Japanese movie crew will film at KSC, other Brevard sites in June

'Space Brothers' will include about 20 minutes of local footage

Anthony Realmuto, second from left, and David Cox, right, shoot footage at Kennedy Space Center for “Space Brothers,” a Japanese movie spun off from the popular manga series of comic books. / For FLORIDA TODAY
Written by
DAVE BERMAN
FLORIDA TODAY

 CAPE CANAVERAL — A Japanese film crew will be at Kennedy Space Center and other Space Coast locales in June to film scenes for a full-length action movie that already is drawing buzz in Asia.

 “Space Brothers” will put a popular manga series of comic books on film for the first time. The Japanese crew was in Brevard County in February and April, scouting out locations and doing secondary filming. They will be back in June to film with the stars of “Space Brothers” and a group of local acting extras.

 

“It’s been great,” said Yoshi Hosoya, who is the U.S.-based producer for the project. “People have been very helpful.”

 

Jim Lewis, president of Cape Canaveral-based Communications Concepts Inc., the local production company helping coordinate work on the film, said the film plot for “Space Brothers: Let’s Go to Space, Brother” is based loosely on several of the dozen “Space Brothers” books that have been published.

 

The live-action film will tell the story of two brothers who make a pact when they are ages 12 and 9 to become astronauts. The younger brother, Hibito Namba, reaches the goal, and in 2025 is about to become the first Japanese astronaut to land on the moon. But his older brother, Mutta Namba, becomes an autoworker who still lives with his parents when he is in his 20s. He gets fired from his factory job after an argument, then picks up on his dream to become an astronaut.

 

The comic book characters have spun off action figures and other collectibles.

 

Shaun Sorenson, assistant manager of Famous Faces & Funnies Comics and Toys in West Melbourne, said he would expect the “Space Brothers” movie to do well in Japan, considering it is a long-running series in print there.

 

He said manga is much more popular in Japan than U.S.-produced comic books are in the United States, and is the basis for many Japanese movies and television shows. It is particularly popular in the 18-24 age group.

 

The “Space Brothers” film will be produced and distributed by Toho Studios, among the largest film companies in Japan, and perhaps best-known in the United States for its series of Godzilla movies. Toho said it beat out more than 20 other movie studios and television stations for the project.

 

Hosoya said the 1½- to 2-hour film will include 15 to 20 minutes of scenes shot in Brevard County. Lewis said other filming is being done in Japan, both on location and in a studio.

 

Lewis said the film company has lined up roughly 20 local acting extras and a local technical crew of 26 to supplement its Japanese actors and Japanese crew of 20 that will be here in June for six days of shooting, plus an additional week of preparation and follow-up work.

 

Lewis credits Space Coast Film Commissioner Bonnie King with helping capture the project for the area.

 

It will qualify for special state tax incentives for filmmakers producing movies in Florida, including bonus incentives because “Space Brothers” is a family-friendly film, Lewis said.

 

Release in Japan is expected next spring.

The live-action film will tell the story of two brothers who make a pact when they are ages 12 and 9 to become astronauts. The younger brother, Hibito Namba, reaches the goal, and in 2025 is about to become the first Japanese astronaut to land on the moon. But his older brother, Mutta Namba, becomes an autoworker who still lives with his parents when he is in his 20s. He gets fired from his factory job after an argument, then picks up on his dream to become an astronaut.

The live-action film will tell the story of two brothers who make a pact when they are ages 12 and 9 to become astronauts. The younger brother, Hibito Namba, reaches the goal, and in 2025 is about to become the first Japanese astronaut to land on the moon. But his older brother, Mutta Namba, becomes an autoworker who still lives with his parents when he is in his 20s. He gets fired from his factory job after an argument, then picks up on his dream to become an astronaut.

Film locations

Brevard County sites where “Space Brothers” will be filmed in June include Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, a baseball field in Cape Canaveral, a residential area and a park in Cocoa Beach, and a swampy area of Cocoa near the St. Johns River. Some filming already has taken place at KSC and Titusville’s Space View Park.

Casting the dog
im Lewis, president of Communications Concepts Inc. of Cape Canaveral, said one of the challenges of filming “Space Brothers” in Brevard County has been casting a dog to play Apo, the pet pug of one of the main characters. Lewis is working with an animal casting specialist, trying to line up a local pug that matches the size and coloring of the pug that will be in the scenes being shot in Japan. They’ve gone through five candidates so far, and may cast two dogs — one for the wide shots, the other for close-ups.

Filed under  //  Brevard   KSC   NASA   brothers   canaveral   crew   dog   escapes   film   florida   japan   locations   movie   space  
Posted by Bryan Hays 

Monkey netted after escape from Ueno Zoo | The Japan Times Online

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A wild Japanese macaque that surprised Ueno Zoo by escaping Sunday was recaptured about six hours later after being spotted in the vicinity of a nearby restaurant. Born to be: Wild Japanese macaques captured last year in Aomori Prefecture are shown to the public for the first time Sunday at Ueno Zoo in Taito Ward, Tokyo. KYODO PHOTO The monkey, part of a group of 23 saved from culling in Aomori Prefecture, was captured with a net in a stairwell leading to the basement of the restaurant in Tokyo's Taito Ward. "Unlike monkeys that have grown up in zoos, these are not used to humans," an official said. "The monkey may have become overly excited by its new environment." Japanese macaques have been designated a national treasure. The group at the zoo grew up wild on Shimokita Peninsula and were being publicly displayed for the first time Sunday. Ueno Zoo received the monkeys from Mutsu last April after learning of the city's plan to trim the growing population.

Filed under  //  escapes   japan   monkey   tokyo   ueno   zoo  
Posted by Bryan Hays