In Memoriam

Satoshi Kon, 1963-2010

By August 26, 2010No Comments

K.From Tokyo Godfathers, 2004

I am late in not­ing the great film­maker­’s passing because his death came as such a bolt-from-the-blue shock; I had every com­pla­cent expect­a­tion that he would con­tin­ue cre­at­ing gal­van­ic work until we were both in our respect­ive dot­ages. To say that he will be missed is a massive understatement. 

There are use­ful links, as always, from David Hudson at The Daily Notebook.

No Comments

  • Jason M. says:

    Very sad, and so sud­den, too; pan­cre­at­ic can­cer is a vicious dis­ease. I was­n’t a fan of all of his films, but they were con­sist­ently inter­est­ing, and he just kept get­ting bet­ter with each film.
    He will def­in­itely be missed.
    Does any­one know the status of Dream Machine, his latest (and now final) pro­ject? He’d been work­ing on it for sev­er­al years now; I really hope it’s far enough along that it can be com­pleted posthumously.

  • Rob says:

    I am a fan of all of his films as well as Paranoia Agent (well, I only recom­mend Perfect Blue with a long caveat, espe­cially to women), but I’m really glad you used a still from Tokyo Godfathers, which I think is really under­rated. Millennium Actress is my favor­ite, but I don’t under­stand why people dis­miss Godfathers so read­ily. Sure it’s schmaltzy, but it is a Christmas movie after all.

  • don r. lewis says:

    I’m sure many have already seen it, but they’ve pos­ted Satoshi’s final good­bye here:
    http://www.makikoitoh.com/journal/satoshi-kons-last-words
    Very touch­ing and humble and makes me want to just walk off this job and go spend the day with my wife and child.

  • Jason M. says:

    Don, thanks much for post­ing Satoshi Kon’s good­bye. I had­n’t seen it; it’s very moving.

  • Lord Henry says:

    Second that. Thanks, Don. Thanks, Glenn.

  • Oliver_C says:

    Kon’s “With my heart full of grat­it­ude for everything good in the world, I’ll put down my pen,” fol­lows nobly in the Japanese tra­di­tion of deathbed poems.
    R.I.P.

  • derek says:

    I can­’t say that I’m a fan of a lot of animé, but I liked Kon’s work very much. He had the sens­ib­il­it­ies of a real filmmaker/storyteller and was quite remark­able. His death is simply tra­gic and, I must admit, has hurt. Thanks for post­ing this.

  • gmoke says:

    Tokyo Godfathers” is par­tially based upon the John Wayne west­ern “Three Godfathers.” Satoshi Kon will be missed and it seems from his last let­ter that “Dream Machine” will be fin­ished. May it be so.