The phrase âtiming is everythingâ couldnât relate better to the festivalâs evening with SHÅGUNâs showrunners Justin Marks and Rachel Kondo, who are this yearâs HIFF44 Career Achievement Award honorees.  Make sure to book your tickets for SHÅGUN â AN EVENING WITH SHOWRUNNERS JUSTIN MARKS & RACHEL KONDO, scheduled for October 11th at Consolidated Kahala. It is fortuitous timing for HIFF to celebrate this groundbreaking series and its showrunners, especially coming on the heels of its racking up a record 18 Emmy awards, including four that were part of Sundayâs gala event.
Marks and Kondoâwho are married with two childrenâare residents of Maui, and Kondo was born on the Valley Isle, raised in Pukalani and attended Maui High School. She is also a nationally recognized fiction writer, while husband Marks Is a veteran television and film writer with credits that include an Oscar nomination for co-writing TOP GUN: MAVERICK.
The two of them have hit it out of the park with their re-adaptation of the James Clavell novel, bringing into sharp focus the Japanese characters that perhaps were âexoticizedâ in the original television series back in 1980. That sensitivity to culture and historical detail, helped in large part with the support of a Japanese production crew, had audiences and critics alike raving about the 10-episode series (with two more seasons already planned).
On Sunday, SHÅGUN won Emmys for outstanding drama series, Hiroyuki Sanada and Anna Sawai for lead actor and actress, and director Frederick E.O. Toye, who helmed four of its episodes.
The Hollywood Reporter points out that the award recognition is âa major moment for Asian representation and non-English-language television. SHÅGUN is the very first majority non-English-language series to win in the outstanding drama series category (Netflixâs Korean sensation SQUID GAME was nominated in 2022 but lost to HBOâs SUCCESSION), and Sanada and Sawai are the first Japanese actors ever to win Emmys.â
Previous to Sundayâs gala ceremony, SHÅGUN already had made history with 14 Creative Arts Emmy wins the previous weekend, the most by a show in a single season. It practically swept all technical categories, with episode-specific wins for outstanding cinematography, visual and sound editing, and period costumes, hairstyling and makeup.
It also won overall Creative Arts Emmys for main title design, outstanding casting for a drama series, and outstanding short form nonfiction or reality series for THE MAKING OF SHÅGUN.
To circle back to our festivalâs event with Marks and Kondo, the very first episode of SHÅGUN, âAnjinâ will be shown on the big screen in all its splendor that will precede their remarks. âAnjinâ won Creative Emmys for outstanding production design and an outstanding guest actor award for Nestor Carbonell. (Carbonell, coincidentally enough, was a guest actor during the third season of LOST, shot in Hawaiâi, whose own documentary GETTING LOST is part of the HIFF slate of films this year.)