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The World of Kanako 渇き (2014)

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The World of Kanako      The World of Kanako Film Poster 2

Japanese Title:

Romaji: Kawaki

Running Time: 113 mins

Release Date: June 27th, 2014 (Japan)

Seen at the BFI London Film Festival

Director: Tetsuya Nakashima

Writer: Tetsuya Nakashima (Screenplay), Akio Fukamachi (Novel),

Starring: Koji Yakusho, Nana Komatsu, Satoshi Tsumabuki, Joe Odagiri, Fumi Nikaido, Ai Hashimoto, Miki Nakatani, Jun Kunimura, Asuka Kurosawa,

Website

On paper The World of Kanako sounds incredibly formulaic: based on a novel by Akio Fukamachi, it’s about an ex-cop and bad father who goes in search of his missing daughter who may be involved in a world of trouble. The World of Kanako is anything but formulaic. It resists falling into cliché by being a visually and aurally staggering assault on the senses so meticulously designed, written, and directed by Tetsuya Nakashima, and acted out by big name actors given the chance to play evil characters that it makes an old plot feel new and exciting.

The film begins with the quote:

An era is only confused by a confused mind – Jean Cocteau

This brilliantly sums up what the characters’ in the film are going through. Everybody is confused about what they know about others, especially their nearest and dearest and, most of all, the siren Kanako, the one everybody is looking for and the big enigma at the heart of the film. None, however, are more confused than lead character Akikazu Fujishima (Yakusho), an ex-police detective bounced out of the force for committing a brutal beating on a civilian, divorced and estranged from his wife Kiriko (Kurosawa) and their daughter Kanako (Komatsu) and caught in a cycle of anger and bitterness. When not working menial part time jobs, he spends his days swilling himself in beer and popping a plethora of prescription pills prescribed by his psychiatrist to keep a mean temper in check.

His life gets a lot more complicated when three people turn up dead at the convenience store he works at as a security guard, two with links to a yakuza group. Then his wife calls to ask for his help tracking down their daughter Kanako who has been missing for eight days. Kiriko would have rather avoided calling him but after finding drugs in Kanako’s room she hopes that Akikzau can sort everything out quietly without getting the police involved. He is soon on the case, piecing together an image of his daughter’s social life. The more he finds the more he discovers that his daughter was not an angel and that others are also trying to track her down…

The World of Kanako Kanako Komatsu

The World of Kanako is a manual detailing every parent’s worst nightmare about what can happen to their children as it touches on a number of real life crises and issues like drugs and gangsters and then cranks up the action to extreme levels.  What makes this mainstream star packed movie stand outThe World of Kanako On Set in the Snow is the depth and breadth of darkness that surrounds everyone and the extent to which both director and cast are willing to show it through the extreme behaviour of a set of really nasty characters who quite willingly torture, maim and betray each other. There are few decent people in the film and a lot of horrifying scenes to get through. As a result, it has drawn massive controversy back in its native Japan, a county which has a film industry increasingly releasing safe adaptations of novels and TV shows, and do you know what? Good. The violence and grit and directorial finesse here is shock therapy for the industry, it is stunning and viscerally effective, a horror film rooted in everyday life and the reality in Japan it shows and exaggerates makes it all the more terrifying. As much as the violence will get highlighted, brilliantly, the film grips viewer’s attention intellectually because all of what happens on screen, every editing technique and the way the script unfolds, provides a fascinating take on themes such as our inability to truly know what is going on in the mind of another person and what we are capable of. Through Akikazu’s investigation and the recollections of others we delve into a film that plays with secrets, memory, and perspectives in the most extreme ways possible.

Do you even know anything about Kanako?

Right from the start, Nakashima drops the viewer into a maelstrom of multiple scenes from multiple perspectives at multiple places in the film’s year-long timeline which is bookended by Christmas at the start and finish.

Through a series of fast cross cuts full of different visual and aural styles. A peaceful midnight mass with hymns sung by respectable families is contrasted with salacious and seedy images of clubs full of scantily clad girls and guys who deal out drugs and violence. In this short sequence Nakashima teases mysterious and intriguing backstories and character introductions at a dizzying pace to disorientate and intrigue viewers with contradictory emotions. The traditional thriller narrative is made alien through this overwhelming sensory overload. It is as if the script has been torn up and scattered and pasted back together by a Beat Poet. The film continues in this vein by expanding upon and interweaving the seemingly too numerous scenes and stitching them together to create an elegantly unfolding story told from multiple perspectives from the main players who are soon shoved together as Kanako’s world comes into focus.

As well as constantly disturbing audience expectations about the direction of the narrative, this allows Nakashima to work on another layer as he utilises every editing and directing tool to constantly influence and undermine our opinions of events and display the different emotions and perspectives of each person which reveals the truth of the enigma at the centre of the film, Kanako, and allows the story to delve deep into the darker aspects of modern Japan.

Our first encounters with Kanako are initiated through Akikazu’s witness testimonies, flashbacks from his blurred recollections and a bullied schoolboy’s daydreams and treasured interactions with her. She is beautiful. She is popular. She is angelic.

Genki-The-World-of-Kanako-Nana-Komatsu-The-Most-Beautiful-Creature

These early scenes are shot in gentle, dreamlike ways, suffused in calming colours like white and blue, the camera holding firm and the editing is calmer than at any other point in the film, the takes are a little longer and majestic. Here, Kanako is a beauty glimpsed from afar and idolised by those around her. She is the luminous presence at the edge of the darkness these guys are going through. She tells her father she loves him and offers sympathy to the boy after watching him take brutal and humiliating beatings. She is a heavenly being that has descended to offer care and kind words to the wounded and persecuted.

Genki-The-World-of-Kanako-Victim-Written-All-Over-Him

It is easy to see how people can love such a person who offers succour but as the movie progresses and the scenes play out and are explored there is something off about her behaviour. She seems amused by the bullying, standing by and watching, a sardonic smile teasing her lips as she pokes and prods the boy’s wounds. That, “I love you,” she whispers to her father is a little too leading, their proximity and the positions of their bodies a little too intimate. Is Kanako really as innocent as many people think?

The World of Kanako I Love You

As more characters are introduced, the picture surrounding Kanako becomes murkier as contradictory views and scenes play out and so the visuals change. The costumes Kanako is dressed in stop being respectable and become shocking, daring and she wears garish make-up. The settings and visual styles become markedly different, schoolsThe World of Kanako - Kanako Herself are replaced by clubs, clean cut beautiful students are replaced by gangsters and addicts taking drugs, the classical music and twee guitar strumming of daydreams becomes hyperactive J-Pop, the colour schemes and set-designs becoming more aggressive as white is replaced by oranges, reds and psychedelic colours with contrasted with blackness, the editing faster and blurrier. All the while, Kanako remains hard to read. Just what is going on with her?

The man holding the investigation together is Akikazu.

Sometimes I don’t have a clue what she’s really thinking

Akikazu is a singular protagonist. If his daughter Kanako is a spectre who haunts everyone and gradually materialises over the course of the story, Akikazu is the engine of destruction that powers the narrative and brings everything to light.

Genki-The-World-of-Kanako-Yakusho-and-Odagiri-Fight

Although he initially fulfils the archetype of being an old school cop and bad father, slightly hapless and someone who we would normally root for, from the first shot of him to the last he proves himself to be a violent b*stard and becomes a beast we should despise rather than empathise with as is normally the case with films.

Akikazu doesn’t quite follow the trail of the mystery, more like he barrels through, taking beatings and meting out violence himself. His modus operandi is confrontation and subjugation, shouting at and slapping people around to get what he wants, quick to bully women and children and not afraid of men either. After quickly teaming up with his wife, we see exactly why she left him as he goes on to exercise verbal and physical violence against her that will immediately set the audience against him, a feeling emphasised when we realise that whatever rage he has shown is not some recent manifestation but an intrinsic part of his character. This is revealed as routine in a heart-breaking moment where Kiriko stoically accepts this as the price for getting her daughter back falls back into a well-practiced ways of applying make-up to cover her wounds.

There are flashes of the sly old detective shown in Akikazu throughout the movie. He outfoxes seemingly smarter opponents and he shows his powers of deduction and evidence gathering as he searches through his daughter’s possessions and spotting clues to changing behaviour, questions her friends and tracks down sources of information, but his violence always hampers him, it is hardwired into his character and makes him a unique and compelling protagonist to follow even if we hate him.

Genki-The-World-of-Kanako-Yakusho-and-Takahashi-Interview

Yakusho plays him with great gusto. Through massive amounts of physical energy and movement, his costumes and behaviour, he morphs from the genial everyman that his fans will know and reveals his dark side in a searing performance that terrifies and intrigues. Hair frazzled, his sweat covered face contorted by anger or ferocious laughter over the mayhem he causes, eyes wild with emotion, he walks around dressed like a yakuza with an aloha shirt and a crumpled white suit which gets increasingly bloodied as he takes beatings and deals them out all with a funk music accompaniment like the old-school detective he is.

Crucially for the film Yakusho conveys that underneath all that The World of Kanako Fightviolence is the real sense of seething, unexplainable and all-consuming rage driven by feelings for a daughter he doesn’t know and emotions that he himself struggles to understand that forces him to continue his journey with his relentless attitude. It’s not without reason that the most dominant colour in his part of the film is blood red, the colour design emphasising his inner rage, the shaky camera-work emphasising his lack of a grip on his anger because violence is how he communicates as he hurts men, women and children, and performs evil acts. It’s exciting and scary to watch because the film can go anywhere with a protagonist like that.

As evil as he can be, seeing him lose his mind so often becomes blackly humorous because the violence rises to such absurd operatic levels as he stumbles from one bad situation into another with The World of Kanako Odagiripunches soon trumped by knives, guns, and cars as he and his enemies battle each other. Each confrontation becomes an unexpected treat of black comedy and blood-letting that leavened the serious nature of the film. This is a testament to Koji Yakusho’s acting because I kept watching and even enjoying the action because of his ability to be monstrous and funny.

As long as I am alive, she is alive

That Koji Yakusho agreed to do the work is amazing because it is a controversial role. As Tetsuya Nakashima revealed during the post-movie Q&A, actors make their money from ads and playing bad The World of Kanako Akikazu Fusjishimacharacters in controversial film may hurt their chances but it seems that Koji and the rest of the cast were up for playing these roles where they could be evil.  Amusingly, Nakashima revealed that Koji destroys things he is paid to advertise! Everyone is strong and there are some who use the script’s battery of nasty characters to offer heightened performances that go beyond the convincing and, much like Koji Yakusho, achieve a balance between the serious and even the playful with their absurd and mannered actions. Jo Odagiri is pitch-black horrific as a brutal killer but his passion for violence leads to some amusing scenes. Fumi Nikaido has a small role but is especially tragic as a drug user respectively.

There are few likeable characters in the film. Nakashima paints humanity as a cesspool but there are some characters who bring a little light relief from the darkness like Satoshi Tsumabuki’s detective Asai, the younger and smug foil to Akikazu’s old and brutish detective.

Genki-The-World-of-Kanako-Tsumabuki-Sempai-Scene

He is a dandyish, slick, slightly camp presence skipping around crime scenes, delicately eating desserts surrounded by a coterie of detectives and always talking to Yakusho, his senior, with a condescending tone. “Seeeeemmmmpaaaaiiii,” he calls out to his former superior, mocking Akikazu’s predicament. Behind his lovely smile and seemingly honest facade is a sly fox who wants Akikazu to cause damage and self-destruct so he can pick up the pieces.

The World of Kanako Tsumabuki

Satoshi Tsumabuki has rocketed to near the top of my favourite actors after this performance.

New actress Nana Komatsu is a revelation as Kanako. Despite being surrounded by more experienced actresses, much like her character, Komatsu is able to wrap all the attention around her with her mere presence. She has a background in modelling and although this is her first role she plays the character perfectly precisely because she is new and hard to read. She has the beauty, confidence, and style to dictate scenes and be the girl others go crazy over but there is also something enigmatic about her which makes her character work as the bewildering presence, a black hole that sucks others in.

The World of Kanako Shocking Truth Komatsu

The World of Kanako is a thriller cranked up to the extreme in style and performances. Visually complex and awe-inspiring with actors and actresses willing to take risks by performing dangerous roles and playing monsters doing horrific things. It will sicken and horrify and that is the point as it plays out like a horror story to show the perils and pitfalls of modern society and people caught in a confusing destructive darkness. It is an experience worth having just to see how far one of Japan’s leading auteurs is willing to go to deliver a shocking story.

The World of Kanako on Set

The World of Kanako is a searing tour-de-force of acting, direction and design that takes something old and through heightened violence and shocks turns it into something truly, searingly, gut-churningly new, a film that uses the oft-explored disconnect between parents and children to create a modern day crime thriller of operatic proportions that shocks and entertains (even when it’s morally best not to enjoy the proceedings). I don’t know if my review conveyed that but I really enjoyed it all. I am so glad I saw this in a cinema because having it blown up on the big screen made the impact even harder!

4.5/5

So yeah, I really enjoyed watching the film and I am glad I saw it in a cinema. Even though I have written about it at length I have given little about the film away and you can enjoy it when it gets a release next year courtesy of Third Window Films.

Here are images I didn’t get the chance to put in the main body of the review. More Tsumabuki:

The World of Kanako Fumi Nikaido The World of Kanako Ai Hashimoto The World of Kanako Miki Nakatani The World of Kanako Satoshi Tsumabuki The World of Kanako Satoshi Tsumabuki On Form The World of Kanako Film Poster

Also, what a great poster at the top of the review!

Here are some of the tracks played in the film:

I also got to meet the director and we chatted via the interpreter about the casting of Nana Komatsu. I asked Tetsuya Nakashima why he cast her instead of a more established actress like Ai Hashimoto and Fumi Nikaido. Here’s part of his reply:

Nana Komatsu had never acted before. She’s actually a fashion model but I wanted someone who could wear clothes and create a scene. There are many actresses I could have asked but I wanted someone who wouldn’t think too much about the role because it was very illusive and I did not want someone who would project too much to the audience.



Pale Moon / Paper Moon, As the Gods Will, Crimson Pledge, Black Butler: Book of Murder, Expelled from Paradise, Peeping Life WE ARE THE HERO, Tanikawa-san, Please Create One Poem and Other Japanese Film Trailers

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Hello dear audience!

I hope you’re all in good health.
This has been a pretty movie filled week for me and I feel somewhat The World of Kanako Tsumabukienergised because of it. I started the week with What Time is it Over There? and Rampo Noir and that was quickly followed by Nightcrawler and at the end of the week I watched a selection of Koji Shiraishi films like Occult and Cult. By the time this post goes live I’ll be in work and after that I am heading to my favourite cinema with an acquaintance from Japan to watch the British film, Mr Turner.

I mentioned my need to crank up the speed with which I review things and I can confirm that I have two film reviews completed with one more almost finished and they all come in at less than one thousand words. You’ll have to be the judge as to whether they are any good or not ;)

The review I posted this week was for The World of Kanako, a stellar film I had a blast watching because it was intellectually and emotionally moving, full of fine performances from many great young and established actors and a visual tour de force. I highly recommend the film which gets a western release courtesy of Third Window Films next year.

What’s released in Tokyo this weekend?

Pale Moon / Paper Moon   Paper Moon Film Poster

Japanese Title: 紙の月

Romaji: Kami no Tsuki

Release Date: November 15th,  2014

Running Time: 126 mins.

Director: Daihachi Yoshida

Writer: Hayafune Utaeko (Screenplay), Mitsuyo Kakuta (Original Novel)

Starring: Rie Miyazawa, Sosuke Ikematsu, Yuko Oshima, Seiichi Tanabe, Yoshimasa Kindo, Satomi Kobayashi, Renji Ishibashi,

Paper Moon is the literal title but it seems that the international one is Pale Moon. When I think of Paper Moon, I think of the 1973 American title. The Japanese version is based on a novel by Mitsuyo Kakuta which was then adapted into a dorama. The film won the audience award at the recent Tokyo International Film Festival and is directed by Daihachi Yoshida who was last reviewed in this blog for brilliantly bringing The Kirishima Thing (2012) to life. It stars Rie Miyazawa as an adulterous housewife involved with a student and I sung her praises for her performance in The Twilight Samurai. I think this looks really good and I love the poster.

Rika Umezawa (Miyazawa) lives a dull life. Despite being a highly rated employee with her clients at a bank, a seemingly loveless marriage with her husband leaves her feeling a profound sense of emptiness and this leads her to embark on an affair with a young man named Kota (Ikematsu), a university student. Spending money on him is a costly endeavour what with hotel suites and fancy restaurants and so she begins to embezzle money from her clients and neglect her husband as she becomes addicted to her illicit affair…

Website

 

As the Gods Will       As the Gods Will Film Poster 1

Japanese: 神さまの言うとお

Romaji: Kami-sama no Iutoori

Release Date: November 15th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 83 mins.

Director: Takashi Miike

Writer: Hiroyuki Yatsu (Screenplay), Muneyuki Kaneshiro, Akeji Fujimura (Original Manga)

Starring: Sota Fukushi, Hirona Yamazaki, Ryunosuke Kamiki, Mio Yuki, Shota Sometani, Nao Omori, Lily Franky

Looking even better is this!!! Takashi Miike is back to his bloody best with a series of horror films released in the second half of this year. Kami-sama no Iu Toori translates as Just as God Said but it’s also known under the title As the God’s Will. It is based on a horror-survival manga series written by Muneyuki Kaneshiro and illustrated by Akeji Fujimura and taking part in the horror show are an amazingly talented bunch with experienced actor Nao Omori, star of The Ravine of Goodbye (2013) and Lily Franky, a supporting actor and a hilarious one at that in Judge! (2014). They are providing support for a new generation of actors like Ryunosuke Kamiki, one of the standouts in the ensemble school drama, The Kirishima Thing (2012) and Hirona Yamazaki, one of the star of Lesson of Evil (2012). I started reading the manga recently and it’s pretty good! For more images and trailers, see my post about its trailer.

