The producer behind Edward Yang's Yi Yi calls for renewed Asian filmmaking partnerships amid theatrical cinema crisis

Kawai Shinya (provided by Emu Films)
Edward Yang's Yi Yi won Best Director at the
2000 Cannes Film Festival and is now regarded as a 21st-century masterpiece.
Behind it stands Japanese producer Kawai Shinya (河井真也, 68), who spearheaded the late-1990s
"Y2K Project" uniting Asia's finest directors for global markets.
Visiting Korea for the film's 4K remastered re-release, Kawai warned that
"if we continue to neglect this, theaters will disappear," calling
for Asian creators to reunite. His cross-border collaboration model from 25
years ago is gaining renewed urgency.
Kawai Shinya joined Fuji TV in 1981 and
debuted as a film producer in 1987, producing landmark works including Iwai
Shunji's Love Letter (1995) and Ring (1998). In 1987, he established Cineswitch
Ginza theater to screen foreign films, demonstrating early global orientation.
Japan's film industry was then 99% domestically focused. His diagnosis:
"Films that only work in Japan may be entertaining, but a year later,
almost no one remembers them."
In the late 1990s, Kawai launched the
"Y2K Project" to create films about Asian values for global
audiences. To find partners, he attended the Busan International Film
Festival's PPP (Pusan Promotion Plan, now Asian Project Market) in 1999. Launched
in 1998, PPP was Asia's first co-production platform connecting producers and
investors. Kawai promised festival officials that "when the project is
completed, we will present it at BIFF."
Through the Y2K Project, Kawai met Edward
Yang (1947-2007), Taiwan New Wave master. Their collaboration began with
"Let's go to Cannes together." Investors were skeptical about
Japanese funding for a non-Japanese director, but Kawai persuaded them:
"If we create films that work overseas, it will become a promising
industry." Yang's initial pitch was a thriller titled Scissors with Jin
Chengwu as lead. When Jin declined, Yang pivoted and completed the Yi Yi
screenplay about an ordinary Taipei family in two weeks.
Kawai initially worried about this quiet
family drama: "Can this film get into Cannes?" Yang replied
confidently, "It can even win the Palme d'Or." Kawai had doubts about
the nearly three-hour traditional narrative, but trusted Yang's commitment.
Shot from April to August 1999, Yi Yi won Best Director at the 2000 Cannes Film
Festival, then met Korean audiences at BIFF.
Kawai's Korean connection began in 1999 when
he proposed a co-production with director Hur Jin-ho within 15 minutes of
meeting. Though abandoned when actress Shim Eun-ha retired, the screenplay
became One Fine Spring Day. He later co-produced Rikidozan (2004) as a
Korean-Japanese partnership. Having experienced Korean sets, he observed:
"All staff unite to realize the director's vision. Korean directors are
more insistent about their shots than Japanese directors." He praised
Korean cinema's strengths: "Korea aims for cinema-worthy films. While
actors and directors are excellent, screenwriting is truly outstanding."
Yi Yi became a 21st-century classic,
ranking in BBC's (8th, 2016), The Guardian's (26th, 2019), and Rolling Stone's
(8th, 2025) best-of-century lists. In Korea, it has been released three
times—2000, 2018, and 2025. The 2025 4K restoration, selected for Cannes
Classics, was authorized by Kawai, who personally oversaw color grading. It
surpassed 10,000 viewers within five days of re-release.
Kawai's conviction: "Working with
foreign staff with different techniques and perspectives allows for films
people working only in Japan could never imagine." During this Korea
visit, he stated, "It's time for Asian creators to unite again." With
theaters declining worldwide due to streaming, he believes Asian filmmakers'
reunion could provide a breakthrough.
Yi Yi demonstrated that Asian
co-productions can achieve both artistic and commercial success. Japanese
capital, Taiwanese talent, and Korean festival support created a Cannes winner
rediscovered globally 25 years later—impossible through single-nation systems.
BIFF's PPP (now Asian Project Market) has become Asia's largest co-production
platform, with numerous completed projects receiving international acclaim.
Kawai is preparing Korean-Japanese
collaborations, Japanese-Italian co-productions, and Iwai Shunji's next
work—all for theatrical release. His insistence on theaters stems from
commitment to preserving cinema's essential experience: "Yi Yi is one of
the works you must see to answer: What is cinema's appeal?" This reflects
conviction about experiences possible only in theaters.
Kawai's assessment carries weight:
"Screenwriting is exceptional" confirms Korean cinema's
competitiveness in narrative structure. "Directors are insistent about
their shots" reveals creative intensity. These strengths represent Korea's
unique contribution to international collaborations. Japan offers technical
expertise and investment, Taiwan distinctive aesthetics. Combined, they create
works impossible for single nations.
Yi Yi's 25-year rediscovery proves the
value of classics. Kawai notes: "Just as novels become classics after 100
years, cinema has its classics too." In an era of rapidly consumed
content, true success means creating works that retain meaning. Korean
appreciation for Yi Yi and Love Letter reflects this enduring value.
Kawai's message isn't nostalgic—it's
urgent. As theatrical cinema faces existential crisis, Asian filmmakers must
collaborate across borders again. His late-1990s model remains valid, now more
than ever. For theatrical cinema to survive streaming dominance, works must
target pan-Asian and global audiences through cross-border collaboration, not
closed systems. As Yi Yi proved 25 years ago, the time has come for Asian
filmmakers to unite again.
Sources
• The Dong-A Ilbo, "Asian Creators Should Unite Again... If We
Keep Neglecting This, Theaters Will Disappear", 2026.01.15
• Kyunghyang Shinmun, "'Yi Yi' is a Textbook of Cinema: How the
21st-Century Classic Began", 2026.01.13