![]() ![]() Mima incapacitates Rumi with a mirror shard in self-defense. At wit's end, Rumi's "Mima" personality chases Mima through the city to murder her. She also reveals her motives: she is displeased by Mima retiring from the idol industry and hence, seeks to destroy and replace her in order to 'redeem' her image. Rumi previously developed a second personality who believed herself to be the "real Mima", using information from Mima's confiding in her as the basis for "Mima's Room". Mima is found backstage by Rumi and taken back to Rumi's home, where she wakes up in a room modelled on Mima's own room, only to discover that Rumi was the culprit behind "Mima's Room", the serial murders, and the folie à deux that manipulated and scapegoated Me-Mania. After the rest of the filming staff have left the studio, Me-Mania, acting on e-mailed instructions from "the real Mima" to "eliminate the impostor", attempts to rape and kill her, but Mima knocks him unconscious with a hammer. Mima manages to finish shooting Double Bind, the final scene of which reveals that her character killed and assumed the identity of her sister due to trauma-induced dissociative identity disorder. Mima finds evidence which makes her appear to be the prime suspect, and her mental instability makes her doubt her own memories and innocence, as she recalls brutally murdering pornographer Murano. Several people who had been involved in her acting are murdered. Between the ongoing stresses of filming Double Bind, her lingering regret over leaving CHAM!, her paranoia of being stalked, and her increasing obsession with "Mima's Room", Mima begins to suffer from psychosis: in particular, struggling to distinguish real life from her work in show business, and having repeated apparently unreal sightings of her former self, "the real Mima". ![]() The reflection claims she's "the real Mima". On her way home, she sees her reflection dressed in her former idol outfit. Despite Rumi's objections, Mima accepts the role, although this leaves her severely affected. Mima's first job is a minor role in a television detective drama called Double Bind, however, Tadokoro lobbies the producers of Double Bind, and succeeds in securing Mima a larger part that involves a rape scene. Mima confides in Rumi about "Mima's Room", but is advised to ignore it. During her acting career, she is joined by manager and former pop-idol Rumi Hidaka, and her agent, Tadokoro. ![]() Following directions from a fan letter, Mima discovers a website called "Mima's Room" containing public diary entries written from her perspective, and which has her daily life and thoughts recorded in great detail. She gets stalked by an obsessive fan named Me-Mania, who is upset by her change from a clean-cut image. Mima Kirigoe, member of a J-pop idol group named "CHAM!", decides to leave the group to become a full-time actress. The film deals with the blurring of the line between fantasy and reality, a commonly found theme in Kon's later works, such as Millennium Actress (2001) and Paprika (2006). As she becomes a victim of stalking, gruesome murders take place, and she begins losing her grip on reality. Featuring the voices of Junko Iwao, Rica Matsumoto, Shiho Niiyama, Masaaki Okura, Shinpachi Tsuji and Emiko Furukawa, the plot follows a member of a Japanese idol group who retires from music to pursue an acting career. It is based on the novel Perfect Blue: Complete Metamorphosis ( パーフェクトブルー:完全変態, Pāfekuto Burū: Kanzen Hentai ) by Yoshikazu Takeuchi, with a screenplay written by Sadayuki Murai. And somewhere along the way, things get a little Lovecraftian and tentacles are involved.Īnyway, that’s around 1/3 of what the game is really about.Perfect Blue ( Japanese: パーフェクトブルー, Hepburn: Pāfekuto Burū) is a 1997 Japanese animated psychological thriller film directed by Satoshi Kon. Talk about a time-saver!īut of course, then people start dying, because that’s what they do. Quincy could wash his hands and time-travel while he was at it. In fact, it turned out to be so fancy that there was a time machine in its bathroom. So, he accepted and went because even though the mansion was suspicious and secluded, it was also fancy and had a parteh. One day, Quincy was invited to a fancy parteh at a suspiciously secluded mansion. Rosalene have peculiar jobs: They give people another chance to live their lives, all the way from the very beginning. ![]()
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