Shun Takahata (Fukushi) is a high school student who lives an ordinary life until he finds himself forced to participate in a series of children’s games which turn extremely deadly as is seen in the first one when his teacher’s head explodes and is replaced by a daruma doll! Shun has to play the games and win to survive otherwise he will die. It gets complicated because his friend Ichika Akimoto (Yamazaki) is also playing. Nobody knows who or what has caused this bizarre game but a fellow student named Takeru Amaya (Kamiki) is enjoying seeing his classmates die…

Website

 

Crimson Pledge   Crimson Pledge FIlm Poster

Japanese: 紅破れ

Romaji: Kurenai Yabure

Release Date: November 15th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 70 mins.

Director: Koji Yokogawa

Writer: Koji Yokogawa, Kenichi Iwabuchi (Screenplay),

Starring: Hiroyuki Watanabe, Kayoko Shibata, Shizuka Midorikawa, Kenji Sakamoto, Asuka Kishi, Aya Maekawa,

Aki and her boyfriend Tomoya throw a retirement party for his father Tadashi and are going to invite many of his students. The students get drunk and reveal all sorts of secrets about Tadashi, a lot of them of a sexual nature. What seemed like a party was Aki’s revenge for being abandoned as a child by a father she is trying to track down…

Website

 

Black Butler: Book of Murder   Black Butler Book of Murder Film Poster

Japanese: 黒執事 Book of Murder 上巻

Romaji: Kuro Shitsuji Book of Murder Joukan

Release Date: October 25th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: N/A

Director: Noriyuki Abe

Writer: Hiroyuki Yoshino (Series Composition/OVA Script),

Starring: Daisuke Ono (Sebastian Michaelis), Maaya Sakamoto (Ciel Phantomhive), Emiri Kato (Mey-yin), Shunji Fujimura (Mr Tanaka), Hiroki Touchi (Baldroy), Shintaro Asanuma (Arthur),

This is episode 2 of the OVA. Here’s the synopsis straight from Anime News Network!

At the Queen’s behest, young master Ciel Phantomhive hosts a lavish banquet to be attended by the crème-de-la-crème of London’s elite. What begins as a fabulous affair quickly takes a dark turn when guests begin turning up dead! Murder takes center stage in this chilling OVA collection where even a debonair demon butler isn’t safe from a killer on the prowl. Should Sebastian and Ciel wish to once more see the light of day, they must join forces with their guests, including the legendary author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, to unravel the mystery – and apprehend the murderer before it’s too late!

Website

 

Expelled from Paradise   Rakuen Tsuiho Expelled From Paradise Film Poster

Japanese: 楽園追放 -Expelled From Paradise-

Romaji: Rakuen Tsuihō – Expelled from Paradise

Release Date: November 15th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 104 mins

Director: Seiji Mizushima

Writer: Gen Urobuchi (Screenplay),

Starring: Rie Kugimiya (Angela Balzac), Hiroshi Kamiya (Frontier Settler), Shinichiro Miki (Zarik “Dingo” Kajiwara), Megumi Hayashibara, Noriko Uemura, Yukiko Morishita, Minami Takayama,

The only Gen Urobuchi anime I like is Psycho-Pass and Expelled from Paradise ain’t no Psycho-Pass, it looks like more mecha madness in the mould of Aldnoah.Zero (disappointing) and Gargantia on the Verdurous Planet (haven’t finished watching it) and rather silly. It looks like in the future humanity abandons the earth to live in cyber space but when a person starts hacking into the system, a material body named Angela Balzac is created and sent to take out that guy.

Website

 

Peeping Life WE ARE THE HERO   Peeping Life WE ARE THE HERO Film Poster

Japanese: ピーピング ライフ ウェーアーザヒーロー

Romaji: Pi-pingu Raifu We- A- Za Hi-ro

Release Date: November 15th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 30 mins.

Director: Ryoichi Mori

Writer: N/A

Starring: Shunsuke Sano, Yukari Seino, GO Matsumoto, Koji Mishima, Tomoko Fujii

Short animation and CG from Tatsunoko Production and Tezuka Production were combined with improv theatre to bring to life heroes such as Astro Boy a Casshern and demonstrate how important heroes are to people.

Website

 

Tanikawa-san, Please Create One Poem   Tanikawa-san, Please Create One Poem Film Poster

Japanese: 谷川さん、詩をひとつ作ってください。

Romaji: Tanigawa-san, Uta wo Hitotsu Tsukutte Kudasai

Release Date: November 15th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 82 mins.

Director: Nobuaki Sugimoto

Writer: N/A

Starring: Shuntaro Tanikawa,

Shuntaro Tanikawa is one of the most widely read and highly regarded living poets both in Japan and aborad according to Wikipedia. He has written more than sixty books of poetry and translated Charles Schilz’s Peanuts. On top of that he co-wrote Kon Ichikawa’s Tokyo Olympiad and wrote the lyrics to the theme song of Howl’s Moving Castle. Following the Great East Japan Earthquake he has attempted to capture the scale of the disaster on the people who endured it and his work and the people who inspired it are featured in this documentary. I would like to see this one.

Website

 

Futaba kara Toukuhanarete Dainibu   Far Away from Futaba The Second Part Film Poster

Japanese: フタバから遠く離れて 第二部

Romaji: Futaba kara Toukuhanarete Dainibu

Release Date: November 15th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 114 mins

Director: Atsushi Funahashi

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

With certain areas in Japan planning to restart reactors and the government continuing to gag the press, it seems that documentary filmmakers are one of the best sources of information about what is going on in the 3/11 disaster zones and the people displaced as a result of the tsunami and reactor meltdowns.

This is a sequel to a documentary about the residents of Futaba town in Fukushima prefecture following their story a few years after the first one. Here’s a synopsis for the original film from the site:

A documentary about the exile of Futaba’s residents, the region housing the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Since the 1960s, Futaba had been promised prosperity with tax breaks and major subsidies to compensate for the presence of the power plant. The town’s people have now lost their homeland. Through their agonies and frustrations, the film questions the real cost of capitalism and nuclear energy.

The day after the magnitude 9.0 earthquake on March 11, 2011, Futaba locals heard the hydrogen explosion at Reactor Number 1 and were showered with nuclear fallout. In response, the Japanese government designated the whole town as an “exclusion zone” and 1,400 of the town’s residents fled to an abandoned high school 250 kilometers away. The entire community, including the Town Hall office, was moved into the four-story building, making the residents nuclear refugees.

The film portrays the evacuees as the nuclear disaster situation changes over time. One of them is Ichiro Nakai, a farmer who lost his wife, his home, and his rice fields in the massive tsunami. Doing his best to cope with the monotony of life at the evacuation center, he struggles to wipe away the haunting memories and start a new life with his son. The two finally get an official permit to enter the exclusion zone to visit their hometown. There, they see that their worst fears have become reality…

The other is Katsutaka Idogawa, Futaba’s mayor, a former active supporter of the government’s nuclear policy, who was lobbying to build two additional reactors. After realizing his constituents were exposed to significant amounts of radiation and that the situation at the TEPCO plant is still unstable, his beliefs begin to change.

Website

 

ASAHIZA Ningen ha, Doko he Iku      Asahiza Film Image

Japanese: ASAHIZA 人間は、どこへ行く

Romaji: ASAHIZA Ningen ha, Doko he Iku  

Release Date: November 15th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 74 mins.

Director: Hikaru Fujii

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

The ASAHIZA is an old movie theatre in Fukushima which was opened in 1923 and closed in 1991 after serving its community well and yet it is still the focus of community activity even after the 3/11 disaster and memories of the place are shared by interviewees in this documentary.

Website

 

Eiga toshite no Ongaku   Eiga toshite no Ongaku Film Poster

Japanese: 映画としての音楽

Romaji: Eiga toshite no Ongaku

Release Date: November 15th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 56 mins.

Director: Kei Shichiri

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

Musicians and poets met to perform a series of pieces live one night and the results were recorded.

Website

 

Kita Chousen Sugao no Hitobito   

Japanese: 北朝鮮・素顔の人々

Romaji: Eiga toshite no Ongaku

Release Date: November 15th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 30 mins.

Director: Kazuo Inagawa

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

This is a secret film shot in North Korea and it shows the everyday lives of people including executions… This is shown in a double-bill with another film about a military parade Kim Il Sung attended.

Website

 

And that’s it for this week! Here’s a video that has music heard in the film The World o Kanako:


The Guest (2014)

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The Guest (2014)   The Guest Film Poster

UK Release Date: September 05th, 2014

Running Time: 99 mins.

Director: Adam Wingard

Writer: Simon Barrett (Screenplay),

Starring: Dan Stevens, Maika Monroe, Sheila Kelley, Lance Reddick, Brendan Meyer, Leland Orser, Tabatha Shaun,

Mumblegore film You’re Next (2013) put director Adam Wingard and writer Simon Barrett firmly on the map with its blend of classy visuals and genre-mixing as a family came under siege from brutal masked killers in a home invasion horror meets black comedy film. They do much the same here in The Guest, a film which feels like a take on 80s style thrillers complete with glorious synth soundtrack with an added dose of slasher horror.

The film starts with a shot of a man running down a desert road in military boots. The road is seemingly located in the middle of nowhere with nothing but scarecrows, Jack-o-lanterns, hay bales, and shoots of grass for features but this person has a specific destination in mind and he soon arrives on the doorstep of the Peterson family. The mother, Anna Peterson (Monroe), is home alone when he knocks on the door and she is taken by surprise.

The Guest At the Doorstep

He introduces himself as David (Stevens) and claims to have served with Anna’s eldest son Caleb who died in action. Anna still affected by grief, lets David in, eager to show hospitality to someone who was a friend of her son. Despite some suspicions about him the family soon fall under his spell as David proceeds to tell tales of their son while providing some form of support, filling in gaps left by Caleb’s loss. For the mother, he is a surrogate son, the father Spencer (Orser) finds a drinking buddy, and the younger son Luke (Meyer) finds someone who will protect him from bullies. Even the more independent, suspicious, and slightly rebellious twenty-something daughter Anna (Monroe) soon  finds something alluring about this incredibly handsome stranger with piercing blue eyes. As time passes a series of accidental deaths seem to be connected to his presence and Anna finds herself questioning just who this guest in their house really is…

If most of the Peterson family are charmed by him, the audience will already be suspicious not least because that intro to the film primed us for some darker events.

When bodies start turning up there is no surprise as to who the killer is. Much like Michael Myers in Halloween, we know right from the start that it is David and we are waiting for him to go on a killing spree. However, The Guest spends time building up the suspense by showing David inveigling his way into the lives of the Peterson family and ‘dealing’ with their problems before unleashing murderous results.

David (a brilliantly charismatic Dan Stevens) is old-school charm and politeness, referring to people as “ma’am” and “sir”, helping out around the house with chores and providing a focal point as well as relief for a family hurting from their loss, trapped in small town America with nothing to do but grieve. With his smile as sweet as apple pie, his devastatingly handsome face and sculpted body, and piercing blue eyes, he is quick to work his physical magic on others and we see that behind every action and emotion he displays is precision engineered and well thought-out behaviour planned to influence others and further some plan he works on in secret.

All this friendship is seemingly uncomplicated and the characters take it. Just as the Peterson’s fall for him, so will members of the audience. Aware of this, the director always places a moment of menace behind the friendship which undercuts the bonhomie. The camera lingers on his glances and charming which turn into menacing stares, his smile disappearing as we see his brain working on some mad plot while the camera slowly zooms in as a rumble in the soundtrack builds up.   His advice on how to deal with life’s problems starts off harmless but becomes extremely (and hilariously) violent as we see him apply military solutions. We know are watching a murderous madman and the film plays this up brilliantly.

He brutally and efficiently wipes out and humiliates the bullies, teenage boys and girls unable to withstand his psychological mind-games and military training which he imparts to Luke with advice on how to defend himself with hilarious tips and demonstrations. The father’s workplace rivalries are settled brutally. His military trained body is used to carry beer kegs to parties Anna’s friends throw and he seemingly innocently reveals that same body to young women, putting their out of shape men-folk to shame and ensuring he becomes a sex object for the ladies, not least Anna whose pothead boyfriend falls far short of her expectations. In small-town America with nothing going on, he is like a flash of lightning.

Like the best slasher films, the tension builds up. As Anna starts to The Guest Stand Offdig into things the film introduces hints of present day real-world political tensions with the inclusion of defence contractors and the constant allusion to foreign wars but this is all subsumed into the films more earnest and fun final third when David’s past catches up with him, where the mask drops and David begins to hunt down various people. This leads to car chases, extended exciting gun fights, and an intense.

The Guest On the RunLike the best horror films, the build-up of characters and place creates intensity for events as Anna has to transform into something of a final girl. The carnage and battle is all the more satisfying because we have seen how efficient David is at working his way into the character’s lives, how he uses his deadly skills to solve every day problems, and how manipulative. The action is all the more unpredictable because we have to factor in how relationships come into his murderous rampage and which characters can survive. David is a psychotic killer with an almost supernatural physical presence that makes him even scarier, his charm still lingers and it is tempting to root for him as the film becomes blackly humorous with every kill he makes and every building and vehicle he destroys.

The Guest Dan Stevens Armed and Dangerous

Actually, I think I came to wish I was just like David.

Overall the final third proves to be hugely satisfying as chaos ensues and people die in bigger and nastier explosions and gun battles. Dan Stevens puts in a fantastic performance as the devastatingly charming and deadly David which makes the film a compelling watch all the way from its early build up to the final third, an action-packed fun finale.

4.5/5


Ecotherapy Getaway Holiday, Mindset, Miracle: Devil Claus’ Love and Magic, Until the Day Comes, Hibi Rock, Yugami. Norowareta Heisa Kuukan, Attack on Titan Part 1: Crimson Bow and Arrow, and Other Japanese Film Trailers

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Hello dear audience!

I’m doing more hours in work once again. I will be at the gallery nearly every day for the next few weeks/months. I’m drumming up money for film festival’s and a trip to Japan. I’ll continue to post one review a week. Being at work has its benefits aside from getting paid. Yesterday I met a girl from Japan and we talked, me with my Japanese and the lady with her English. We got along pretty well and I discovered she listens to Creephyp. I told her about How Selfish I Am! as we walked around the galleries.

Work, work, work. As long as I have films I’ll get through the day. This week I posted The Guest Dan Stevens Armed and Dangerousabout the black comedy/action thriller, The Guest (2014), a film I highly recommend. I watched Nobuhiro Yamashita’s take on brother sister love in the incest (but it’s not really incest because they aren’t related) drama adaptation Cream Lemon (2004) and the powerful and beautiful Plastic Love Story (2014).
Ken Takakura Film Image

“I’m an awkward guy.”

RIP Ken Takakura, an actor I first saw in the American film Black Rain and who later popped up in Japanese films I write about once in a while. I should watch some of his films.

What’s released in Tokyo this weekend?

Ecotherapy Getaway Holiday   Ecotherapy Getaway Holiday Film Poster

Japanese Title: 滝を見にいく

Romaji: Taki wo Mi ni Iku

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 88 mins.

Director: Shuichi Okita

Writer: Shuichi Okita (Screenplay)

Starring: Haruko Negishi, Chigusa Yasuzawa, Yuriko Ogino, Mie Kirihara, Kumiko Kawada, Keiko Tokunou, Michiko Watanabe, Daisuke Kuroda,

Shuichi Okita caught my attention last year with two film releases: The Woodsman & the Rain (2012), The Story of Yonosuke (2013), two gentle bittersweet comedies with strong ensemble casts. Ecotherapy Getaway Holiday is his latest film and it features another ensemble but they are a bunch of unknowns. This was at the Tokyo International Film Festival and Mark Schilling’s review in The Japan Times indicates that this is a solid dramedy.

Seven middle-aged/elderly women go for a tour of a mountain to see a picturesque waterfall. Their trip is pleasant until their male guide disappears and leaves them stranded deep in the mountains and with no cellphone service.

Website

 

Mindset   Mindset Film Poster

Japanese Title: 想いのこし

Romaji: Omoi Nokoshi

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 118 mins.

Director: Yuichiro Hirakawa

Writer: Takaya Okamoto (Original Novel/Screenplay)

Starring: Masaki Okada, Ryoko Hirosue, Haruka Kinami, Airi Matsui, Takeshi Kaga, Sayaka Kuon,

Gaijirou (Okada) loves himself, money and dames but his mindset changes when he is hit by a car and finds out that the driver and three pole dancers also died. The change in thinking is sparked by the appearance of four ghosts who offer to show him where a large amount of money is if he will fulfill their last wishes…

Website

 

Miracle: Devil Claus’ Love and Magic   Miracle Devil Claus' Love and Magic Film Poster

Japanese Title: MIRACLE デビクロくんの恋と魔法

Romaji: Miracle Debikuro kun no Koi to Mahou

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 114 mins.

