K2 Pictures, the Japanese film venture founded by veteran producer Muneyuki Kii, has landed some sizable institutional support. Japanese megabank MUFG, part of the country’s largest financial institution, has joined K2 Pictures’ flagship film production fund as an investor.
K2 Pictures unveiled its fund — dubbed the “K2P Film Fund I” — at the Cannes Film Festival in 2024, with an impressive roster of Japanese directors in attendance as collaborators for the mini-studio’s first project slate, including Palme d’Or winner Hirokazu Kore-eda (Shoplifters), local industry mainstay Takashi Miike (Ichi the Killer) and leading anime studio MAPPA, known for mega-hits like Jujutsu Kaisen 0 and Attack on Titan.
K2 Pictures says the new film fund is scheduled to close at the end of 2025 and that MUBK’s investment will be made in installments over the course of the fundraising period. The new partners declined to share financial information, but a source with knowledge of the arrangement tells The Hollywood Reporter that the initial investment will fall somewhere between $5 million and $10 million.
Although modest in monetary terms, the buy-in from one of Tokyo’s most respected financial institutions is a significant vote of confidence for K2 Pictures’ bold ambitions within Japan’s highly conservative film sector. K2 Pictures was founded by Kii, a 25-year veteran of leading local studio Toei, with a mission to shake up Japan’s sclerotic and risk-averse production committee system for film financing. While that traditional approach spreads risk, it has long been criticized for stifling creative freedom and limiting outside investment in Japanese films.
K2’s alternative model is designed to bring in outside capital and reward creatives more directly. “We are trying to create a new method, transforming [the old] ecosystem into one of film production funds, following an approach used in Hollywood and around the world,” the company said in a statement during its launch. The studio added that it aims to “enrich film production by returning profits traditionally accruing to traditional film companies to both investors and creators”— a profit-sharing approach that lowers the hefty fees and middleman layers typical of Japan’s committee-style financing. K2 structured its fund in collaboration with top Japanese entertainment lawyers and accountants to attract domestic and foreign investors and ensure creatives share in the success of the projects. Industry analysts hailed the initiative as a timely jolt to the system of old-guard cronyism in Japan’s entertainment industry, which is nonetheless drawing growing global interest thanks to the worldwide popularity of Japanese stories and anime.
“With the investment from MUBK, K2 Pictures will not only accelerate the production of new films, but also continue discussions with MUBK to explore innovative financing structures,” the company said in a statement. “Together, we aim to expand the funding options available within the Japanese film industry, while building a framework that enables us to compete on the global stage,” the partners added.
MUFG’s endorsement lends K2 a new level of credibility as it forges ahead with its creator-friendly finance model. The bank’s support is also part of a broader trend of established Japanese companies warming to independent cinema. VFX and post-production giant Imagica Group recently launched a similar initiative, pledging to co-finance five auteur-driven indie films over the next five years (investing up to ¥70 million, or about $500,000, in each) as a way to cultivate fresh filmmaking talent. That program – unveiled at Cannes this year and again backed by Kore-eda – was said to be directly inspired by Imagica’s CEO’s attendance at K2 Pictures’ Cannes press conference the year prior.