The Flying Luna Clipper
The Flying Luna Clipper | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ikko Ono |
Written by | Ikko Ono |
Story by | Ikko Ono |
Produced by | Kan Tsuzurahara |
Starring | Anne Lambert Ina Krantz Mark Hagan Zev Asher |
Music by | ANZ Masamichi Amano Yoshinobu Morikawa |
Production company | Sony Video Software International |
Release date |
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Running time | 55 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | English |
The Flying Luna Clipper (ザ・フライング・ルナクリッパー) is a 1987 Japanese computer-animated art film/demo directed by Ikko Ono and produced by Sony. The film was animated entirely using 8-bit MSX computers[1] and was released on Video8, Betamax, VHS, and LaserDisc in Japan. It was mostly unknown until a copy was found in a Japanese thrift store and uploaded to YouTube in December 2015 by journalist Matt Hawkins.[2]
Plot
[edit]The film depicts a group of anthropomorphic fruits and other creatures who win a contest for a ticket on the first flight of a newly found Martin M-130 flying boat named the Flying Luna Clipper. Departing from Honolulu, they embark on a journey across the Pacific Ocean and watch short films on a 200-inch screen during the trip.
Voice cast
[edit]- Anne Lambert as Hunger Kihikihi, Gail, Mr. Yukio, Flower and Venus
- Ina Krantz as Eyecatcher, Grace, The Sun, Mercury and Island
- Mark Hagan as Narrator, Smith, Duck, Coco and Ancient Polynesian
- Zev Asher as Kan Blackwell, Jose, Cucumber, Onion, Copilot Daibush, Tangaroa, Professor Theron and Dancer
- Ikko Ono as Captain Ikko (uncredited)
Background
[edit]Ikko Ono is a graphic designer who worked as the cover artist for MSX Magazine from 1986. He also had his own column called Ikko's Gallery about using the computer as a tool for illustration. Many of the illustrations he created for the magazine depict characters seen in the film. Later he had another column called Ikko's Theatre about short films which served as the basis for The Flying Luna Clipper.[3] It was first announced in the May 1987 issue of the magazine to celebrate the fifth anniversary of the publication, and according to the same magazine, was released via home video on 1 October of that year, and was featured again in Ikko's Theatre the following month.[3][4][5]
Legacy
[edit]A revived run of MSX Magazine was published between 2002 and 2005. A special limited edition of the magazine published a series of 12 artworks in December 2003 by Ohno featuring characters from the film entitled "The Flying Luna Clipper 2004",[6] followed by a calendar featuring the art for that year. However, a sequel was never created. The film remained obscure until December 2015 when a LaserDisc copy was uploaded online by Matt Hawkins, after which it steadily grew in popularity.[1] In 2019, Hawkins screened it theatrically at the Wonderville arcade in New York City, doing so again a year later in 2020.[7]
In December 2021, an interview with Ohno on the film, conducted by Victor Navarro-Remesal, Marçal Mora-Cantallops, and Yoshihiro Hino, was published in ROMchip: A Journal of Game Histories, featuring contributed art, storyboards and promotional material from Ohno's collection.[1] ROMchip noted its distinctive style due to being produced using an 8-bit computer typically used for video games, terming it "chipcinema" and comparing it to later developments such as machinima - narrative films created within specific video games - and demoscene - a computer art scene based around creating advanced art and music on technically limited systems.[1] An article on the film published in Senses of Cinema in January 2022 described it as "absolutely, almost singularly devoted to spectacle" and "a forward-thinking and technological marvel, that far precedes a number of digital artforms that are now dominant in modern media", and describing its style as "proto-vaporwave".[8]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Navarro-Remesal, Victor; Mora-Cantallops, Marçal; Hino, Yoshihiro (23 June 2021). "The Dream of MSX Cinema". ROMchip. 3 (2). Retrieved 2 June 2022.
- ^ Navarro-Remesal, Victor (2019-09-19). "Cine Ludens: 'The Flying Luna Clipper'". Medium. Retrieved 2021-09-01.
- ^ a b Hawkins, Matt (2020-09-13). "Dream Flight Interpreted: The Deconstructed Flying Luna Clipper". Medium. Retrieved 2021-09-01.
- ^ Sephton, Matt (2021-09-03). "A movie made using MSX2 computers: The Flying Luna Clipper". gingerbreadman.com. Retrieved 2022-11-20.
- ^ "Ikko's Theatre". MSXマガジン (in Japanese). Japan. October 1987. p. 33. Retrieved 2022-11-20.
- ^ Shinkai, Koichiro (2003-11-29). "『MSX MAGAZINE 永久保存版 2』 12月3日発売". ASCII.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-09-26.
- ^ Hawkins, Matt (2020-08-18). "The Flying Luna Clipper Is Scheduled To Depart From Wonderville Yet Again". Medium. Retrieved 2022-06-02.
- ^ Cochran, Declan (January 2022). "Smooth Digital Reveries: On Proto-Vaporwave and The Flying Luna Clipper". Senses of Cinema. No. 100. Retrieved 2023-06-02.
External links
[edit]- Full film on YouTube
- The Flying Luna Clipper at IMDb
- Dream Flight Interpreted: The Deconstructed Flying Luna Clipper by Matt Hawkins
- Review: The Flying Luna Clipper, Part 1 and Part 2 by Matt Hawkins
- Review on Apocalypse Later by Hal C. F. Astell
- Review on 1000 Anime by Michael Hewis
- 1987 films
- 1987 anime films
- 1987 computer-animated films
- 1980s avant-garde and experimental films
- English-language Japanese films
- Animated films set in Oceania
- Films set on airplanes
- Japanese avant-garde and experimental films
- Japanese computer-animated films
- Japanese direct-to-video films
- 1980s rediscovered films
- Rediscovered Japanese films
- MSX
- Rediscovered animated films
- Animated films set in Hawaii
- Surrealist films