Director: Isshin Inudo

Writer: Kou Nakamura (Original Novel), Tomoe Kanno (Screenplay)

Starring: Masaki Aiba, Nana Eikura, Han Hyo-Joo, Toma Ikuta, Hitori Gekidan, Mantaro Koichi, Makako Watanabe, Kokoro Hirawasa, Chris Peppler

All I’d like for Christmas is a girl who looks like Nana Eikura. You can keep your video games! I’d also like the looks, intelligence, and confidence and grace to actually keep her. Witness her here in this film!

Hikari (Aiba) is an aspiring mangaka who works in a bookstore. Despite being friends with a successful mangaka named Kitayama (Ikuta), his career isn’t going where he wants it to. Perhaps it is because he is so nice his kindness makes him look foolish. His friend Anna (Eikura) has known him since childhood and she is friends with So Young (Han Hyo-Joo), a famous lighting designer. As Christmas approaches the love lives of these four people will have a miracle.

Website

 

Until the Day Comes   Until the Day Comes Film Poster

Japanese Title: 救いたい

Romaji: Sukitai! Doctor’s Wish

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 110 mins.

Director: Seijiro Koyama

Writer: Takae Kawamura (Original Essay), Mootomo Furuta (Screenplay)

Starring: Kyoka Suzuki, Tomokazu Miura, Misaki Taiki, Tomoko Koyanagi,

After the 3/11 earthquake and tsunami strikes, Takako, an anesthesiologist at a Sendai hospital, and her husband Teiichi who runs a private clinic,  volunteer in the affected area to help others. This is based on the experiences of real life people.

Website

 

Hibi Rock    Hibi Rock Film Poster 3

Japanese Title: 日々ロック

Romaji: Hibi Rock

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 110 mins.

Director: Yu Irie

Writer: Karsumasa Enokiya (Original Manga), Koto Fukuhara, Yu Irie (Screenplay)

Starring: Shuhei Nomura, Fumi Nikaido, Tomoya Maeno, Tomoko Mariya, Keisuke Okamoto, Motoki Ochiai, Naoto Takenaka, Yoko Kita,

In the pantheon of great rock and roll movies, Japan has a number of entries but the only one reviewed on this site is Detroit Metal City, could this be another one? It has Fumi Nikaido star of Himizu (2012), Why Don’t You Play in Hell? (2013)! She acts alongside Shuhei Nomura who was in Daily Lives of the High School Boys (2013).

While in high school Takuro Hibinuma (Nomura) struggled at sports and academia and he struck out when it came to getting girls but when he found rock music, he found his true calling and so formed a rock band with his friends. He got to perform at the club “Hibi Rock” and when he got really excited he took all of his clothes off during the performances… When he graduated he moved to Tokyo and kept doing this. When he meets the famous musician Saki Utagawa (Nikaido), his while world changes…

Website

 

Yugami. Norowareta Heisa Kuukan   Yugami. Norowareta Heisa Kuukan Film Poster

Japanese Title: ゆがみ。 呪われた閉鎖空間

Romaji: Yugami. Norowareta Heisa Kuukan

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 95 mins.

Director: Daichiro Natsume, Kiminori Sato, Fumio Shimazaki Katsui Sasaki

Writer: Kimihiko Kuroki, Yanase Kizutaka (Screenplay)

Starring: Hiroko Tanaka, Makoto Kikuchi, Itsuki Sagara, Karin Tachibana,

This horror anthology features enclosed spaces that become the sites of hauntings and psycho attacks. Witness school girls in sinister phone boxes, a film crew in a haunted tunnel and more.

Website

 

Attack on Titan Part 1: Crimson Bow and Arrow   Attack on Titan Part 1 Crimson Bow and Arrow Film Poster

Japanese Title: 劇場版「進撃の巨人」前編 紅蓮の弓矢

Romaji: Shingeki no Kyojin Zenpen – Guren no Yumiya –

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 119 mins.

Director: Tetsuro Araki

Writer: Hajime Isayama (Original Creator)

Starring: Yuuki Kaji (Eren Jaeger), Yui Ishikawa (Mikasa Ackerman), Marina Inoue (Amin Arlelt), Kisho Taniyama (Jean Kirstein), Yu Shimamura (Annie Leonhardt), Yu Kobayashi (Sasha Browse),

Attack on Titan’s TV anime has been repackaged for the cinema with two films, the first of which takes thirteen of the twenty-five to tell the story of Eren Jaeger and his friends as they battle Titans who want to devour humanity… I’ve written about the anime with a first impression and a final thoughts post and made lots of Gifs. Seeing the epic carnage on the big screen makes me shudder with glee.

Website

 

The Wages of Resistance: Narita Stories   The Wages of Resistance Narita Stories Film Poster

Japanese Title: 三里塚に生きる

Romaji: Sanrizuka ni Ikiru

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 140 mins.

Director: Koshiro Otsu

Writer: N/A

Starring (Narration): Kazuki Yoshiyuki, Arata Iura,

Straight from the site:

In 1966, the Japanese government abruptly and arbitrarily announced a plan to build an airport in the rural Sanrizuka district of the city of Narita. Local farmers stood up in opposition, and their movement won the support of students and young labor union activists nationwide. Narita became the site of a decade of intense and often violent struggle representing Japan’s era of political activism.

Forty-five years later, The Wages of Resistance: Narita Stories returns to visit those farmers who once rose in resistance against the state. Today a few continue to farm under the deafening roar of jet engines, while others speak tearfully about departures and lost lands and livelihoods. Their lives were forever altered by the building of Narita International Airport – today Tokyo’s hub for international air traffic, with over 600 flights taking off and landing every day.

Co-directed by the 80-year-old cinematographer of the first of Ogawa Production’s acclaimed Sanrizuka Series in 1968, the film contrasts stunning vintage documentary footage and photographs heated with collision and fury, with the serene beauty of Narita’s pastoral landscape today̶serene save for the jet airplanes roaring overhead. With the 2020 Tokyo Olympics approaching, the Japanese government plans to extend the existing runways further into the remaining fields.

Website (English language website)

 

The Obroaders Ruin Road Adventures   The Obroaders Film Poster

Japanese Title: The Obroaders オブローダー 廃道冒険家

Romaji: The Obroaders Oburo-da- Haidou Boukenka

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: N/A

Director: Satoru Onishi

Writer: N/A

Starring: Yoshiyuki Hiranuma, Atsuko Ishii,

Ruin exploration and looking at the forgotten urban places tucked away in cities is a common subject in the west but this is the first time I have seen it in Japan (not that I’m an expert since I tend to watch comedies and avoid reality TV).

Website

 

Umaneru Zutto, Issho   Umaneru Zutto, Issho Film Poster

Japanese Title: うまれる ずっと、いっしょ。

Romaji: Umaneru Zutto, Issho

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 119 mins.

Director: Tomo Goda

Writer: N/A

Starring (Narration): Kiki Kirin

Umaneru Zutto, Issho is the second in a series of documentaries charting the links between different generations of a family. Following the matriarch’s death new life has come into the world only one son is born with severe disabilities.

Website

 

Hanahasu Karen   Hanahasu Karen Film Poster

Japanese Title: 花蓮 かれん

Romaji: Hanahasu Karen

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 99 mins.

Director: Toshihiro Goto

Writer: Patrice Kondo (Original Work), Toshihiro Goto (Screenplay)

Starring: Mayu Kitaki, Takahiro Miura, Aya Enjoji, Mayu Sakuma,

A Japanese-Thai woman finds love in Ibaraki prefecture.

Website

 

Taksu     Yokudou Film Poster

Japanese Title: 欲動

Romaji: Taksu

Release Date: November 22nd, 2014

Running Time: 97 mins.

Director: Kiki Sugino

Writer: Kotaro Yajima (Screenplay)

Starring: Yoko Mitsuya, Takumi Saito, Kiki Sugino, Hiroyuki Takashima,

This one is about a bunch of lovers in Indonesia!

Website

 

Aaaaaand that’s it for this weekend’s releases! Here’s a random music video:


Rurouni Kenshin: Kyoto Inferno UK Release Info

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I am really excited because Rurouni Kenshin: Kyoto Inferno is going to Rurouni Kenshin Kyoto Inferno Film Posterbe released in my local cinema! This is the follow-up to 2012’s Rurouni Kenshin film which I really liked. Kyoto Inferno is actually the second part in a trilogy and was released in Japan back in August. It is now making its way to the UK courtesy of Warner Bros and will be in the following cinemas from next Friday:

Cineworld Enfield, Crawley, Sheffield, West India Quay, Glasgow RS, Cardiff, Stevenage, Bolton and Vue Piccadilly

I have booked the day off work and my family are coming along for this one because they liked the first film as well!

Here’s some info and the UK trailer and poster:

Rurouni Kenshin: Kyoto Inferno    RUROUNI KENSHIN 2_Poster

Japanese Title: るろうに剣心 京都大火編

Romaji: Rurouni Kenshin: Kyoto Taika Hen

Release Date: August 01st, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 139 mins.

Director: Keishi Ohtomo

Writer: Watsuki Nobuhrio (Original Manga), Kiyomi Fujii, Keishi Ohtomo (Screenplay)

Starring: Takeru Sato, Emi Takei, Munetaka Aoki, Yu Aoi, Ryunosuke Kamiki, Tatsuya Fujiwara, Yosuke Eguchi, Kaito Oyagi, Yosuke Eguchi, Yusuke Iseya, Tao Tsuchiya, Maryjun Takahashi,

Kenshin Himura (Takeru Satoh) is a legendary swordsman, a hero in the wars preceding the turbulent fall of Japan’s Shogunate in the 19th century. Once feared as ‘Battosai the Killer’, with the arrival of the new Japanese age and nursing the pain of losing many of his companions he is now a lone wanderer, roaming the land seeking to be of service to those in need.  Fate however, had taken hold of Kenshin’s future and was now guiding him toward a new destiny.

Without warning he is summoned by Home Minister Toshimichi Okubo (Kazufumi Miyazawa), and is informed that Makoto Shishio (Tatsuya Fujiwara), his successor in the service of the new government, believed to be dead, is in fact both alive and plotting in Kyoto. Driven by a burning revenge Shishio commands a private army of bloodthirsty mercenaries and is planning to overthrow the government and will stop at nothing to take control.   In that moment it becomes clear why he has been summoned; Kenshin is the only man alive who can find Shishio… and stop him.

Kenshin must summon every warrior skill he possesses to fight dangerous and brutal enemies along fate’s journey; leading to the ultimate bloody confrontation… blade on blade, soul against soul.

Much of the cast from the original return for what looks set to be another entertaining historical action epic with Takeru Sato (Real), Emi Takei (Ai to Makoto) and Yu Aoi (Hana and Alice) taking the lead roles.

I’m looking forward to this!!!


Nightcrawler (2014)

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Nightcrawler (2014)   Nightcrawler Film Poster

UK Release Date: June, 2014

Running Time: 109 mins.

Director: Dan Gilroy

Writer: Dan Gilroy (Screenplay),

Starring: Jake Gyllenhaal, Rene Russon, Bill Paxton, Riz Ahmed, Michael Hyatt, Price Carson,

The film begins with soaring optimistic music that tends to play when you have stories about The American Dream but the visuals subvert the cliches we expect. Instead of scenes suffused with sunlight and filled with beautiful smiling people our first images are of L.A. at night, bright neon lights and billboards, wide roads that stretch endlessly and crushingly heavy-looking black skies.

There is potential out there, but it will come from somewhere unexpected.

We soon meet our main protagonist chasing The American Dream.

Nightcrawler Lou Bloom (Gyllenhaal) 2

Lou Bloom (Gyllenhaal), a gaunt ghoulish shadowy figure who is comfortable stalking the night. We catch him in the process of stealing manhole covers and other metal objects to sell for scrap. Within minutes of his introduction he will kill someone. By the end of the film many more will die as he tries to achieve his own success story through being a freelance crime journalist, recording death scenes from accidents and violent crime and selling them to TV news veteran Nina (Russo) so she can boost ratings for her middling local station.

The American director Dan Gilroy comes from a family of filmmakers. His brothers have recently worked on a multitude of films that critique aspects of modern America in various genres (the best, in my opinion, coming from Tony Gilroy in the 2010 George Clooney legal drama Michael Clayton). This is Dan Gilroy’s feature film debut and he makes a confident satire of the news media, not that hard to do or even all that original I suppose, but he has a secret weapon in his lead actor.

Jake Gyllenhaal has cornered the market playing strange characters and Lou Bloom is one of the strangest characters and one his most compelling performances. Having lost a lot of weight for the role, we see a man literally looking hungry for success, his slim frame bobbing up and down around crime scenes, picking up new details on how the police operate or on the dynamics of a newsroom, learning how editing works and his videos could be improved to draw bigger audience figures and earn him larger paychecks. When he speaks it is in a polite manner and it is clear he is intelligent because a deluge of information is released, all persuasive and astounding in its clarity. His intense coal rimmed eyes and shadowy features suggest something malevolent is ticking away in his head. As we spend more time with him it becomes clear why he is unnerving, his amorality.

Nightcrawler Lou Bloom (Gyllenhaal)

Over the course of the film he works his way up from thievery to news reporter through equal parts sheer guts, manipulation and intelligence. Lou Bloom has what it takes to be a news hound. He has the doggedness and determination to chase leads he hears on his police scanner, the memory and wit to learn fast on the job and understand people and upgrade his equipment, the ballsiness and lack of tact to venture into unsafe territory and the amorality which allows him to worry more about the framing and lighting of a crime scene rather than helping those in trouble.

It would be easy to attribute this to a lack of emotional intelligence exacerbated by his loner lifestyle. We see him isolated from others, seemingly because he has no friends or family. In disarming scenes we see his simple private life where, his shoebox apartment where he spends his spare time learning things over the internet and ironing his work clothes. As he cruises the night streets of L.A., he gazes at the people and bright lights with a degree of what must be envy. He is somewhat emotionally self-sufficient and while pained by the stabs of loneliness over his failure in intimate human relations he is more interested in success. It shows in his awkwardness and bluntness when dealing with people and situations where he uses his intellect and bulldozes past people’s feelings. That is a useful weapon, especially in news media. Where some people might shrink Nightcrawler Lou Bloom (Gyllenhaal) Bodyfrom a crime scene to get a scoop, the moral repercussions, potential for embarrassment, and emotional squeamishness making them think twice about interfering, he barges his way in. This results in him manipulating evidence, moving dead bodies like stage props to create dramatic effect. Pretty soon His acts go from amoral to immoral in ways that increasingly shock as car crashes are topped by bigger ratings draws like shootings, car chases, and serial murders and epic gun fights. We, as the audience, wait to see just how far he will take it and if he will fall.

In other hands the character the film is built around would be a sad sack loser, an outsider who may be too seedy for an audience to empathise with, but Jake Gyllenhaal makes him a quick talking, fast thinking entrepreneur, one perfect for our modern age of being adept at changing with the market and multi-talented. There is something admirable in the way he takes online business courses and reads self-help books, and learns everything by heart and can utilise what he learns to help him progress in the world. He becomes almost like an eager child trying to impress others with what he has learned and so it is easy to be charmed by him even when he acts in unsympathetic ways but underneath it all lies that amorality and ruthlessness and determination to succeed, the sort that modern marketers and job advisors try to mould for the workplace. The media, with its drive for sensationalism. is just another arena for him and such a cesspool where morality is a small, often overruled voice conquered by sensationalism, allows this man with the little empathy he has for his fellow human being, to truly shine.

“I like to think that if you see me you are having the worst day of your life,” Lou says with a big smile toward the end of the film. There is no hint of irony in his voice. It is a line that sums him up brilliantly. It gets a laugh and it is scary. He does not care all that much about others and it is a great catchphrase to frame his burgeoning news business with as he arranges ever more dangerous and executes everything with a stunning single-minded ambition and orchestrates his rise to the top.

Nightcrawler Lou Bloom (Gyllenhaal) Station

This film is all about success and having the drive to achieve it. Don’t lose sight of that, no matter how dark the ride gets in this brilliantly dark satire of modern culture and the news.

4/5


Parasyte Part 1, The Next Generation Patlabor Chapter 6, Coming Out, Fruit of Love, Yuruyuri Nachu Yachumi! (OAV), Hikoki Korin, The Nutcracker, Ultra LIFE, RADWIMPS 2014 Document 4×4 and Other Japanese Film Trailers

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Hello readers! I hope you are well!

Rurouni Kenshin About to Fight (Takeru Satoh)

I saw Rurouni Kenshin: The Kyoto Inferno in a cinema yesterday and I loved every second of it! I’m still hyped up after seeing it and I’m considering going again! I also watched a couple of other films like Manufactured Landscapes, a documentary about the artist Edward Burtynsky and his work which consists of photographs that show the environmental impact people have on the landscape. Mari Asato, a director who has been mentioned here a few times has directed a few horror films like Ju-On: The Girl in Black and Project Zero, well I watched Bilocation, a fun little thriller about doppelgangers (technically not doppelgangers but bilocations) where the characters suffered occasional moments of silliness but that made the events even more unpredictable as a twisted story played out.

In terms of writing, I published my review of Nightcrawler (2014) and the first part of my Winter 2015 anime guide is in the process of being proofed at Anime UK News. I have tomorrow free so I’ll have a chance to write up more reviews for films I have seen as well as some “other” acts…

Genki-Nightcrawler-Arranging-the-Scene

like practicing my Japanese…

What’s released in Japan this weekend?

Parasyte Part 1   Parasyte Film Poster

Japanese: 寄生獣 Part 1

Romaji: Kiseiju Part 1

Release Date: November 29th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 109 mins.

