The Tokyo International Film Festival has selected the samurai action thriller 11 Rebels as the opening movie of its upcoming 37th edition. The film is directed by Shiraishi Kazuya from a decades-old screenplay by the late, great scriptwriter Kasahara Kazuo (Japanese Yakuza, Battles Without Honor and Humanity). The festival will close with a screening of the French-Italian comedy Marcello Mio, directed by Christophe Honoré and starring European screen royalty Chiara Mastroianni, also serving on Tokyo’s main competition jury this year.
Produced by Japanese studio heavyweight Toei, 11 Rebels has already secured theatrical distribution in North America, where it will look to tap into the resurgent interest in samurai action cinema following the smash success of FX’s Shogun. It stars popular local actors Takayuki Yamada and Taiga Nakano.
“We expect this powerful film to mark a spectacular opening to the festival,” the event’s organizers said in a statement released Thursday.
Set amidst the Boshin War, one of the fiercest battles in Japanese history, 11 Rebels follows a rag-tag samurai squad as they mount a suicide mission to defend a fortress. “When the interests of the Shibata clan, the old shogunate, and the new government collide, their heroic battle begins,” reads the official plot summary.
“This film inherits the tradition of ensemble period dramas that Toei once excelled at, showcasing the top-tier production values in contemporary Japanese cinema in every aspect, from action sequences to set design,” said Tokyo’s programming director, Shozo Ichiyama. “It is also significant that it shines a spotlight on people who have been cast aside throughout history,” he added.
Marcello Mio premiered in competition at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, where it attracted attention with its unique premise, in which French actress Chiara Mastroianni plays a character who turns into her real-life father, Italian screen icon Marcello Mastroianni (La Dolce Vita, 8 1/2). The film also features her real-life mother, Catherine Deneuve.
“This is a unique film that serves as both an homage to Marcello Mastroianni and an experimental piece, in which many French actors, including the lead Chiara Mastroianni, appear under their real names, blurring the boundary between the stars’ true selves and fiction,” said Ichiyama of the selection. “This film is perfect to close this year’s festival, commemorating the 100th anniversary of Marcello Mastroianni’s birth.”
The 2024 Tokyo International Film Festival runs Oct. 28 to Nov. 6. The event’s full lineup will be unveiled on Sept. 25.