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Friday, March 29, 2024

A tale of unbreakable bond between boy and his dog

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Fox Searchlight Pictures and Indian Paintbrush bring together an all-star voice cast in Wes Anderson’s endearing breakthrough stop-motion animation Isle of Dogs that is exclusively screening in Ayala Malls Cinemas.

Featuring the Koyu Rankin, Greta Gerwig, Yoko Ono, Frances McDormand, Live Schreiber, Edward Norton, Bill Murray, Bob Balaban, Jeff Goldblum, Bryan Cranston, Scarlett Johansson, F. Murray Abraham, Tilda Swinton and Harvey Keitel as voice talents, Isle of Dogs is a grand adventure set in a near-future Japan in the grips of a canine crisis and mass anti-dog hysteria where a boy tries to find and rescue his dog in a place known as Trash Island.  

The story, with its chatty canines, furred femmes fatales, a boy aviator, an intrepid school reporter, mutant viruses, mythical isle and step-by-step unraveling of a big human mistake, developed over time and innumerable cups of tea. 

Taking the primary human role of Atari Kobayashi, the heartbroken Japanese boy who makes a heroic flight search for his lost dog, is Koyu Rankin, a young Canadian actor who is bilingual in Japanese and English.  

Only 8 years old at the time of recording, Rankin makes his feature film debut in the role.

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 Wes Anderson’s new film ‘Isle of Dogs’ is a stop-motion animation with canine heroes set in a near-future Japan. 

“Atari’s dog was basically his best friend. Spots are all he ever had, and since he is an orphan, Spots was like his brother, basically.  He’s determined to find him, so that’s why he takes the plane and runs away from home,” says Rankin of why Atari risks everything to search for Spots.

With its semi-fictional Japanese setting, its construction out of comic book-like chapters and its intercut themes of nature, heroism, technology, rescue and honor, perhaps it was only natural that the film would also reverberate with echoes of Japanese pop culture and some of Japan’s greatest film directors, from Yasujiro Ozu to Kurosawa to Seijun Suzuki, as well as the Japanese monster films of the ‘50s and ‘60s, with their climactic disasters.  

“We think of it as referring to a whole range of Japanese filmmakers and Japanese culture, but Kurosawa is the main movie influence,” says Anderson. 

While the sheer number of individual moving pieces, physical and thematic, that make up the Isle of Dogs might be staggering, the paradox is that the prevailing core of the film is one of the most timelessly simple relationships on earth.  

“No matter what is going on visually, at heart this is an adventure film about a boy and his dog,” sums up storyboard artist Jay Clarke.

From 20th Century Fox, Isle of Dogs started screening on May 30 exclusively at Ayala Malls Cinemas: Glorietta 4, Trinoma, Market!Market!, Cloverleaf Balintawak and Fairview Terraces.

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