Director: Takashi Yamazaki

Writer: Ryota Kosawa (Screenplay), Hitoshi Iwaaki (Original Manga)

Starring: Shota Sometani, Ai Hashimoto, Eri Fukatsu, Nao Omori, Pierre Taki, Hirofumi Arai, Kazuki ktamura, Tadanobu Asano, Jun Kunimura, Kmiko Yo, Masahiro Higashide,

This got its premiere at the Tokyo International Film Festival where it has earned some great reviews but I have to admit that I’m very taken with the anime right now which has been on a run of greatness lately. I rewatched episode seven about five times and tried explaining it to people in work!!!

Mysterious worm-like aliens tumble from the sky and penetrate people through their ears, nose and mouth and head to the brain to live-off and control it. Shinichi Izumi (Shota Sometani) was an ordinary high school student who was suddenly attacked by a parasite but he fought it off. For the most part. The thing still exists inside him but it lives in his right hand. Izumi learns to co-exist with the parasite and because of this he discovers the presence of the others. He’s being monitored by another parasite that inhabits the body of his teacher Ryoko Tamiya (Eri Fukatsu). With only his best friend Satomi Murano (Ai Hashimoto) to rely on, what can Izumi do?

Website

 

The Next Generation Patlabor Chapter 6      Patlabor The Next Generation Part 6 Film Poster

Japanese: THE NEXT GENERATION パトレイバー第6

Romaji: THE NEXT GENERATION PatlaborDai 6 Shou

Release Date: October 29th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: N/A

Director: Mamoru Oshii

Writer: Mamoru Oshii, (Screenplay), Masami Yuki (Original Novel)

Starring: Erina Mano, Toshio Kakei, Seiji Fukushi, Rina Ohta, Shigeru Chiba, Yoshinori Horimoto, Yoshikatsu Fujiki, Hinako Saeki, Daisuke Takashi,

This is the sixth in a seven-part series of films that act as a continuation of the Patlabor series with a brand new set of characters. For those late to the party, Labors are giant robots. In this one we get episode ten and eleven. Ten is titled “Bōsō! Akai Labor” (Rampage! Red Labor), which is about a battle between the police Labors and a military Labor from the former Soviet Union.  Episode eleven, “The Long Goodbye,” sees Labor pilot Akira Izumino (Mano) reunited with her first love. A feature length film is set for release after the next episode and will open during Japan’s Golden Week holidays next year.

Website

 

Coming Out   Coming Out Film Poster

Japanese: カミングアウト

Romaji: Kamingu Auto

Release Date: October 29th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 98 mins.

Director: Kautoshi Inudo

Writer: Kautoshi Inudo (Screenplay),

Starring: Naoto Takahashi, Yu Okamura, Yuko Takayama, Kosuke Akiyama, Fumika Ichinose, Emi Tsuji,

There are a few films released where you have lbgt characters but so many seem to be comic relief or pretty dolls in some sort of OTT meldrama. This looks to be a serious one looking at the implications of coming out, how it affects family and friends.

Website

 

Fruit of Love   Fruit of Love Film Poster

Japanese: 愛の果実

Romaji: Ai no Kajitsu

Release Date: October 29th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 93 mins.

Director: Satoshi Kaneda

Writer: Takayuki Morita (Screenplay),

Starring: Yoko Kamon, Ryunosuke Kawai, Mutsuo Yoshioka, Ryo Ueda, Tomoe Suzuki,

Love Stories Volume 5! This is a drama about a married woman torn between two men called, her husband Koji who has gotten himself involved in some bad business decisions, and a former classmate named Anzai, who has been successful in IT business. Anzai offers money to solve the money problems of the couple but only on the condition that he can spend three months with Mariko. She is tired of her normal life but will she find happiness with Anzai?

Website

 

Kono Danshi, Sekika ni Nayandemasu (OAV)   Kono Danshi, Sekika ni Nayandemasu Film Poster

Japanese: この男子、石化に悩んでます。

Romaji: Kono Danshi, Sekika ni Nayandemasu (OAV)

Release Date: October 29th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 26 mins.

Director: Soubi Yamamoto

Writer: Soubi Yamamoto (Screenplay),

Starring: Daisuke Hirakawa (Koya Onihara), Shouta Aoi (Ayumu Tamari)

Straight from Anime News Network:

The story revolves around high school boy Ayumu Banri, who has an illness that makes him start to turn to stone when he’s stressed. Since he couldn’t fit in with his class, after repeating a year, he declared that he wanted to have a “Sparkly youth” as well. To do this, he changed his hair and clothes to be more fashionable, and constantly checked for popular topics to stay in the know. In the midst of Ayumu’s life of making a facade, his homeroom teacher and stone-loving geology teacher Kōya Onihara says that Ayumu’s stone transformation is beautiful. Ayumu begins to become attracted to Kōya, who starts to give him advice.

Website

 

Yuruyuri Nachu Yachumi! (OAV)   Yuruyuri Nachu Yachumi Film Poster

Japanese: ゆるゆり なちゅやちゅみ!

Romaji: Yuruyuri Nachu Yachumi (OAV)

Release Date: October 29th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: N/A

Director: Hiroyuki Hata

Writer: Michiko Yokote (Screenplay), Namori (Original Manga)

Starring: Minami Tsuda (Yui Funami), Rumi Ookubo (Chinatsu Yoshikawa), Emiri Katou (Sakurako Oumuro), Ayano Sugiura (Saki Fujita), Aki Toyosaki (Chitose Ikeda), Shiori Mikami (Akari Akaza), Yuka Otsubo (Kyouko Toshinou) Suzuku Mimori (Himawari Furutani),

The staff from the TV anime return to make a OAV about the girls on their summer vacation it involves a tea ceremony and going to a camp.

Website

 

Hikoki Korin   Hikoki Film Poster

Japanese: ひ・き・こ 降臨

Romaji: Hikoki Korin

Release Date: October 29th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 88 mins.

Director: Yoshikawa

Writer: Daisuke Miyazaki (Screenplay),

Starring: Mika Akizuki, Kazuha Komiya, Kaori Cyborg, Masaki Sawa, Shigeru Haribara,

Something about three women involved in a website which broadcasts isturbing images, extreme violence and a skinless monster?

Website

 

The Nutcracker    The Nut Cracker Animated Film Poster

Japanese Title: くるみ割り人形

Romaji: Kurumi Wari Ningyo

Release Date: November 29th, 2014

Running Time: 80 mins.

Director: Sebastian Masuda

Writer: Takae Kawamura (Original Essay), Tomoe Kanno (Screenplay)

Starring: Kasumi Arimura, Tori Matsuzaka, Masachika Ichimura, Ryoko Hirosue, Takashi Fujii, Takuro Ohno, Kei Aran, Tomomi Itano, Kotaro Yoshida, Saori Yuki,

We’re seeing Sanrio bring back its 1979 Christmas film Nutcracker Fantasy (Kurumiwari Ningyō) to Japanese theaters in a new edition which comes from director Sebastian Masuda, an artist and collaborator of Kyary Pamyu Pamyu who helped popularise Harajuku Kawaii Culture. Kyary provides the theme song.

One snowy night, Clara’s (Arimura) precious nutcracker (Matsuzaka) doll is swept away by a tide of white rats. Clara chases after them and winds up in Doll’s Nation where the princes have been afflicted by a sleeping spell cast by the White Rat Queen (Hirosue). Clara gets involved in a battle between the dolls and the rats and learns the sad secret behind the nutcracker doll.

Website

 

 

Ultra LIFE

Japanese: LIFE

Romaji: Chou-LIFE

Release Date: October 29th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: N/A

Director: Takei Goodman

Writer: N/A

Starring: Kenji Ozawa

Kenji Ozawa is a famous musician and it’s the 20th anniversary of his famous release, “LIFE” and so Space Shower TV are showing limited screenings of a special program which includes video of hi making the music in 1994 and going on tour.

Website

 

 

RADWIMPS 2014 Document 4×4   Radwimps 4x4 2014 Documentary Film Poster

Japanese: RADWIMPS 2014 Document 4×4

Romaji: RADWIMPS 2014 Document 4×4

Release Date: October 29th, 2014 (Japan)

Running Time: 95 mins

Director: Tetsuya Nagator

Writer: N/A

Starring: Yojiro Noda, Akira Kuwahara, Yusuke Takeda, Satoshi Yamaguchi,

Earlier this year RADWIMPS went on tour and a film has been made of it which gets released today.

Website


Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

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Edge of Tomorrow (2014)  Edge of Tomorrow UK Film Poster

UK Release Date: May 30th, 2014 (seen at a cinema on the same day I watched Godzilla)

Running Time: 99 mins.

Director: Doug Liman

Writer: Christopher McQuarrie, Jez Butterworth, John-Henry Butterworth (Screenplay), Hiroshi Sakurazaka (Original Novel)

Starring: Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt, Bill Paxton, Brendan Gleeson, Charlotte Riley, Noah Taylor, Franz Drameh, Madeleine Mantock,

Warning Spoilers for some of Tom Cruise’s earlier films in the opening paragraph:

Tom Cruise dies in this one. Not that revealing his character’s death spoils the movie. Edge of Tomorrow is based on a novel where the main protagonist dies quite a bit. That’s what makes the film surprisingly fun. Of course, A-list Hollywood actors can die and even Tom kicks the bucket in a number of his own films like The Last Samurai and Collateral but few films take great delight showing Tom get crushed, shot, impaled, drowned, blown up, and more in all manners of inventive and grisly ways over and over again in a smart and surprisingly vicious sci-fi war movie.

An alien race, called Mimics are attacking Earth and these floating squid-like creatures have captured much of Europe. Conventional military technology only provides limited success in battle but soldiers equipped with new heavily armed exoskeletons are starting to win fights despite huge losses.

Edge of Tomorrow Brigham

A new campaign to seize back Europe is about to be launched by General Brigham (Gleeson) of Earth’s United Defence Force who intends to invade mainland Europe through the beaches of France in a re-run of D-Day. Heading the propaganda campaign for the oncoming battle is public affairs officer Major William Cage (Cruise), a former advertising executive who has never seen a day of combat. He fronts numerous PR events and news appearances. When he heads to London to meet Brigham to discuss how he can further coverage of the war he finds Brigham wants him to cover the combat himself from on the beaches!

Cage tries to get out of the battle but finds himself literally dropped into the fight out of a drop ship alongside other grunts and fighting in the very war he has been selling to the public. He is killed within minutes in a spectacularly ugly run in with a brute of an alien… and then wakes up at a military base on the eve of the battle about to be deployed again. He finds that he lives the battle over and over in a time loop which resets itself every time he dies. 

As he keeps on fighting he does his best to try and change the future, altering decisions and choosing new paths he becomes more skilled and gets closer to meeting a Special Forces soldier named Rita Vrataski (Blunt) who soon joins him in combating the aliens. With each fight the two discover the circumstance of his death means he may be hold the key to defeating the aliens since his death can reset the events of the day and he can learn the weakness of the aliens through battle.

Emily and Tom Scope Out the Area in Edge of Tomorrow

The film is based on Hiroshi Sakurazaka’s novel All You Need is Kill, a fitting title for a book which inventively uses death to create its narrative structure while hurting its lead actors in different ways to further the plot. It is a pathological obsession carried neatly over into the film and this creates an odd and almost addictive quality to the viewing experience as we watch our lead actor die over and over and over again and, rather morbidly, we want to continue watching the horror show just to see how much further he gets in his efforts to survive. In one iteration of the battle we see him head in one direction only to get engulfed in the flames of a dropship and in the next iteration we see what happens when he heads in another direction and pauses… before he gets blasted by aliens.

That the lead character is played by Tom Cruise is a testament to how game he is in playing with his image. He portrays William Cage with relish and we witness his range as he plays against the Hollywood hero type at the start and alters his performance over the course of the film.

When we first see Cruise he goes full bore utilising his star presence to ground the character. He is charming news anchors and beaming with confidence, selling the war to the audience as the smug and handsome media man. This the side of him we see in chat shows. Then we revel in his surprise and horror at being told he will cover the war from the frontlines and face the aliens.

Tom Tries to Back Out in Edge of Tomorrow

You will see a convincing performance in cowardice and wheedling that totally flips the script on how we expect our leading men to act as he tries to duck out of his assignment and gets humiliated by a mean sergeant (played with gusto by Bill Paxton) and a platoon of roughneck squaddies before being sent on a spectacular looking (though tightly contained on a beach with a limited cast) suicide mission which is constantly revisited and expanded on as the film progresses and he alters his actions in each visit to this central battle.

The action is a cross between Groundhog Day and Saving Private Ryan with a dose of Aliens thrown in thanks to an exoskeleton that looks a little like Ripley’s Powerloader. Cage’s lack of combat skills sends him spiralling into an endless cycle of death and rebirth in numerous sequences which grow grander, gorier and more elaborate with every iteration of the battle he goes through. Death even visits him when he is not in battle as he tries to escape the training camp. The ability to come back to life never truly lifts the spectre of death from the film because the aliens are unnerving, the power relatively unknown and unexplained and the chaotic and fiery battles are pulse pounding while Cruise is great at conveying the fear his character feels.

Emily and Tom Train in Edge of Tomorrow

Of course, with the power to come back from the dead our hero eventually learns to harness it and find a way to defeat the aliens (and complete a satisfying character arc) but getting there is tricky and grinding process (sometimes literally as Cage gets crushed by a lorry at one point) that takes hundreds of deaths, each one helping him figure out how to fight better. The mental and physical toll it exacts is shown in his toughening up and tiredness but the plot does get pushed forward in every iteration of the war against the aliens and actually explores what might happen if he drops out of it altogether. Cage’s comradeship with his platoon and his relationship with the ice cold Rita, wonderfully played by Emily Blunt, also get explored as characters are fleshed out.

Leaving the Suit Behind in Edge of Tomorrow

 

The film is a lot of fun and the constant death cycle makes it a compelling watch as much as the action spectacle. You really do get the sense that the idea is being fully explored as well as getting the impressive action scenes. The unique set-up makes the film compelling and rather unique with its misanthropic and gleefully nasty air to it in the way that it deals with its main star.

4/5

I have reviewed one other Doug Liman film here, and that’s Fair Game.

The Japanese film release retains All You Need is Kill because of the popularity of the book, I suspect.

Edge of Tomorrow Japanese Film Poster



Chonoryoku Kenkyu-bu no 3-nin, ESP Research Club’s 3 Members, Nouka no Yome Anata ni Aitakute, Oneness Unmei Hikiyose no Kogane Ritsu, Harmony, Over The L’Arc-en-Ciel, The Message from Kato-Kun, and Other Japanese Film Trailers

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Hello dear audience!

I hope you are well and prepped for another Saturday full of trailers and badly translated rambling notes (I should work with a native Japanese speaker…).

Leaving the Suit Behind in Edge of Tomorrow

It’s coming up to that time of the year where everyone throws out their Top Ten whatever lists and I’ll try and do that. I’ve also given some serious though about actually going to Japan instead of constantly writing about it and promising to go. I have started to compile lists of places to visit and contacted friends in Japan. I’ve also taken to speaking Japanese a lot with friends from Japan a lot more than usual. I can go through whole conversations speaking nothing but 日本語 - basic stuff like polite form and describing things, desires and so on (ために practice today) because I find it’s easiest when speaking on the fly – even if some of it is wrong. Well, that’s for next year, coming up next is Christmas and I get a few days off to write a lot and merriment and whatever.

In terms of films, I watched Rurouni Kenshin: Kyoto Inferno for a Rurouni Kenshin Kyoto Inferno Film Postersecond time at the cinema and took a friend from Japan with me. We both loved every bit of it and we’re eagerly anticipating the next instalment as is my mother who I took the first time round. Kyoto Inferno is going to be my first review for the New Year (one more Western film and then a lot of Japanese films). I also watched Ichi the Killer and posted about the film Edge of Tomorrow (2014).

Yuri Kuma Arashi Key ImageUp over on Anime UK News are the previews for the winter 2015 season of anime. Part One and Part Two have key images and PVs!!!

Also… Episode 10 of Parasyte was brilliant. That was one of the most excruciatingly tense and scary episode of anime I have seen in a long time.

Parasyte Episode 10 Shinichi Saves the Day

What’s released in Tokyo this weekend? The films released over this weekend are diverse but there are only two killer titles for me: ESP Research Club’s 3 Members and Hoozuki no Reitetsu.

Chonoryoku Kenkyu-bu no 3-nin (ESP Research Club’s 3 Members)Chonouryoku Kenkyu-bu no 3-nin Film Poster

Japanese Title: 超能力研究部の3

Romaji: Chonouryoku Kenkyu-bu no 3-nin

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 115 mins.

Director: Nobuhiro Yamashita

Writer: Hiroyuki Ohashi(Original Manga), Shinji Imaoka, Hiroyuki Ohashi, Kosuke Mukai, (Screenplay)

Starring: Manatsu Akimoto, Erika Ikuta, Nanami Hashimoto, Shono Hayama, Yuki Izumisawa, Hiroshi Sato, Masahiro Usui, Nobuhiro Yamashita,

Nobuhiro Yamashita. I’m slowly making my way through his filmography and so far, The Drudgery Train (2012) and Linda, Linda, Linda (2005) are the tops. Cream Lemon (2004) has grown on me with a second viewing (despite the ick factor of the story). Could this be another? Nogizaka46 idol girls are starring in a film based on Hiroyuki Ohashi;s manga short story series, City Lights. The stories follow the daily lives of various people, such as high school girls in an ESP research club or a good-for-nothing teacher at a school for spies. Three members of a certain high school club investigate incidents of UFOs, ESP, and other unexplained phenomena.

