Sayonara Jupiter (film)


Bye Bye Jupiter is a 1984 Japanese science fiction film directed by Sakyo Komatsu and Koji Hashimoto. The script was adapted by science-fiction author Sakyo Komatsu from his 1982 novel Sayonara Jupiter.

Plot

The year is 2125.  Earth's population has swelled to 18 billion, while colonies throughout the solar system are home to an additional 5 billion people.  While attempting to drive mankind's legacy beyond the solar system, these outer space colonists are engaged in a search for resources and energy, in an effort to tame the harsh environment of space.
A project to melt the polar regions of Mars uncovers massive ground designs similar to those at Nazca.  Space Linguist Millicent “Millie” Willem, a member of the Mars project, visits Chief Engineer Eiji Honda aboard the Jupiter-orbiting Minerva Base.  Honda is head of the Jupiter Solarization project, and Millie brings news from the Solar System Development Department that the Martian discoveries may delay his work.  Millie describes her theory that aliens visited 100,000 years ago, leaving carvings on the Earth, the Moon and Mars.  The messages hint towards a “key” in Jupiter’s Great Red Spot, and she requests Honda’s help with a research trip.
Giving a tour to a delegation from Earth, Honda describes the JS project.  Due to the colony energy crisis, and the expense of nuclear fusion, a new power source is required.  Jupiter will be turned into a star, thereby providing solar power to all colonies and solving the crisis.  The tour is interrupted by protestors from the “Jupiter Church” group, a musician-led cult opposed to the JS project.  Honda recognizes one of the protestors as Maria, a former lover.
Honda and Millie take a research craft to the Great Red Spot.  Once there, they detect a large rapidly moving sensor anomaly that, according to Honda, was discovered on a previous survey.  It is referred to as the "Jupiter Ghost”. Moving in for a closer look, it is revealed as a 120-kilometer long derelict spacecraft, likely the alien ship referenced in Millie’s Nazca research.  It is also transmitting a message that they can’t decode.
Meanwhile, Captain Kinn meets with a scientist named Doctor Inoue.  Using the spacecraft “Space Arrow,” the pair investigate a region beyond Pluto called “The Comet’s Nest.”  It is a ring of dust and ice particles that releases three comets a year.  The number of comets is decreasing and they intend to understand why.  Forcibly awakened from deep sleep due to a malfunction, they discover a black hole is responsible for the comet reduction, and are killed when their craft is destroyed.  Research on the black hole reveals it is headed towards the Sun.
The only way to save the solar system is to use the JS Project to destroy Jupiter, changing the black hole’s course.  It is a race against time that draws the attention of Jupiter Church operatives, while the mystery of the “Jupiter Ghost” looms in the background.

Cast

Opening Credits

Assistants to the Crew
was released in Japan in 1978, contributing to that country’s science fiction boom.  Its contemporaries included two indigenously-produced films, Toho’s The War in Space and Toei’s Message from Space.  Prior to production on The War in Space, Toho offered a contract to author Sakyo Komatsu to write a science fiction film.  Komatsu had long desired to make a film comparable to. He took further inspiration from NASA’s Voyager mission to Jupiter and the outer planets.  The first draft of “Sayonara Jupiter’s” script was completed in mid-1979.
Simultaneously, Toho registered copyright in the United States.  Komatsu’s script included planned collaboration with the US, due to an estimated shooting time of three hours and the involvement of hundreds of foreign cast members.
In 1980, a serialized novel based on the first screenplay was published in “The Weekly Sankei”.  The shooting script was completed in March 1983.  Tragedy struck when original director Shiro Moritani died in 1984 of stomach cancer. He was replaced by Koji Hashimoto, the assistant director.

Release

Bye Bye Jupiter was released in Japan on 17 March 1984, distributed by Toho. The film was never released theatrically in the United States. It was released on DVD by Discotek Media in both an English-dubbed and Japanese-language format on January 30, 2007.

Reviews

Critical reception for the film by English language critics has been mixed. DVD Talk gave the film a mixed review, writing "Sayonara Jupiter will intrigue and frustrate fans of Japanese fantasy cinema in equal measure, while mainstream American audiences will find it insufferably dull and unoriginal."

Footnotes