PULSAR (1990): Katsushi Bōda’s Surreal Gypsum-Animated Breakthrough
In the vast landscape of Japanese stop-motion history, Katsushi Bōda’s Pulsar (1990) stands out as a rare and boundary-pushing experiment—a short film created not with clay or foam, but with gypsum, a material seldom used in animation. Running only a few minutes in length, Pulsar remains one of the most unusual and visually striking independent animations of its era, and a fascinating early work from an artist who would later become one of Japan’s most distinctive stop-motion creators.
The film opens with stark, milky-white forms—block-headed figures, abstract shapes, and mechanical movements—shifting and morphing in rhythmic pulses. Bōda’s use of gypsum gives the puppets a dense, stone-like presence, lending each frame a sculptural quality that contrasts sharply with the pliable, rounded look of traditional clay animation. The result is an uncanny aesthetic that feels both handmade and otherworldly, as though the characters have been carved from chalk or bone and awakened through motion.
According to archival notes and long-circulated fan descriptions, Pulsar was produced as an amateur short and broadcast on the Japanese TV program EBITEN, a show known for featuring emerging filmmakers through its contest showcases. Though the original contest records are difficult to trace, this early exposure placed Bōda on the radar within Japan’s independent animation community at the start of the 1990s.
At the time of Pulsar’s creation, Bōda had only recently begun working as a freelance stop-motion animator. The film’s odd geometry, mechanical timing, and replacement-series technique hint at the signature style he would later refine across commercial projects and original works—including the cult-favorite character Robot Palta. Today, Bōda is recognized as one of Japan’s long-standing professional stop-motion artists, but Pulsar offers a glimpse of the experimental curiosity that fueled his early career.
Visually, the film plays like a kinetic sculpture. Figures wobble with intentional stiffness, shapes rotate and collide, and the harsh brightness of the gypsum creates graphic shadows that emphasize each movement. Where most stop-motion shorts of the era leaned toward character-driven narrative or comedic charm, Pulsar embraces abstraction. Its power lies not in story but in texture, rhythm, and the tactile presence of material.
More than three decades later, Pulsar continues to surface in online animation circles and retrospective screenings of Japanese experimental shorts. Its unusual material choice and hypnotic movement have earned it a strange kind of cult status—a reminder that innovation in stop-motion often emerges when artists challenge the boundaries of the medium through unconventional tools and techniques.
For those passionate about stop-motion history, Pulsar stands as a compelling artifact from the second wave of Japanese independent animation. It is the work of an animator taking risks, exploring texture, and discovering the expressive possibilities of frame-by-frame filmmaking with little more than imagination, patience, and a block of gypsum.
Sources & Hyperlinks
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Pulsar (1990) video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7T1llQSMj-o
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Katsushi Bōda profile (Nishikata Film): https://sites.google.com/site/nishikatajafp/1975-1995-second-wave/bowda-katsushi
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Cartoon Brew archival feature on Pulsar: https://www.cartoonbrew.com/shorts/pulsar-by-katushi-bowda-9191.html
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Pink Tentacle feature: https://pinktentacle.com/2008/11/video-pulsar/
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Letterboxd listing: https://letterboxd.com/film/pulsar-1990/