Website

 

Nouka no Yome Anata ni Aitakute   Nouka no Yome Anata ni Aitakute Film Poster

Japanese Title: 農家の嫁 あなたに逢いたくて

Romaji: Nouka no Yome Anata ni Aitakute

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 89 mins.

Director: Toshiro Enomoto

Writer: Shuji Kataoka, Hiroyuki Ohashi, Kosuke Mukai, (Screenplay)

Starring: Kei Mizutani, Manabu Hamada, Haruka Nishimoto, Yoshino Sayaka, Mutuo Yoshioka, Reiko Tajima,

Ooohh, another entry in the Love Stories season! This one stars Kei Mizutani who was apparently something of a legend for her sexy appearance in the late-night variety show Gilgamesh Night (I just did a quick Google search and found this appalling video on YouTube which is the least sexiest thing I have seen today). Anyway, she plays a woman married to a farmer’s son and after a career working in a bar she finds adjusting to her new life difficult. She has never done a hard days physical work and finds it hard to adjust to the new family, especially her strict mother-in-law, but with her husband’s support, she gets through things but there’s still some bumps in the road.

Website

 

Oneness Unmei Hikiyose no Kogane Ritsu   Wanesu Unmei Hikiyose no Kogane Ritsu Film Poster

Japanese Title: ワンネス 運命引き寄せの黄金律

Romaji: Wanesu Unmei Hikiyose no Kogane Ritsu

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 94 mins.

Director: Ken Morita

Writer: Ken Morita (Original Novel), Ken Morita, (Screenplay)

Starring: Yui Umemura, Yuichiro Nakamura, Wataru Mori Ayano Tachibana, IZAM,

Yoko (Umemura) and Tomoya (Nakamura) are high school students who fall in love with eachother. They each have memories of meeting eachother in previous lives and go on a journey through space and time reliving different events.

Website

 

Harmony   Wa Film Poster

Japanese Title: WA

Romaji: Wa Wa

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 82 mins.

Director: Ken Morita

Writer: Ken Morita (Original Story), Ken Morita, (Screenplay)

Starring: Seira Hoshino, Osamu Toumi,

Harmony is a big thing in Japan and the writer Ken Morita has explored this in books and films where people meet and meet again and form strong bonds over time and space. Not even death can prevent people from getting back together again.  Anyway, partly inspired by the lack of looting following the Great East Japan Earthquake, he took to the streets of Japan to interview people about harmony, made some animated and live-action films and the results are here in this weird documentary.

Website

 

Like a Fairy Tale   Otogi Banashi Mitai Film Poster

Japanese Title: おとぎ話みたい

Romaji: Otogi Banashi Mitai

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 82 mins.

Director: Yuki Yamato

Writer: Yuki Yamato (Screenplay)

Starring: Shuri, Ayako Kobayashi, Kazuki Arima, Nao Okabe, Kenta Ushio, Tami Maeda,

I think that this is a variety of performances at Moosic Lab 2013. The website for this is great. Even if you don’t normally click through to them, try this nicely designed website out.

Website

 

Yokotawaru Kanojo      Lying Girlfriend Film Poster

Japanese Title: 横たわる彼女

Romaji: Yokotawaru Kanojo

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 70 mins.

Director: Akihiro Toda

Writer: Yuhito Terato (Screenplay)

Starring: Ayaka Komatsu, Ryo Kimura, Itsuki Sagara, Airi Nakajima,

Momoko (Komatsu) and Midori (Sagara) are sisters and total opposites, Momoko being terribly clumsy but kind-hearted, Midori being far more loof and very lonely. With their parents gone, they find staying in touch hard and when a man named Kumi (Kimura) enters the scene, things get harder….

Website

 

 

Naruto the Movie: The Last   The Last Naruto The Movie Film Poster

Japanese Title: 劇場版NARUTO-ナルト- 『ザ・ラスト』

Romaji: Gekijouban Naruto – Za Rasuto

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 115 mins.

Director: Tsuneo Kobayashi

Writer: Masashi Kishimoto (Original Manga), Kyozuka Maruo (Screenplay)

Starring: Junko Takeuchi (Naruto Uzumaki), Nana Mizuki (Hinata Hyuga), Noriaki Sugiyama (Sasuke Uchiha), Chie Nakamura (Sakura Haruno), Kauhiko Inoue (Kakashi Hatake), Showtaro Morikubo (Shikamaru Nara), Kiyomi Asai (Hanabi Hyuga),

Straight from Anime News Network:

The moon is beginning to fall, and at the rate it’s going, it is doomed to fall on the Earth. The countdown for the survival of the planet begins. Among the havoc, Hinata’s younger sister Hanabi is captured by the mysterious enemy, Toneri Ōtsutsuki, who mistakes her for the elder sister. Naruto must overcome great danger on a mission to save Hanabi and the world along with Hinata, Sai, Shikamaru, and Sakura. Finally realizing what and who he must protect, Naruto embarks on his final story.

Website

 

Hoozuki no Reitetsu   Hozuki no Reitetsu (OAV) Film Poster

Japanese Title: 鬼灯の冷徹

Romaji: Hoozuki no Reitetsu

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 74 mins.

Director: Hiroki Kaburaki

Writer: Natsumi Eguchi (Original Manga), Midori Gotuo (Screenplay)

Starring: Hiroki Yasumoto (Hozuki), Sumire Uesaka (Peach Maki), Takashi Nagasako (Enma Daio), Ayaka Suwa (Miki) Atsumi Tanezaki (Karashi), Daisuke Hirakawa (Momotaro), Yumiko Kobayashi (Shiro),

This is one of my favourite anime of the year so far, a collection of short tales, all blackly comic, based on the day-to-day life of Hoozuki (Yasumoto) the chief aide to the Great King Enma (Takashi Nagasako) who runs Japanese hell. The different levels of hell are effectively turned into mini-departments of a government which Hoozuki must keep an eye on in order to ensure that they work hard in punishing humans who have sinned in life. It became something of a hit in Japan with both the manga and DVDs seling well. The cinema screening released this weekend collects a bunch of OAVs (original anime videos) that will be bundled with the latest edition of the manga (volumes 17-19).

Website

 

Space Battleship Yamato 2199: Star-Voyaging Ark   Space Battleship Yamato 2199 Star-Voyaging Ark Film Poster

Japanese Title: 宇宙戦艦ヤマト2199 星巡る方舟

Romaji: Uchū Senkan Yamato 2199: Hoshi-Meguru Hakobune

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 110 mins.

Chief Director: Makoto Bessho, Yutaka Izubuchi,

Writer: Leiji Matsumoto, Yoshinobu Nishizaki (Original Creator), Yutaka Iubichi (Screenplay)

Starring: Daisuke Ono (Susumu Kodai), Houko Kuwashima (Yuki Mori), Kenichi Suzumura (Daisuke Shima), Takayuki Sugo (Captain Juuzoo Okita) Aya Hisakawa (Lt. Kaoru Nimi), Aya Uchida (Warrant Officer Yuria Misaki),

The new Yamato anime is about to launch and I have turned to Anime News Network for a plot synopsis because I haven’t read the manga or kept track of the TV series:

2199 AD. Yamato tried to leave behind the Large Magellanic Cloud galaxy, after receiving a “Cosmo Reverse System” at its destination, Iscandar. However, suddenly, it encounters a mysterious group at the edge of the Large Magellanic Cloud. The crew finds out that the group is called the “Gatlantis,” and that its leader is the Gutaba expeditionary force commander who calls himself “Goran Dagaamu of Thunder.” The commander demands that Yamato be handed over to him. Yamato, wanting to hurry to Earth, escapes the fray. However, Yamato is attacked by a devastating beam weapon called the “Flame Direct Attack Cannon” that can transcend space.

Yamato was able to retreat, but ends up getting lost, and finds itself in a strangely colored irregular dimension. The crew decides to turn off the engine on the ship, and explore a mysterious planet. In order to collect information, Kodai, Kiryū, Sawamura, Niimi, and Aihara land on the planet. What they saw when they arrived was a ship that was not supposed to be there.

Dagaamu chases after the traces of Yamato’s warp, and also reaches the strangely colored space. The planet on which Yamato landed was in fact what Dagaamu had been looking for all along.

Website

 

BUMP OF CHICKEN “WILLPOLIS 2014″ Movie   Bump of Chicken Willpolis 2014 Film Poster

Japanese Title: BUMP OF CHICKEN “WILLPOLIS 2014” 劇場版

Romaji: BUMP OF CHICKEN WILLPOLIS 2014 Gekijouban

Release Date: December 05th, 2014

Running Time: 103 mins.

Director: Shuichi Banba

Writer: N/A

Starring: Atsushi Kano (Interviewer), Bump of Chicken Members: Motoo Fujiwara , Hiroaki Masukawa, Naoi Yoshifumi, Hideo Masu,

Earlier this year Bump of Chicken went on tour and played to 25 million people in 20 performances that culminated in the Tokyo Dome. With short animated sections and lots of interviews, we get a documentary that shows us the guys rocking out.

Website

 

Over The L’Arc-en-Ciel   Over The L'Arc-en-Ciel Film Poster

Japanese Title: Over The L’Arc-en-Ciel

Romaji: Over The L’Arc-en-Ciel

Release Date: December 05th, 2014

Running Time: N/A

Director: Ray Yoshimoto

Writer: N/A

Starring: L’Arc-en-Ciel are Vocal: hyde / Guitar: ken / Bass: tetsuya / Drums: yukihiro

I have a few Hyde albums. I like his music. L’Arc-en-Ciel are also awesome. And it looks like the rest of the World are in agreement because this documentary shows because in 2012 the guys went on a world tour across ten countries  including Indonesia, South Korea, America, France, and the UK, and the fans flocked to see them as the trailer shows! See more in this documentary.

Also, check out a cool review of the concert in Indonesia from the most passionate L’Arc-en-Ciel fan I know! She also posted about the latest news on the band, so check that out as well.

Website

 

The Message from Kato-Kun   Kato-kun kara no Messeji Film Poster

Japanese Title: 加藤くんからのメッセージ

Romaji: Kato-kun kara no Messeji

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 90 mins.

Director: Watage

Writer: N/A

Starring:

My first thoughts upon seeing the trailer:

“よかいになりたい” o_0

Is this guy for real? Is this documentary for real?

It looks like it follows a university grad named Kato-kun, a 36 years old freeter/neet, whose dream is to be a ghost. He had taken three years to get into Waseda university and then took 11 years to graduate from there. He hasn’t been successful in either love or in making a career for himself having failed at being a cartoonist. He was working as a contract employee and living from hand to mouth but because he couldn’t give up his dream of becoming a ghost and has decided to live as a ghost called KATOH SHI.  The director, Watage used to be an office worker who always had an ambition to make a film. She spent two years filming Kato-kun.

(thanks go out to my teacher for discussing this film with me)

Website

 

Dagu Auto no Mukou Iwa wo Ikiru to iu koto   Dagu Auto no Mukou Iwa wo Ikiru to iu koto Film Poster

Japanese Title: ダグアウトの向こう 今を生きるということ。

Romaji: Dagu Auto no Mukou Iwa wo Ikiru to iu koto

Release Date: December 06th, 2014

Running Time: 100 mins.

Director: N/A

Writer: N/A

Starring: Yokohama DeNA BayStars

The Yokohama DeNA BayStars have had a number of documentaries made of their team’s progress in the Japanese baseball league and after a couple of tumultuous years marked by some losses and retirements, the 2014 season is brought t the cinema screen to show how they are faring now.

Website

And that’s your lot as far as badly translated trailer posts go. Random music video:

[Youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qi07uPJXHxQ]

Also, random anime OP from my childhood:

Tsukimonogatari


Cold in July (2014)

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Cold in July (2014)   Cold in July UK Poster

UK Release Date: June, 2014

Running Time: 109 mins.

Director: Jim Mickle

Writer: Jim Mickle, Nick Damici (Screenplay), Joe R. Lansdale (Story)

Starring: Michael C. Hall, Sam Shepard, Don Johnson, Nick Damici, Vinessa Shaw,

Director Jim Mickle and actor/writer Nick Damici have had a run of horror films with alternative zombie plague chiller Mulberry St (2006), downbeat and savage dystopian vampire film Stake Land (2010) and the remake of the Mexican cannibal film, We Are What We Are (2013), but here they trade genres opting to go for a pulpy thriller based on a novel by Joe R Lansdale.

Set in the ‘80s, in small town Texas, our man is Richard Dane (Hall) a picture framer by trade and a dedicated family man with a son and wife named Ann (Shaw). It is she who is startled awake at night by odd sounds coming of a thief rifling through their belongings in their suburban home.

Genki-Cold-in-July-Start

Ann rouses Richard up who secures his family and gets his father’s gun from its hiding place. With shaking hands he loads the weapon and with quaking steps he approaches the criminal and aims the gun and with trembling breaths he confronts the burglar and…

Cold in July Richard Dane

BANG

A clock sounds the hour and startles Richard who accidentally shoots the burglar through his right eye, spraying gore all across his living room wall.

When the sheriff, Ray Price (Damici), arrives and surveys the crime scene he pokes his stetson up and says to Richard, “Must be hard for a man like you. A civilian, I mean.” It is. Richard is near comatose, the horror and guilt of killing a man having almost entirely sapped him of his strength and reason and knocked the foundations from his world. The sheriff tries to be friendly and reassuring and he eagerly writes the situation off as self-defence and tells Richard that he has killed a wanted felon named Freddy Russel. “Sometimes the good guy wins.”

This does nothing to ease Richard’s fears. He may be regarded as a hero by townsfolk but in his mind he knows the truth. Worse still he soon finds that the gunshot has ignited a gunpowder trail of anguish that leads to bigger trouble in the shape of Freddy’s father, a recently paroled and hardened criminal named Ben Russel (Shephard) who wants revenge but the situation they are both in goes beyond mere vengeance.

Genki-Cold-in-July-Confrontation

Cold in July is an assured thriller with its story of a quiet guy getting sucked into a black hole of crime after peeling back the respectable veneer of the local community and finding a rotten heart beating underneath. It can be compared quite easily to other recent neo-noir films like David Cronenberg’s A History of Violence (2005) and the indie thriller Blue Ruin (2013) as well as drawing heavily on ‘80s mixed-genre films like suburban horror Blue Velvet (1986) but it differentiates itself greatly thanks to its frequent and well-handled changes tone and slippery sly snakelike narrative that refuses to be pinned down as it wraps itself around the audience. As familiar as the set-up to the film sounds, it is anything but that thanks to its protagonist and the willingness of its writer and director to explore familiar themes and tropes about men, fatherhood and masculinity through the protagonist.

Although Richard is not passive or a pacifist, he fails to measure up to old fashioned standards of masculinity where guys ‘man up’ and take out those who threaten their family. He is certainly highly civilised and entirely comfortable being a domesticated male, perhaps a little wishy-washy as his relationship with his wife shows.

Cold in July Vinson and Hall

People’s attitude to him changes markedly once news gets out that he’s a killer, a newfound respect emerges something Richard is uneasy with because he is gripped by guilt over the act and the fact that it was mostly committed by mistake. Morally, he tries to stick to a righteous path and avoid violence (his father’s gun turns into a cursed item he wishes he never had, he chastises his son who plays with toy guns) but a dark seed has been planted in him one that grows as he seeks to protect his family from Ben Russel and then other threats that lurk in the night.

For Richard that fatal shooting uncovers an interest in violence and living up to masculine ideals which have been neutered by society, an interest that blossoms into a dark and compelling especially when he is in the presence of stoic and hard-boiled Ben Russel and the more garrulous flamboyant private eye Jim Bob (Johnson), two Korean war vets, who are different from each other but provide more traditional masculine archetypes and offer an odd camaraderie that intoxicates Richard, makes him want to live up to his elder’s example. As Richard, Michael C. Hall gives a nervy performance as an everyman trying to survive dangerous times and find the courage to do what’s right that makes the film but still gives hints of an addiction to danger while Johnson and Shephard who offer some comic relief.

Cold in July Hall, Johnson, Shephard

Watching the film is fun because these themes of family and violence are placed firmly in a heightened atmosphere of extreme action in a lurid story that opens the path to black comedy and shock surprises.

Expertly shot, Cold in July is rooted firmly in its richly recreated ‘80s Texas setting complete with brick-like portable telephones, mullet hair-do’s, ancient DOS computers, VCRs and a minimalist synthesizer score straight from a John Carpenter film provides some driving impetus to keep the atmosphere and genre nods going.

Visually, the presentation is glossy but full of highlights such as a dead of night criminal stalking a family home which is lit up by lightning, when the boys ride into battle, the neon lights of the cherry red Cadillac puncturing the night as the boys go on their mission. Or maybe that lurid final gun battle which is illuminated by red lighting from flames and blood-spattered light bulbs.

The film makes the most impact when it is viewed with little foreknowledge about the story since a number of plot twists unexpectedly slither out of a narrative that becomes an increasingly morally murky conspiracy thriller which wrong-foots the audience. Writer/director team Jim Mickle and Nick Damici have always shown a canny skill in reinterpreting films through the lens of their genre knowledge and in charting Richard’s battle to protect his family and gradual addiction to violence so that what starts as yet another neo-noir becomes an exciting and rich exploration of violence, revenge, responsibility, and masculinity tinged with gothic horror and black comedy.

