAR PICTURES PRESENTS
A METROPOLIS COMMITTEE PRODUCTION

OSAMU TEZUKA's
"METROPOLIS"

Directed by
RINTARO

Screenplay by
KATSUHIRO OTOMO

WITH NEW ENGLISH SUBTITLES.

METROPOLIS will be released in theaters in January, 2002

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Based on the Comic by    OSAMU TEZUKA
Directed byRINTARO
Screenplay byKATSUHIRO OTOMO
Character Design / Chief Key-Animation SupervisorYASUHIRO NAKURA
Key-Animation SupervisorsSHIGEO AKAHORI,
KUNIHIKO SAKURAI,
SHIGERU FUJITA
Art Director / CGI Art DirectorSHUICHI HIRATA
CGI Technical DirectorTSUNEO MAEDA
Music byTOSHIYUKI HONDA
Sound DirectorMASAFUMI MIMA
Animation ProducersMASAO MARUYAMA,
IWAO YAMAKI
Animation StudioMADHOUSE
Conceptual SupportTEZUKA PRODUCTIONS
Produced byMETROPOLIS COMMITTEE

Voice Cast
 - TimaYUKA IMOTO
 - KenichiKEI KOBAYASHI
 - RockKOHKI OKADA
 - Duke RedTARO ISHIDA
 - Shunsaku BanKOUSEI TOMITA
 - PeroNORIO WAKAMOTO
 - Dr. LaughtonJUNPEI TAKIGUCHI
 - PonkotzTAKESHI AONO
 - President BoonMASARU IKEDA
 - NotarlinSYUN YASHIRO
 - SkunkTOSHIO FURUKAWA
 - Lamp:SHIGERU CHIBA
 - Hamueggu:MASASHI EBARA
 - Lyon:TAKAYA HASHI
 - Atlas:NORIHIRO INOUE
 - Fifi:RIKAKO AIKAWA

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Press Contacts:
In New York:
Sophie Gluck
Wang/Gluck
212-226-3269
212-941-1425 fax
      In Los Angeles:
Annalee Paulo, Elizabeth Johnson
mPRm Public Relations
323-933-3399
323-939-7211 fax

Synopsis
Based on the classic manga (comic) by Osamu Tezuka, the Godfather of Anime and Manga, Metropolis was brought to the screen by two of the most respected figures in Japanese animation today: Katsuhiro Otomo (AKIRA) and Rintaro (X, Galaxy Express 999). In fact, Rintaro began his career working for Tezuka on his popular Astro Boy (Tetsuwan Atom) television series.

In the late 1940s, long before Astro Boy and Kimba the White Lion established Osamu Tezuka as one of the most influential animators of all time, the legendary illustrator created the classic manga Metropolis. Set in the future, Metropolis is a grand city-state populated by humans and robots, the cohabitants of a strictly segmented society. Amidst the chaos created by anti-robot factions, detective Shunsaku Ban and his sidekick Ken-ichi are searching for rebel scientist Dr. Laughton, to arrest him and seize his latest creation, Tima, a beautiful young girl. When they locate them, Shunsaku quickly comes to realize that the eccentric scientist is beyond their reach, protected by a powerful man and his fierce desire to reclaim a tragic figure from his past.

More than fifty years since it was first imagined, Tezuka's vision of the inability of scientific progress to fulfill basic human needs—in spite of its mechanizing even the most fundamental aspects of life—confirms him as a prophet as well as a fabulist. Written by Otomo and directed by Rintaro, the retro-futurism of the story—as well as its precautionary tale—is spectacularly rendered in its visual style, combining the best in Japanese cel animation with the latest in digital technology.


Director: Rintaro
Born in 1941 in Tokyo, Rintaro joined Toei Animation in 1958 and went to work for Osamu Tezuka's Mushi Productions in 1960. There, he directed episodes of such classic animated series as Astro Boy and Kimba, The White Lion. He has also directed episodes of many other television series, Space Pirate Captain Harlock (1978) among them. During the seventies, he cemented his position as one of the best television anime directors, and has since concentrated his efforts on feature animation work, and has directed a string of enduring masterpieces such as Galaxy Express 999 (1979); Harmagedon (1983); The Blade of Kamui (1985); Phoenix (1986), and X: The Movie (1996).


Screenplay by: Katsuhiro Otomo
Born in 1954 in Miyagi prefecture, Katsuhiro Otomo started his career in 1973 as a comic writer and has since become one of the world's top selling manga artists, and one of the anime industry's top directors. He won the Japan Sci-Fi Grand Prix in 1983 with Domu and in the same year started serializing Akira. His first work in animation was as a character designer for Rintaro's Harmagedon in 1983. Otomo then went on to direct a screen adaptation of Akira (1988), which earned him worldwide recognition and was an international hit. His follow-up film, the comedy Roujin Z, was a Siskel & Ebert Video Pick of the Week. He has also worked on the blockbuster anime films Perfect Blue, Spriggan, Robot Carnival, Neo-Tokyo and Memories and the live-action feature World Apartment Horror (1991). He is currently working on his next directorial project, Steam Boy.


About Osamu Tezuka
Born in 1928, Tezuka Osamu is widely considered the most influential animator in Japan, and the rise of the Japanese animation industry parallels his career. Also considered the father of the modern Japanese manga comic, Tezuka is probably best known for three characters he created in the early 50s: Kimba the White Lion, Astro Boy (Mighty Atom) and Princess Knight. The serialized comics were so successful that their animated versions was distributed in America.

A pioneer in incorporating a cinematic style into his comics, Tezuka brought themes of hope and humanity to post-war Japan, where the graphic novel-like manga is popular as a national pastime. Based on a character that originated in the Metropolis manga, Astro Boy represented the soaring achievement of society in danger of becoming a victim to its own technology. This ambivalence toward scientific progress touched a nation recovering from first-hand experience with the theme.

In the early 60s, Tezuka set up his own studio, Mushi Productions, which launched the careers of many of today's most talented animators. When Tezuka made the transition into animation, he not only brought his manga characters to life, he revolutionized the field by introducing adult themes into animation. Tezuha's early success paved the way for the fascination with Japanese animation—and its visual style—that continues to this day.


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