| Errors | Missing | Unverified | Supported |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 11 |
Counts based on original analysis categories (not yet classified).
Errors = Critical Errors + Imprecisions
Missing = Critical Omissions + Notable Gaps
In Satoshi Kon’s Millennium Actress (2001), the connections between the main characters are revealed through a narrative that blurs the line between the present day, personal memory, and cinematic history.
The characters know each other through the following specific connections:
In the film's "present day" (late 1990s/early 2000s), Genya is a documentary filmmaker who has tracked down the reclusive Chiyoko to interview her about the history of Ginei Studios. However, they have a significant shared history from decades earlier:
The "Man of the Key" is the central figure of Chiyoko's life, though they only met once in person.
Kyoji serves as the audience surrogate and has no prior connection to Chiyoko.
No oversights detected.
The main characters in Millennium Actress are connected through a mix of professional history and a singular past encounter. Genya Tachibana, the interviewer, was formerly a junior employee at Ginei Studios who idolized Chiyoko Fujiwara and saved her life during an earthquake on the set of her final film—the same event where he found and kept her lost key. The Man of the Key (a dissident painter) met Chiyoko only once when she hid him from the police as a schoolgirl; he gave her the key that drove her entire career. Kyoji Ida, the cameraman, has no prior connection and acts as an audience surrogate. Eiko Shimao and Junichi Otaki were Chiyoko's colleagues; Eiko was a jealous rival who stole Chiyoko's key, and Otaki was a director who married Chiyoko under false pretenses.