4/5


Hana to Alice: Satsujin Jiken (The Case of Hana & Alice) Trailers

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The Case of Hana & AliceHana and Alice Anime Movie Poster 

Japanese Title: 花とアリス 殺人事件

Romaji: Hana to Alice: Satsujin Jiken

Release Date: February 20th, 2015

Running Time: N/A

Director: Shunji Iwai

Writer: Shunji Iwai (Screenplay/Original Creator),

Starring: Yu Aoi (Tetsuko Arisugawa), Anne Suzuki (Hana Arai), Ryou Kazuji (Kotaro Yuda – a man who holds the key to the murder mystery), Haru Kuroki (Satomi Hagino-sensei – Hana and Alice’s homeroom teacher), Tae Kimura (Yuki Tsutsumi – the ballet classroom teacher), Shouko Aida (Kayo Arisugawa – Alice’s mother), Sei Hiraizumi (Kenji Kuroyanagi – Alice’s father), Ranran Suzuki (Tomomi Mutsu – Hana’s classmate), Tomohiro Kaku (Asanaga-sensei), Midoriko Kimura (Tomomi Arai – Hana’s mother),

I write for a few websites and one of them is Anime UK News which is where I publish anime season previews. I have written about a lot of TV anime but there is one special anime film I want to share with users and that is Hana to Alice: Satsujin Jiken which is in the first part of my season preview.

This is the prequel movie to Shunji Iwai’s wonderful 2004 coming-of-age film Hana & Alice, the film which was the break-out title for two totally talented actors Yu Aoi and Anne Suzuki who respectively starred as Alice and Hana, two school girls in an intense friendship who both experience love for the first time. Hana to Alice: Satsujin Jiken tells the story of how the girls first met and it is apparently through the world’s smallest murder case.

There hasn’t been much word on why Shunji Iwai has turned this into an anime but he has directed in the medium before with short films. One may suggest that it may be to allow his lead actresses to reprise their roles without standing out too much but the art style intrigues me. It reminds me of Aku no Hana which used rotoscoping and which combined intense realism and grace of human movement (perfect for scenes of ballet) and expressive facial features. It also allows the film to easily slide from detailed and realistic sets/locations into flights of fancy which the trailers show.

Much like the first Hana & Alice film Shunji Iwai is writing and directing and composing the music here, and he is also credited with making the music. My first experience of his films was All About Lily Chou-Chou back when it screened on BBC Four in the early 2000’s. Here’s the music video:

 

The film broke my heart and made me cry tears that tasted of ash. Okay, maybe not literally but I sure did feel devastated and empty after it. Thankfully, his other films were easier for me to take (I have a small collection that includes the All About Lily Chou-Chou (too scared to watch it), April Story, Picnic, Swallowtail Butterfly, and Hana & Alice. I’m really excited about Hana to Alice: Satsujin Jiken not least because a lot of the actors and staff are returning:

Yu Aoi plays Alice. She is famous for starting off with Shunji Iwai and has expanded to working with bigger directors like Yoji Yamada in titles like About Her Brother and Tokyo Family as well as slightly offbeat titles like One Million Yen and the Nigamushi Woman and Don’t Laugh at My Romance. She is a name mentioned quite a bit around here because she was Megumi in Rurouni Kenshin, and Tanyu in Mushi-shi as well as a haunting appearance in Penance/Shokuzai

Her co-star from the first film, Anne Suzuki has been in The Ravine of Goodbye and 9 Souls. The rest of the cast include actors involved in the first film like Tae Kimura who is another actor who has impressed me with performances in the most recent version of Zero Focus (2009), and the small but great intriguing Starfish Hotel.

Hana to Alice: Satsujin Jiken is also getting a manga adaptation of the Hana and Alice Anime Movie Imageprequel film and novelist Otsuichi is also creating a novel adaptation that will ship in February before the movie premieres in February next year. One last reference before I go… Otsuichi created the manga Goth which was the basis of another favourite film of mine! Goth – Love of Death.

Find out more about this film over at Anime News Network and the film’s website.


Ao Haru Ride, Aikatsu!, Yume Haruka, Two Homelands, One Love – Lee Joong-Seop’s Wife -, And the Mud Ship Sails Away, Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Drive & Gaim: Movie War Full Throttle Japanese Film Trailers

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Cold in July Hall, Johnson, ShephardThe year is winding down now so theatrical releases are getting thin on the ground. Give it a month and we’ll be back to 10+ a week and I’ll be crying over how little time I have and how I wish I was working with someone again.

As far as my movie/anime viewing goes, I went to see Wong Kar-Wai’s latest film, The Grandmaster, and was wowed by Parasyte yet again. Gugure!! Kokkuri-san is shaping up to be one of the best anime of the year ad I expected cheap laughs. I also reviewed Cold in July.

 What’s released in Tokyo cinemas this weekend?

Ao Haru Ride   Ao Haru Ride Film Poster

Japanese Title: アオ ハラ ライド

Romaji: Ao Hara Raido

Release Date: December 13th, 2014

Running Time: 122 mins.

Director: Takahiro Miki

Writer: Tomoko Yoshida (Screenplay), Io Sakisaka (Original Manga)

Starring: Tsubasa Honda, Masahiro Higashide, Yua Shinkawa, Ryo Yoshizawa, Izumi Fujimoto, Mitsuki Takahahta, Airi Tazume, Yudai Chiba, Yu Koyanagi,

That poster tagline:

The scent of air. After the rain…

I heard your pulse. I saw the light.

Sigh The lead actors Masahiro Higashide (The Kirishima Thing) and and Tsubasa Honda (Rakugo Eiga, Enoshima Prism) who are perfectly cast for this adaptation of a shoujo manga which has already had an anime adaptation which I didn’t watch because I am not shoujo. I am seinen. Expect lots of confessions of love and tears and misunderstandings before best couple get together in a drama directed by Takahiro Miki, a guy with nothing but shoujo/novel adaptations to his name like Hot Road and We Were There! and Girl in the Sunny Place.

Middle school students Futaba Yoshioka and Kou Tanaka had crushes on each other. She liked him because he was unlike the other boys and quite gentle. Then Kou Tanaka then moved away and changed schools and they lost contact.

Four years later…

Futaba Yoshioka is a sophmore at her high school and she meets Kou Tanaka again. Kou Tanaka’s name has changed to Kou Mabuchi and his personality seems different from his middle school days, colder and unfriendly… Just what happened? Futaba finds out…

Website

 

Aikatsu!   Aikatsu! Film Poster

Japanese Title: 劇場版アイカツ! 

Romaji: Gekijouban Aikatsu!

Release Date: December 13th, 2014

Running Time: 89 mins.

Director: Yuichiro Yano

Writer: Yoichi Kato (Screenplay)

Starring: Sumire Morohoshi (Ichigo Hoshimiya), Shino Shimoji (Akari Ozora), Azusa Tadokoro (Aoi Kiriya), Ayaka Ohashi (Ran Shibuki), Aya Suzuki (Mikuru Natsuki), Minako Kotobuki (Mizuki Kanzaki),

This is based on a TV anime which is popular with elementary schoolgirls so I’ll quickly write a synopsis about this and go back to writing pretentious stuff about ‘mature’ anime like Ping Pong and crying over various scenes for an end of year post at Anime UK News…

Ichigo, the main protag, was just a normal middle school student until she got to enter the world of idols and fins herself taking part in the greatest “Super Live” convert to be held in Japan, the Dai Star Miya Ichigo Matsuri. She now has to take part in press coferences and extra lessons to be the greatest idol in town…

Apparently, there are 50 episodes in the first season!!!

Website

 

Yume Haruka   Yume Haruka Film Poster

Japanese Title: ゆめはるか

Romaji: Yume Haruka

Release Date: December 13th, 2014

Running Time: 108 mins.

Director: Toshihiro Goto

Writer: Toshihiro Goto (Screenplay), Io Sakisaka (Original Manga)

Starring: Miyu Yoshimoto, Michi Yamamura, Jun Toba, Nanase Iwai, Minami Takahashi, Koichi Yamadera, Fuyuna Asakura,

A year since his last film, Yume no Kayoji, Toshihiro Goto is back with another tale…

Haruka Honda (Yoshimoto) is on track to become a star sprinter when she collapses after a dizzy spell. Medical tests follow and she is diagnosed as having a brain tumor. Her family, friends, and doctor rally around her to offer support as she risks losing her dream of being a super athlete.

Website

 

Two Homelands, One Love – Lee Joong-Seop’s Wife –   Two Homelands, One Love – Lee Joong-Seop’s Wife - Film Poster

Japanese Title: ふたつの祖国、ひとつの愛 イ・ジュンソプの妻

Romaji: Futatsu no Sokoku, Hitotsu no Ai i Junsopu no Tsuma

Release Date: December 13th, 2014

Running Time: 8o mins.

Director: Atsuko Sakai

Writer: N/A

Starring: Masako Yamamoto, Yasunari Yamamoto,

A year since his last film, Yume no Kayoji, Toshihiro Goto is back with another tale…

Lee Jung-Seob died at the age of 40 in 1956 but his life was packed with incident. He studied art in Japan at a time when Korea was occupied, he married a Japanese girl named Masako Yamamoto despite the problems of the two nations. When Korea achieved independence, he took his family to the country but he was separated from his family by the Korean war when his wife took their sons and fled the war for their safety. Tragedy awaited him just as he was on the cusp of fame. Fast forward to 2013 an Masako follows his trail from where she last saw him on Jeju Island to Seoul and meets people he came into contact with.

Website

 

And the Mud Ship Sails Away      And the Mudship Sails Away Film Poster

Japanese Title: そして泥船はゆ

Romaji: soshite doro-sen wa yuku

Running Time: 88 mins.

Director: Hirobumi Watanabe

Writer: Hirobumi Watanabe (Screenplay)

Starring: Kiyohiko Shibukawa, Kaori Iida, Ayasuna Takahashi, Mina Takeda, Hitoshi Suzuki,

I saw this indie gem at the Raindance Film Festival and own it on DVD after backing the New Directors from Japan Kickstarter. I met the director and producer and they were cool cats. This film is also a cool experience that goes from Jim Jarmusch style dry humour into an entirely loopy space. You won’t see what’s coming!

Takashi is 36 years old, unemployed and completely aimless. He lives with his grandmother, repeating the same routine – game centre, bowling center, watching TV – day after day. This suddenly changes when Yuka shows up, claiming to be his half-sister. Confronted with a new situation, Takashi decides to change his life…

Website

 

 

Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Drive & Gaim: Movie War Full Throttle   Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Drive & Gaim Movie War Full Throttle Film Poster

Japanese Title: 仮面ライダー×仮面ライダー ドライブ&鎧武(ガイム) MOVIE大戦フルスロットル

Romaji: Kamen Raida × Kamen Raida Doraibu& Yoroi Take (Gaimu) Mubi Taisen Furu Surottoru

Release Date: December 13th, 2014

Running Time: 93 mins.

Director: Takayuki Shibasaki

Writer: Jin Haganeya, Riku Sanjo (Screenplay), Shotaro Ishinomori (Original Concept)

Starring: Gaku Sano, Yutaka Kobayashi, Mahiro Takasugi, Yuumi Shida, Yuki Kubota, Ryoma Takeuchi, Rio Uchida, Taiko Katoono, Shota Matsushima,

Thank God there are other sites that cover the Kamen Rider franchise because I never know what’s going on and my terrible translation skills leave me even more lost. Must practice Japanese more. Here’s info dug up from scifijapan.com!

Gaim, in his last screen appearance! Drive, in his greatest case!

Fighting with the strength of all the different Riders from each generation, this “Movie War” will inherit their spirit of justice. Now, a new page will be carved in history…

Kamen Rider Gaim will face a shocking climax head-on. At the end of the last stage is a magnificent debut to anticipate.

The new warrior, Kamen Rider Drive, investigates the appearance of a law-breaking “car.” As the Detective Rider, he will face this strange and difficult case!

And when two people manifest on the joint front, a phantasmagorical nonstop Fruit-Car Battle explodes!

Is this the destiny of one who becomes a Kamen Rider?

For freedom, for peace, the door to the next era will be opened!

What the heck did I copy and paste from scifijapan? Is that the synopsis?

Website

That’s enough trauma for you this weekend. Here’s a random music video:


Japan Foundation Touring Film Programme 2015 Preview

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The Japan Foundation has announced their Touring Film Programme for 2015 and for the 12th festival the title is, “It Only Happens in the Movies?” The festival runs from January 30th to March 26th and the festival aims to provide “an exciting programme of films under the narrative framework of ‘encounters’.” Each film has characters who experience “unusual meetings, plunge into unexpected circumstances and new environments, as well as collide with different generations, ideals and ideas.”

The film line-up has a huge variety of styles, genres, and tones covered from comedy to serious drama and films from various eras with an adult drama set in1950s Japan all the way to one about teens in uni falling in love in contemporary Japan.

Here are the films, scroll down for trailers and more details (the English titles are the links to the pages so click on them for more info):

 

Wood Job!   (ウッジョブ) 神去なあなあ日常   

Wood Job Film Poster
Wood Job Film Poster

Director: Shinobu Yaguchi, Writer: Shinobu Yaguchi(Screenplay), Shion Miura (Original Novel), Starring: Shota Sometani, Masami Nagasawa, Hideaki Ito, Yuka, Naomi Nishida, Makita Sports, Ken Mitsuishi, Akira Emoto

Running Time: 116 mins

This one comes from a novel written by Shion Miura (Mahoro Eki Mae BangaichiThe Great Passage), so expect a light-hearted comedy.

Shota Sometani (Himizu), stars as Yuki Hirano (Sometani), a high school grad who has failed his university entrance exams and expects to spend the near future working a part time job but sees a brochure with an attractive girl for a year-long forestry training scheme and soon he’s in a remote mountain village called Kamusari. Never mind the job, he wants the girl, so he heads out to the village which has none of the amenities of Tokyo but immense beauty and warm-hearted locals and meets the beautiful young woman on te brochure named Naoki (Nagasawa). He just has to survive his rough and ready instructors like Yoki (Ito).

 

The Light Shines Only There (そこのみにて光輝)   

The Light Shines Only There Film Poster
The Light Shines Only There Film Poster

Director: Mipo O, Writer: Yasushi Sato (Screenplay), Ryo Takada (Original Novel), Starring: Gou Ayano, Chizuru Ikewaki, Masaki Suda, Kazuya Takahashi, Shohei Hinom Hiroko Isayama

Running Time: 120 mins.

I saw this one at the Raindance Film Festival and I found it an intensely moving drama about emotionally damage people and also very beautiful. I’m tempted to see this one again because I was so impressed – I just need to finish the review. It is based on a novel published in 1989 by an author who lived a tragic life and was updated for the screen by the director Mipo O (most famous in the UK for Quirky Guys and Gals) and the writer Ryo Takada (one of the writers on the tough drama The Ravine of Goodbye). It stars Gou Ayano (Rurouni KenshinThe Story of Yonosuke) and Chizuru Ikewaki (Shokuzai). It’s a film full of despair but ends on a little bit of hope. This is Japan’s entry for the next Academy Awards.

Tatsuo Sato (Ayano) quits his job and does little with his days until he meets Takuji Oshiro (Suda), a rough around the edges kid recently released from jail, at a pachinko parlour and strikes up a friendship. Takuji invites Tatsuo back to his home where he lives with is sick father, mother and older sister Chinatsu (Ikewaki). Tatsuo becomes attracted to Chinatsu, who shines even in their difficult situation.

 

The Handsome Suit  (ハンサム★スーツ) 

The Handsome Suit Film Poster
The Handsome Suit Film Poster

Director: Tsutomu Hanabusa, Writer: Osamu Suzuki (Screenplay), Starring: Tanihara, Muga Tsukaji, Keiko Kitagawa, Mayumi Sada, Nozomi Sasaki, Yusuke Yamamoto

Running Time: 115 mins

 

Making fun of unattractive actors by pointing out how unattractive they are and then giving them a magical suit/ring that replaces them with a handsome actor is a genre in Japan where many men and women are tormented by this bitter genre. I’m hoping this one will be funny. Diner chef Takuro is kind-hearted man but has never been popular with the opposite sex. After discovering a magical suit which transforms him into a good-looking male model, Takuro must work out whether to keep the suit on forever.

 

Short Peace Film Poster
Short Peace Film Poster

Short Peace (ショート ピース)   

Directors: Katsuhiro Otomo, Shuhei Morita, Hiroaki Ando, Hajime Katoki, Starring: Saori Hayami, Yuki Midori, Takeshi Kusao, Fuka Haruna, Ryotaro Okiayu, Akio Otsuka,

Running Time: 68 mins.

Short Peace is an omnibus film which collects four short films directed by four different directors. The biggest name is Katsuhiro Otomo (AkiraSteamboy) who also directed Mushishi. Other directors attached to the project include Shuhei Morita who was director on the rather good adaptation of Tokyo Ghoul which is about to have a second season launch in a month’s time. Morita’s part is called Possessions and won an Oscar earlier this year for best animated short.

The stories all have the overarching theme of Japan and stretch from a tale of a controversial marriage that ends in a fiery blaze in Edo era Japan to the tale of a man lost deep in the mountains who encounters Mononoke, a terrible demon during the Sengoku period. The other stand out looking tale is a sci-fi one set in Tokyo in the near future where a platoon of soldiers encounter a mysterious weapon.

