964 Pinocchio was created on a low-budget using
guerrilla-filmmaking techniques, with scenes filmed in
Tokyo utilizing reactions from real crowds of people. The team had to get permits for most of the scenes filmed on the streets. The famous scene of Pinocchio parting a crowd of people while running through Tokyo was shot in
Shinjuku in a pedestrianised area. According to Fukui, it was one of the few scenes filmed in the city without a permit due to the crew being legally bound to shoot off the road. After working on
Tetsuo the Iron Man as an assistant director, Fukui was encouraged by director friend
Sogo Ishii to direct a feature. After working on special effects and editing for Ishii's 1989 short film,
The Master of Shiatsu, Shozin would finally have an idea for a story which would later become known to be
964 Pinocchio. According to an interview with Fukui on the 88 Films
Blu-ray release, the script was written while he was
homeless. The actress who played Himiko was initially just a crew member until she was cast a week before filming started. She is credited in the movie as Onn-chan, which was a pseudonym created for the film.
964 Pinocchio was the only movie she ever acted in. The actor who played Pinocchio, Haji Suzuki, had a personal life with his parents being farmers, he had returned to his hometown, got married, and has since taken over the farm. The smoke bombs used during filming were quoted to have "smelled very bad" and were difficult to control. Following the release of
964 Pinocchio, most of the actors quit all their involvement, indicating they felt that they had completed their performance. To promote the film prior to its release, Fukui had flyers and posters put up at music venues, movie theatres, galleries, restaurants and event spaces. He even spray-painted promotional material on a car and drove it around the city. Fukui has cited
Blade Runner, Possession and
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre as big influences on his work. == Release ==