A Cinematic + Digital Collab About Human Connection

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Some collaborations are unexpected in the best way. “Satellites”, a new exhibition conceived by Danish filmmaker Nicolas Winding Refn and celebrated Japanese game designer Hideo Kojima – is one of them. Presented by Prada with support from Fondazione Prada, the show landed at Prada Aoyama Tokyo with a simple but lofty goal: exploring how two creatives, from opposite sides of the world in different industries, overcome language barriers to connect over time, space, and shared imagination.

When you arrive on the fifth floor of the Herzog & de Meuron–designed Prada Aoyama building, you’re not stepping into a typical gallery. Instead, you enter a meticulously staged, mid-century one-bedroom apartment, complete with a couch, bed, lamp, and rotary telephone – each seemingly pulled from another era, eerily lifelike and strangely timeless all at once. The space feels more like a movie set than an exhibition, setting the tone for what unfolds next.

A modern exhibition room with a large display panel, a pink bed, a vintage nightstand, and two futuristic pod-like chairs against a purple geometric window backdrop

Room with futuristic silver pods on pedestals, each displaying a digital face on screens, pink carpet, green armchair, and geometric patterned curtains

Two futuristic silver kiosks with screens stand on a red carpet in a room with blue geometric-patterned walls and ceiling spotlights

Two futuristic silver kiosks with screens stand on a red carpet in a room with blue geometric-patterned walls and ceiling spotlights

The exhibition is divided into two parts. In the first, Refn and Kojima appear on six retro-futuristic televisions reminiscent of small spaceships with exposed circuit boards, wires, and glowing components. Inside these sculptural screens, the two creatives engage in a slow, contemplative dialogue – one speaking in English, the other in Japanese. Their conversation drifts through themes like friendship, collaboration, technology, creativity, identity, and even mortality. The effect is intimate and reflective, inviting visitors to linger, listen, and interpret at their own pace.

Retro-futuristic bedroom with pink carpet, a bed with a floral bedspread, a vintage nightstand, and two pod-shaped TV screens on stands in front of a geometric-patterned window

Two retro-futuristic television sets display a man's face in blue on screens; a bed with pink bedding and headphones rests in the foreground, all in a pink-carpeted room with patterned walls

Two futuristic silver kiosks with screens displaying faces stand on a red carpeted floor against a blue and purple geometric backdrop.

A retro-style television displays a blue-tinted image of a person’s face, with purple lighting and draped curtains in the background.

A retro-style television displays a blue-tinted image of a person’s face, with purple lighting and draped curtains in the background.

A silver boombox sits on a red carpet next to stacks of cassette tapes in a modern room with large angular windows and a white sofa

The second part of the installation unfolds in a nearby dressing room, where a cassette player sits surrounded by stacks of tapes. Each tape contains a remix of Refn and Kojima’s conversation, blending sound bites, cinematic scores, and alternate versions of their dialogue translated into various languages using AI. Visitors are encouraged to sift through the tapes, piecing together their own version of the exchange.

A portable cassette player with red headphones, two cassette tapes, and a clear case rest on a pink floral-patterned bedspread

Modern room with white built-in seating, a wall-mounted screen, stacks of cassette tapes, a retro radio, and large geometric windows overlooking a nighttime cityscape

At its core, “Satellites” is an exploration of connection between people, mediums, and realities. As the worlds of film and video gamess continue to converge, they hint at a future shared digital dimension – one that reimagines how we create, communicate, and experience together. It’s a poetic look at how creativity and technology might ultimately bring us closer, no matter how far apart we begin.

A modern white lounge with a curved sofa, a wall-mounted screen displaying pop art, a large boombox, and stacks of cassette tapes on a red carpet

Nicolas Winding Refn and Hideo Kojima \\\ Photo: Daisuke Takeda

“Satellites” is on view until August 25, 2025 at Prada Aoyama Tokyo every day from 11am – 8pm. For more information, visit prada.com.

Photography by Yasuhiro Takagi courtesy of Prada.

As the Senior Contributing Editor, Vy Yang is obsessed with discovering ways to live well + with intention through design. She’s probably sharing what she finds over on Instagram stories. You can also find her at vytranyang.com.





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