 

Scattered Clouds Film Poster
Scattered Clouds Film Poster

Scattered Clouds (乱れ雲)   

Director: Mikio Naruse, Writer: Nobuo Yamada (Original Novel/Screenplay), Atsuko hashibe (Screenplay), Starring: Yoko Tsukasa, Yuzo Kayama, Mitsuko Kusabue, Mitsuko Mori, Mie Hama

Running Time: 116 mins

Classic time as the director Mikio Naruse’s final film is presented in beautiful colour Tohoscope. It tells the tale of impossible love between a widow and the driver who accidently killed her husband. From my brief research, this looks to be highly regarded.

 

Nobody to Watch Over Me (誰も守ってくれない)   

Nobody to Watch Over Me Film Poster
Nobody to Watch Over Me Film Poster

Director: Ryoichi Kimizuka, Writer: Ryoichi Kimzuka, Satoshi Suzuki (Screenplay), Atsuko hashibe (Screenplay), Starring: Koichi Sato, Mirai Shida, Ryuhei Matsuda, Yuriko Ishida, Kuranosuke Sasaki

Running Time: 118 mins

This one looks really good which is why I have included a short teaser and not a trailer. Don’t spoil the twists!

The Funamura family becomes the target of mass media attention after the 18-year-old son comes under suspicion of committing a horrendous murder. Detective Katsuura’s job is to protect the offender’s younger sister, a 15-year-old girl. Despite his reservations he follows his orders and shields the girl from the paparazzi in the fast paced information-orientated society.

 

With Mugiko Film Poster
With Mugiko Film Poster

My Little Sweet Pea (麦子さんと)   

Director: Keisuke Yoshida, Writer: Keisuke Yoshida, Ryo Nishihara (Screenplay), Starring: Maki Horikita, Ryuhei Matsuda, Kimiko Yo, Sayaka Tashiro, Amane Okayama, Eri Fuse, Yoichi Nukumizu

Running Time: 95 mins.

Rising star Maki Horikita is one actor I picked out of a morass of J-horror casts a few years ago and it seems her hard work is paying off as she is paired up with superstar Ryuhei Matsuda famous for GohattoThe Great Passage, and Nightmare DetectiveDue to the anime otaku nature of the lead character Mugiko, the film has anime clips which were animated by Production I.G, an animation house which will be mentioned again!

Mugiko (Horikita) is a girl who has lived with her older brother Norio (Matsuda), an undependable gambler, ever since their mother Ayako (Yo) abandoned the family and their father died. She dreams of being a voice actress in the anime industry and it has been a long time since she has thought about her mother but one day Ayako returns. Mugiko is uncertain about her mother but Ayako is hiding the fact that she is ill…

 

Jinx!!!  (ジンクス!!!)  

Jinx Film Poster
Jinx Film Poster

Director: Naoto Kumazawa, Writer: Yukiko Manabe, Naoto Kumazawa (Screenplay), Starring: Kurumi Shimizu, Kento Yamazaki, Hyomin, Kazuya Takahashi, Sanae Miyata

Running Time: 122 mins.

A harmless romantic comedy or more? I don’t know too much about this one.

Kurumi Shimizu (The Kirishima Thing) and Kento Yamazaki (AnotherControl Tower) star as university students Kaede and Yusuke, two people who are in love with each other but they are so quiet and reserved they cannot express their feelings to each other. Enter South Korean exchange student Ji-Ho (Hyomin, member of K-pop group T-ara) who knows of their plight and gets them together through a Korean style romance.

 

Carmen from Kawachi Film Poster
Carmen from Kawachi Film Poster

Carmen from Kawachi (河内カルメン)  

Director: Seijun Suzuki Writer: Katsumi Miki, Toko Kon (Novel), Starring: Yumiko Nogawa, Ruriko Ito, Chikako Miyagi, Michio Hino, Masakazu Kuwayama

Running Time: 89 mins

Straight from the Japan Foundation website: An experimental and kaleidoscopic film by iconoclastic director Seijun Suzuki about Carmen, a young lady who escapes her miserable life at home to travel to Osaka and becomes a hugely popular nightclub singer with men falling at her feet. Sounds like a blast

 

Bolt from the Blue (青天の霹靂)   

Bolt from the Blue Film Poster 2
Bolt from the Blue Film Poster 2

Director: Gekidan Hitori, Writer: Gekidan Hitori (Original Novel/Screenplay), Atsuko Hashibe (Screenplay), Starring: Yo Oizumi, Kou Shibasaki, Hitori Gekidan, Seiya Kimura

Running Time: 96 mins

 

This one was released earlier this year and stars Yo Oizumu (The Detective at the Bar) and Kou Shibasaki (Battle Royale,One Missed Call47 Ronin) in what I have heard is a rather powerfully emotional film. The story is about a poor magician named Haruo who wants to be the best in his field. With no parents for support he wonders why his life has turned out this way and then he travels back in time by around 40 years and discovers the secret of his birth…

 

Blood and Bones Film Poster
Blood and Bones Film Poster

Blood and Bones (血と骨)   

Director: Yoichi Sai, Writer: Sogil Yan (Original Novel) Yoichi Sai, Wui Sin Chong (Screenplay), Starring: Takeshi Kitano, Hirofumi Arai, Tomoko Tabata, Joe Odagiri, Kyoka Suzuki,

Running Time: 144 mins

Apparently based on a true story it begins when Kim Shun-Pei (played by Takeshi Kitano – Battle Royale, Sonatine, Boiling Point), a Korean emigrant to 1920s Japan, arrives in Osaka to make a new life for himself but finds discrimination and hard labour waiting for him. With strength and determination he works hard to open up opens a kamaboko (steamed fish cake) factory but finds his lust for money and power overwhelming and soon creates a small criminal empire.

 

All About Our House Film Poster
All About Our House Film Poster

All About Our House (みんなのいえ)   

Director: Koki Mitani, Writer: Koki Mitani (Original Novel/Screenplay), Starring: Toshiaki Karasawa, Kunie Tanaka, Naoki Tanaka, Akiko Yagi, Tsuyoshi Ihara

Running Time: 116 mins

Koki Mitani is a director who is highly rated for him comedies (especially Welcome Home, Mr McDonald) and you can see him in the trailer where he introduces his story of a married couple, Naosuke and Tamiko, who decide to build a new house from scratch. They recruit a young interior designer to plan, and Tamiko’s carpenter father to build, only to find themselves playing piggy in the middle as the two men vie for dominance on the project.

 

A Letter to Momo (ももへの手紙)   

A Letter to Momo Poster
A Letter to Momo Poster

Director: Hiroyuki Okiura, Writer: Hiroyuki Okiura, Starring: Karen Miyama, Cho, Toshiyuki Nishida, Takeo Ogawa

Running time: 120 mins.

A Letter to Momo is film I had intended to see upon its original release in 2012 but never got around to. I was excited by it because it is animated by Production I.G, a favourite studio of mine.The writer/director Hiroyuki Okiura was the director on a favourite film of mine, the magnificent Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade. The animation and background has been handled by former animators for Ghibli Masashi Ando (Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away) and Hiroshi Ono (Kiki’s Delivery Service) respectively and the project has animators from a myriad of other high-profile titles like Evangelion, The Sky Crawlers, and Tokyo Godfathers, other films I really like. A Letter to Momo has quality written all over it and it was no surprise when it received excellent reviews and was compared to Studio Ghibli’s works. Of all the films listed this one takes priority for me. Here’s the trailer:

Momo is a young girl who grew up in a big city. However, following the premature loss of her father, she has to move with her mother to the old family house on a remote island. Here, time seems to have stopped: old wooden buildings, holy shrines surrounded by trees, fields painstakingly carved out from steep hills… and no shopping mall.

Needless to say, Momo is not too enthusiastic about this new environment and finds it difficult to makes friends. Most of all, her heart is still feeling uneasy about an unfinished letter left by her father. A letter that contained only two words: “Dear Momo…”

What was dad going to say?

One day, exploring the attic of her new big house, Momo finds a dusty and worn out book. And from that moment, something really unexpected starts happening around her thanks to three mysterious creatures…

 

My Little Sweet Pea Film Image

That’s an interesting line-up of films and it’s great to see anime get continued exposure. The Japan Foundation has listed the following 11 venues as hosts for the festival:

ICA, London
– Watershed, Bristol
– Queen’s Film Theatre (QFT), Belfast
– QUAD, Derby
– mac birmingham, Birmingham
– Dundee Contemporary Arts (DCA), Dundee
– Filmhouse, Edinburgh
– Showroom Cinema, Sheffield
– Tyneside Cinema, Newcastle upon Tyne
– Brewery Arts Centre, Kendal, Cumbria
– Broadway Cinema, Nottingham

At the present moment information on the festival such as dates and times and who the guest will be are unavailable but keep checking the Japan Foundation website which will be updated soon. As soon as that is updated, this will be, too!


The Vancouver Asahi, 100 Yen Love, My Wife’s Illness Dementia with Lewy Bodies, Death Forest Kyoufu no Mori, Youkai Watch the Movie: It’s the Secret of Birth, Meow!, Chibi neko Tomu no daiboken Chikyuu o Sukue! Na kamatachi Japanese Film Trailers

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Hello, dear audience! I hope you are well! This is the last trailer post before Christmas so….

MERRY CHRISTMAS!

My Little Sweet Pea Film Image

Right, back to business. Film business. Sunday last week I went to see Blade Runner. Since I already know the story and twists, it was more of a fascinating watch as I looked at the technical elements, the aesthetics, performances, and the script. I must admit that I still had shivers during the big speeches:

“…All those memories lost… like tears in the rain…”

I also watched the films Dagon (2001), Tokyo Park (2010) again, and Kotsutsubo (2012). In terms of anime, Gugure!! Kokkuri-san has rocketed up the anime charts with its latest episode and I’m really enjoying Garo a lot as well. I’m glad that Psycho-Pass 2 has finished and while writing Christmas cards I was watching A.D. Police. And that’s about it for stuff that I have viewed. As for what I will view in the future… I posted about the Japan Foundation Touring Film Programme for 2015 and I have a good idea about what I want to watch and what I’m willing to skip.

What’s released in Tokyo this weekend?

Fewer films but what they are is pretty special, especially 100 Yen Love! I hope someone brings that to the UK!

 

The Vancouver Asahi      

The Vancouver Asahi Film Poster
The Vancouver Asahi Film Poster

Japanese: バンクーバーの朝

Romaji: Vancouver no Asahi

Running Time: 132 mins.

Release Date: December 20th, 2014

Director: Yuya Ishii

Writer: Satoko Okudera (Screenplay),

Starring: Satoshi Tsumabuki, Kazuya Kamenashi, Mitsuki Takahata, Aoi Miyazaki, Ryo Katsuji, Yusuke Kamiji, Sosuke Ikematsu, Shihori Kanjiya, Eri Ishida, Koichi Sato,

This was at the Vancouver International Film Festival and it is the latest from director, Yuya Ishii. I have reviewed his films Sawako DecidesMitsuko Delivers, and The Great Passage and found all but one to be wonderful, full of dry comedy based on observational humour. This looks like a mix of that with more serious drama based on the immigrant experience. The screenplay is by Satoko Okudera, scribe for the wonderful The Wolf Children. I bet another reason Vancouver got the film because it’s set in the city! The lead actor is Satoshi Tsumabuki, a great talent who can completely change his
performances with the roles he is given as seen in For Love’s SakeVillainJudge! and The World of Kanako.

Princess Takamado and Satoshi Tsumabuki

He was recently at a screening of the film with Princess Takamado. She is head of the Canada-Japan association and a highly intelligent and widely travelled woman!

Vancouver in the 1930’s had a Japantown, a place near the docks where sailors and immigrants lived. The children of these immigrants form a baseball team named Asahi. They endure problems in their everyday lives like racism and prejudice and things get worse when Japan goes to war with the US, however, through baseball and thanks to their determined and intelligent captain Reggie Kasahara (Tsumabuki) the community unites together to show the world just what they are made of. Get ready for some thrilling baseball matches.

Website

 

100 Yen Love   

100 Yen Love Film Poster
100 Yen Love Film Poster

Japanese: 百円の恋

Romaji: Hyaku-en no Koi

Running Time: 113 mins.

Release Date: December 20th, 2014

Director: Masaharu Take

Writer: Masaharu Take (Screenplay),

Starring: Sakura Ando, Hirofumi Arai, Miyoko Inagawa, Saori, Shohei Uno Tadashi Sakata, Yuki Okita,

Sakura Ando (Love Exposure) and Hirofui Arai (The Ravine of Goodbye) star in a film which is getting all sorts of praise, especially for Ando’s performance. The review over at Variety makes me hope that this will show up at the London Film Festival or Raindance or maybe even Terracotta so I can see if it lives up to the hype. It’s about boxing and the last boxing film I reviewed was Shinya Tsukamoto’s 1995 title, Tokyo Fist. Will this be as intense? Check out the trailer!

Kazuko (Ando) is a hikikomori who lives at her parents’ home but that situation changes when her younger sister divorces and moves back with her child. Kazuko and her sister’s relationship is pretty rocky and the two fight which makes Kazuko move out and find a place of her own. While working at a 100 Yen shop she keeps encountering a middle-aged boxer (Arai) who practices at a local boxing gym. She is attracted to him and the two start a relationship which will fuel the continuing change in her life.

Also, fun fact, Creephyp composed and performed the film’s theme song, “Hyakuhachi-en no Koi” which can be heard in the trailer and they were a key part in Daigo Matsui’s film, How Selfish I Am! considering they inspired the film’s story, made the music and even appeared in it.

Website

 

My Wife’s Illness Demential with Lewy Bodies   My Wife’s Illness Demential with Lewy Bodies Film Poster

Japanese: 妻の病 レビー小体型認知症

Romaji: Tsuma no yamai rebī ko taikei ninshishō

Running Time: 87 mins.

Release Date: December 20th, 2014

Director: Shinichi Ise

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

Doctor Koichi Ishimoto lives in Kochi Prefecture with his wife Yayoi who has dementia and schizophrenia. He spends every day with his wife and records their day-to-day activities not just as a doctor but as a loving husband with support from family and community. This documentary  explore the issues involved with dementia through this couple.

Website

 

Death Forest Kyoufu no Mori   

Death Forest Film Poster
Death Forest Film Poster

Japanese: DEATH FOREST 恐怖の森

Romaji: Death Forest Kyoufu no Mori

Running Time: 65 mins.

Release Date: December 20th, 2014

Director: Kazumi Masataka

Writer: Kazumi Masataka (Screenplay), Kazz (Original Game Creator)

Starring: Momoko Midorikawa, Katsunori Tanaka, Koichi Kida, Kazunori Heike,

There was that movie adaptation of the  Blue Demon free downloadable game where people get chased by a big headed blue monster thing earlier in the year and we have another film that is based on a free downloadable game where people get chased by a big white headed thing. Japanese let’s players have tackled this in a number of videos. You can watch them for ten minutes or watch the short and succinct trailer which actually looks pretty decent. Your choice.

Yoshie and her friends just wanted to go on a camping trip in a region far away from Tokyo but when their car breaks down while they take a short cut through a spooky forest they get chased by some monsters. There’s a lesson here for everyone: don’t take short cuts through spooky forests because people who do almost always get lost and/or attacked by monsters/people. If you want to go somewhere just take a train. It’s hard to get lost on one of those things.

Website

 

Yōkai Watch the Movie: It’s the Secret of Birth, Meow!  

Yōkai Watch the Movie It's the Secret of Birth, Meow! Film Poster
Yōkai Watch the Movie It’s the Secret of Birth, Meow! Film Poster

Japanese: 映画 妖怪ウォッチ 誕生の秘密だニャン!

Romaji: Yōkai Watch: Tanjō no Himitsu da Nyan!

Running Time: 97 mins.

Release Date: December 20th, 2014

Director: Shinji Ushiro,

Writer: Yoichi Kato (Screenplay), LEVEL-5 (Original Game Creator)

Starring: Haruka Tomatsu (Keita Amano), Tomokazu Seki (Whisper), Etsuko Kozakura (Jibanyan), Yuuki Kaji (Fuyunyan), Chie Satou (Kanchi Imada),

Here’s another film based on a video game. Youkai Watch is a game created by LEVEL-5 (Professor Layton, Steambot Chronicles, Inazuma Eleven) and a big deal in Japan. It’s aimed at kids and available on 3DS and it has spawned a massive franchise almost approaching Pokemon level with anime like this movie which has broken records for the number of tickets pre-booked. It has yet to penetrate the West in the same way but it’s only a matter of time, surely? Anyway, the story is all about Keita (Tomatsu) catching ghosts by using the watch. The adventure starts when the watch disappears while he is asleep in his grandmother’s house. He sets out on an adventure to get it back and discovers new allies.

Website

 

Chibi neko Tomu no daiboken Chikyuu o Sukue! Na kamatachi   

Chibi Neko Tom no Dai Bōken Film Poster
Chibi Neko Tom no Dai Bōken Film Poster

Japanese: ちびねこトムの大冒険 地球を救え!なかまたち

Romaji: Chibi neko Tomu no daiboken Chikyuu o Sukue! Na kamatachi

Running Time: 81 mins.

Release Date: December 20th, 2014

Director: Ryutaro Nakamura

Writer: Ryutaro Nakamura (Screenplay),

Starring: Toshiko Fujita (Tom), Masako Nozawa (Mark), Minami Takayama (Alex),

July 26th, 2013 was the date that Ryutaro Nakamura, the director of Kino’s Journey and Serial Experiement Lain, passed away. One of his first feature-length films was Tom’s Big Adventure, a 1992 production that gathered together a talented cast and staff (like the composer Kenji Kawai) to bring to life the adventure of a cat named Tom and his companions who go on a big adventure to save the world. A cinema in Tokyo is screening the film. I have not seen this film but it looks like a good old-fashioned children’s adventure. I have seen other works of Nakamura’s. Kino’s Journey and Serial Experiments Lain are two anime that I hold in high regard and think should be seen by a wider audience so if you have the time, please watch them.

