Movie Paprika -

Satoshi Kon died in 2010 at the age of 46, leaving behind only four feature films. Paprika was his final gift to the world—a warning about the dangers of technology merging with the psyche, and a celebration of the human imagination’s ability to never be contained.

A surprising layer of is its gender politics. Dr. Atsuko Chiba is a serious woman in a male-dominated field. She is dismissed by her male colleagues as cold and rigid. Her dream avatar, Paprika, is everything she is not: flirtatious, spontaneous, and free. The film asks a provocative question: Is the "real" self the one who works in the lab, or the one who dances on a tightrope between nightmares? Movie Paprika

However, the device is stolen before it is officially released. The villain—who is quickly revealed to be Dr. Morio Osanai, a wheelchair-bound genius with a messianic complex—begins using the DC Mini to invade the dreams of the scientists working on the project. The result is a "Dream Insurrection": victims fall asleep in the real world but remain trapped in a shared dream, their psyches merging with the waking world. Satoshi Kon died in 2010 at the age