Website

Here’s the ED for Kino’s Journey which is the not so random video of the weekend. Thanks for reading:


Your Friends きみの友だち Kimi no Tomodachi (2008)

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Your Friends                                        Your Friend Poster

Japanese Title:  きみの友だち

Romaji: Kimi no Tomodachi

Release Date: July 26th, 2008

Running Time: 125 mins.

Director: Ryuichi Hiroki

Writer: Hiroshi Saito (Screenplay), Kiyoshi Shigematsu (Original Work)

Starring: Anna Ishibashi, Yuriko Yoshitaka, Ayu Kitaura, Seiji Fukushi, Naoyuki Morita, Nao Omori, Akira Emoto, Tomorowo Taguchi

A train cuts through expansive fields under wide blue skies. As it meanders along the track the landscape changes, the line edging through hills crowded with the houses of a quiet rural town in Japan. Once it reaches its destination off the train steps a journalist named Nakahara (Fukushi) who is heading to a school for disabled children with the intention of making a documentary of the place.

He tries taking pictures of the kids and interviewing them but the pupils are all shy around him and avoid answering questions. However, with their teachers they bounce around in class, giggle and get involved with lessons and display a sense of liveliness and excitability, ingenuity and originality in the way they see the world. One teacher in particular is very popular with the children and she catches the eye of Nakahara.

Genki-Kimi-no-Tomodachi-Nakahara-(Fukushi)-and-Emi-(Ishibashi)

Her name is Emi (Ishibashi), a young woman who attends college and volunteers at the school. She uses a crutch to walk and seems introverted but the kids adore her. One of the things she does is to take photographs of clouds and allow children to pick their favourite ones and take them home when they graduate.

Kimi no Tomodachi Emi (Ishibashi) and Nakahara (Fukukshi) and the Cloud Pictures

Nakahara tries to spark a conversation with her about photography but his efforts fall on stony ground as he meets her tough and cynical outer shell. She seems to resent his attraction which is masked by an insincere sympathy. “The kids and I aren’t on show,” she warns him.

In truth, Nakahara is attracted to her but his overconfidence leads to blunt questions. “What’s wrong with your leg? Were you born that way?”

With an exasperated sigh and a little reluctance she replies, “I’ve been this way since childhood… Why do you want to know?”

“I find you interesting.”

It would be easy to write off Nakahara’s persistence as the thrill of chasing after a defiant Emi, her rebuffing of his interest spurring him on, but he is more intelligent. He has seen how the kids love her and, as he watched her play with and admonish them about their boisterous behaviour good-naturedly, he witnessed how much she loves them in her own way. He can sense that underneath her tough exterior is a heart as big as the sky that stretches over them.

Under a setting sun which colours the school a warm orange and in the face of her open irritation he persists in talking to her whilst she packs away the kid’s toys with her brother who visits the school from time to time to help out. She eventually relents to Nakahara’s constant chatter and tells him a little more about herself.

And then the film jumps back in time to when Emi was a child in elementary school, before she used a crutch. Popular, pretty, and precocious, she is on track to become an alpha student. She takes notice of Yuka (Kitaura), a girl left out of school events because of a kidney disease. On a rainy day, in a moment of charity, Emi breaks away from her friends and goes to offer Yuka an umbrella which leads to her getting involved in a traffic accident that leaves her with a permanent limp. As she becomes left out of school activities, Emi is disconsolate over the change in her life and blames Yuka. Yuka is devastated at the thought of being the cause of Emi’s accident and possibly losing the one classmate who was willing to interact with her and break through her isolation and so she apologises, genuine tears in eyes and upset in her voice. As the two are relegated to the less strenuous roles in class due to their infirmities they spend more time together and Yuka slowly relents on her anger. Soon the two share sweets, secrets, and shoot the breeze as their friendship becomes set in stone. What binds them together to begin with is that they experience their disabilities with each other, something others will never understand as well as they can, but it deepens with the time they spend with each other.

Kimi no Tomodachi Yuka (Kitaura) and Emi (Ishibashi) Gaze at Clouds

The two mature into teenagers together but what starts out as a story about Emi and Yuka soon encompasses a wide cast of characters from the local area because as Emi must visit the hospital more often, Yuka is left alone and looks in on the lives of those around her through her hobby of photography. Another classmate Kimi no Tomodachi Hana (Yoshitaka) by Herselfof Emi’s, Hana (Yoshitaka), has seen the friendship between Emi and Yuka and wants to be part of something like that as she suffers medical problems. Emi’s younger brother finds himself losing touch with a childhood friend who has become the school football star. Sato (Emoto), a former player in the school team is at a loss over what to do with his days after leaving the team to study for exams. A raft of high school students feature, not just those who are most popular but the thoroughly average and less gifted and those who are in the background. All are important. All have a place in others’ lives no matter how tiny but the film always returns to Yuka and Emi. As they grow older they continue to hold memories of each other, precious ones, and leaving people with good memories is the most that anyone can ask for in our fleeting lives.

These memories and more are relayed to Nakahara who is so enraptured with the depth of feeling in Emi’s tales of ordinary days and lives he forgets his own documentary project and asks questions about what happened to who and where everyone is now. Emi has kept the photographs she has taken and she shows him. This neatly allows the film to dip in and out of different narratives that swirl around Yuka and Emi and allows the film to examine different types of friendships, male and female, adult and child, and the value of them and its effect is potent.

Kimi no Tomodachi Emi (Ishibashi) and Nakahara (Fukukshi) Get Closer

Through the structure of showing photographs director Ryuichi Hiroki’s film mirrors the process of remembering treasured moment. Fragments of memories drift up in no particular order, only to come into focus as links between people are made creating a mosaic of everyday life.

The title Kimi no Tomodachi translates as your friends and the people in the film are so relatable that they could be your friends; this could be your world. It is like experiencing life in small town Japan and the people who exist in reality.

Hiroki’s film has a documentary feel thanks to the long takes and the
Kimi no Tomodachi Emi (Ishibashi) and Hana (Yoshitaka) way the camera is stuck at the periphery of scenes, observing people in a non-judgemental way while the film moves at a gentle pace. There are no sweeping camera moves or absurd sets or costumes to distract the audience, and the acting features no hysterics or melodramatics. The world and the people in it are not made alien through heightened styles, characters’ act and talk in a real manner and we feel like we are involved in some of the most intimate and formative moments of their lives. These characters and the places they exist in –whether liminal or permanent – are all relatable and so the film takes on a universal quality that makes it easy to understand. Kids go to school and attend lessons; they go home and loaf around. They experience disappointments and joy with the familiar burning resentments and the beaming smiles of happiness, parents dote on their kids and vice versa although both sides can be solipsistic and caring, dazed by life’s rough edges and thankful for graces like friendship pulling them into happier places. As in reality there are times when nothing happens but these moments are just as important because of all the details the audience can pick up on such as disquiet over being unable to socialise as easily as others or the difficulty of negotiating everyday problems. The steady camera and the dedicated acting from a cast of brilliant actors who give their characters so much life enable the emotions translate from the screen brilliantly.

Kimi no Tomodachi Yuka (Kitaura) and Emi (Ishibashi) Gaze at Clouds 2

At first the style made me feel that the film was meandering as it detailed the lives of so many characters but like Nakahashi I soon became enraptured in the details. There is a sense of gravitas given to the people on screen and their actions and these coalesce into moments of sheer emotional power. One moment will stay with me for as long as I exist and it was the moment when a painting was shown on screen. Just the sight of a painting of a cloud and where it was placed came as a shock that made me shed tears because it spoke so much about the depth of feeling that the character that would see it every day had for their friend. When I think back to that scene I still get emotional about it. What struck me was that through the simple prop, something so innocuous, I came to understand the distillation of themes in the movie that a person can treasure small things because they are imbued with love and dedication and friendship, things that cut through the loneliness and isolation we all feel. It was so profound and so moving it justified everything, every slow moment and every quiet moment that had gone before. There are more moments like this but for me it was the crescendo of a well-told series of tales. Hiroki’s low-key direction worked its magic.

Emi-(Ishibashi)-and-Yuka-(Kitaura)-Share-a-Picture

The film encompasses a series of memories held by an ordinary girl but despite how ordinary they are it treats them with the respect they deserve and shows how they have enough of a profound impact on the lives of the characters that they will always be remembered. Through this and the believable characters we in the audience understand, almost tangibly, how memories of others live on. As I draw this rather long review to a close I am reminded of the final words of a lonely travelling salesman who told his story to the young protagonist of a story by manga-ka Oji Suzuki,

“I’ve told you the story of my memories. I hope it somehow becomes even just a tiny piece of your memory. Cheers!”

The story of Yuka and Emi and those around them will stay with me and that’s a testament to the powerful writing, directing and acting I saw on screen. I’ve told you the story of my memory of the film. I hope you see it and make the film a piece of your memory. Cheers!

5/5

Here’s the film’s theme as discovered by Haikugirl for her review! I also used two pictures from it. Go visit and see what she thinks of the film.

Here’s a great remix:



Princess Jellyfish, Five Minutes to Tomorrow, Izaihou, Sokyu no Fafner Exodus Japanese Film Trailers

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Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year Dear Audience.

Space Dandy Chameleonian

I’m covering all bases because we have just had one big event (Christmas) pass by and this will be the last trailer post of 2014 before we get to the next (New Year).

I hope everyone reading this is in good spirits and has had a great holiday. I have. I spent time with friends and family and got some cool presents which will allow me to watched a lot more films! I also gobbled a lot of posh chocolates and biscuits and Christmas dinner. Going back to films… I watched a bunch of including Blue Jasmine, Mai Mai Miracle, Dagon, and Plastic Love Story, played catch-up with Garo, finished Gugure!! Kokkuri-san and Psycho-Pass 2 and was left devastated by the latest episode of Parasyte. Also, I thought that the Christmas special of Doctor Who was rather good (better than the ones of previous years). If only the preceding series had been as fun.

I cannot believe a year has passed by so I have a bunch of end of year posts geared up and ready to roll out over the next couple of weeks.

In terms of writing I took part in a round-up of 2014 with Anime UK News where I championed Space Dandy and SF Signal’s Mind Meld where we took a look at the best sci-fi on TV and I championed Space Dandy. Again ;)

I thought that for my final film review of the year I’d go with one that touched my heart a lot and selected Kimi no Tomodachi.

Kimi no Tomodachi Emi (Ishibashi) and Nakahara (Fukukshi) Get Closer

What are the final set of theatrical releases in Tokyo this weekend?

Princess Jellyfish   Princess Jellyfish Film Poster

Japanese Title: 海月姫

Romaji: Kuragehime

Release Date: December 27th, 2014

Running Time: 126 mins.

Director: Taisuke Kawamura

Writer: Akiko Higashimura (Original Manga), Toshiya Ono (Screenplay)

Starring: Rena Nounen, Masaki Suda, Hiroki Hasegawa, Chizuru Ikewaki, Rina Ohta, Tomoe Shinohara, Azusa Babazono, Nana Katase,

This looks funny. According to Wikipedia, it’s based on a manga by Akiko Higashimura and I have read good things about it. It was adapted into an 11-episode anime back in 2010. I must admit that I have not seen it but the trailer for the film has won me over. It looks to be in good hands. Director Yasuhiro Kawamura has a filmography full of live-action adaptations of manga and the cast include some great actors, most notably Chizuru Ikewaki. The lead role is played by Rena Nounen, a very beautiful fashion model and rising star and one to watch out for.

Tsukimi (Nounen) is an aspiring illustrator who is crazy about jellyfish but lacks confidence especially when around men and attractive people. It’s a good thing that she lives in a communal apartment called Amamizukan where men are not allowed and she’s surrounded by otaku women, who believe in living life without men.

One day Tsukimi gets into trouble at tropical fish shop, a stylish woman helps her out but that woman has a secret. She is actually a he. Kuranosuke (Suda) is a university student who dresses like a woman to rebel against his powerful politician father. Kuranosuke starts hanging at with Tsukimi at Amamizukan and when it is threatened with demolition the two join forces to help all of the girls become successful in their lives to save the building.

Website

 

Five Minutes to Tomorrow      Five Minutes to Tomorrow Film Poster

Japanese Title: 海月姫

Romaji: Kuragehime

Release Date: December 27th, 2014

Running Time: 129 mins.

Director: Isao Yukisada

Writer: Takayoshi Honda (Original Manga), Anne Horiizumi (Screenplay)

Starring: Haruma Miura, Liu Shishi, Joseph Chang,

The synopsis of the film makes me think about What Time is it There? (2001), a film directed by Taiwanese auteur Tsai Ming-liang because the setting is in Taipei, it involves a guy working with time pieces pining after a girl… These similarities are superficial. Five Minutes to Tomorrow was filmed in Shanghai and not Taipei and it lacks that Ming-liang style of alienation and loneliness that emanates from his static shots and wordless scenes. This looks more melodramatic. Miura is speaking Mandarin (I’m assuming it’s Mandarin he’s speaking) and looks to be in fine romantic lead form.

Ryo (Miura) is a clockmaker living in Taipei. One day he meets a beautiful woman named Maggie (Liu Shishi) who asks him for gift ideas for her identical twin sister Michelle (also Liu Shishi). Ryo begins dating Maggie but is very much aware that she and Michelle look so alike he gets confused if they switch places. It’s not just looks that the two ladies share because Maggie is secretly in love with Michelle’s boyfriend Leon. Still, Ryo persists in getting closer to Maggie and slowly but surely they connect, however tragedy lies in wait on the eve of Michelle’s wedding to Leon and the characters will find that identity and love become blurred even further…

Website

 

Izaihou    Izaihou Film Poster

Japanese Title: イザイホウ

Romaji: Izaihou

Release Date: December 27th, 2014

Running Time: 49 mins.

Director: Gakuya Nomura

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

Anthropologists gather! In the year of 1966 Gakuya Nomura set out for a small island 5 km off the coast of Okinawa to film a ritual that is performed by women aged between 30 and 41. At the time of filming it was a ritual passed down between generations but it is now no longer practiced because of a lack of successors for the role. Watch a bit of history here with this film.

Website

 

Sokyu no Fafner Exodus   Sokyu no Fafner Dead Aggressor Exodus Film Poster

Japanese Title: 蒼穹のファフナー EXODUS

Romaji: Sokyu no Fafner Exodus

Release Date: December 27th, 2014

Running Time: N/A

Chief Director: Takashi Noto, Director: Nobuyoshi Habara

Writer: Tow Ubukata (Screenplay/Series Composition)

Starring: Kohei Kiyasu (Soshi Minashiro), Makoto Ishii (Kazuki Makabe), Marika Matsumoto (Maya Tomi), Saori Seto(Mai Doma), Satomi Arai (Sakura Kaname),

 

People who go to the Maihama Amphitheater will see the preview screening of a new Sokyu no Fafner anime. This is the start of a 26-episode TV series due to premiere during the winter 2015 season. It is the 10th anniverary project of a franchise that I have never heard of and it reunites the cast and staff to bring the anime back from the past for a new generation.

Website

Aaaand that’s it for badly translated trailers this year. Here’s a music video for you guys to see the end of the year out with. I know I will:


Genkina hito Says Goodbye to 2014 and Hello to 2015 – New Year’s Resolutions

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The Pinkie Here Comes 2015

Welcome to my last post of the year.

2014 has been a good year for me and those I know personally and so as 2015 approaches I am relieved. I have made more friends and attended more film festivals. My personal and work life are stable and I am relatively happy although I am plagued by bouts of uncertainty – the lyrics in the OP for Ping Pong: The Animation which I placed above sum up some of what I feel most days. I watched a heck of a lot of films and I’m still writing reviews for them and I have enjoyed my time doing so. I have kept my previous year’s resolution to improve my Japanese and practice a lot more but there are some I missed out on. So, my last set of resolutions were:

  • In 2014, I will formulate a solid plan in aid of going to Japan either at the end of the year or in 2015,
  • In 2014, I will continue to speak and write in Japanese every day and practice my conversation and comprehension skills with friends,
  • In 2014, I will review more films and continue to write in different styles,
  • In 2014, I will actually have a Hideo Nakata/Takashi Shimizu season and a Takashi Ishii season,
  • In 2014, I will try not to bore you.

Crash and burn!

This is so embarrassing

Well this is another year when I failed to make any plans for Japan, a running joke amongst friends and family. A combination of cowardice and indecision are to blame. It’s easier to stay in the UK and watch films. Of course, the weight of expectation is too much to resist so I’ll get moving on the issue next year.

I didn’t get to do my Nakata/Shimizu/Ishii seasons despite having some of the reviews completed (I’m also sitting on a lot of manga reviews). I really need to speed up my reviews and get back to doing two a week. On the flipside, the quality of my reviews has improved. The posts I write are longer and a lot more involved and I take time to explain my feelings and create a more personal take on what I watch. Furthermore, I comb through them checking for mistakes even after publishing them.

I did write many reviews this year but my favourites (by favourite, I mean those I found to be the most enjoyable while writing AND reading them and do a good job at being reviews and not glorified plot synopses) are these:

Shady

My film of 2013. I saw it at the Raindance Film Festival and was blown away but I had to wait until the home DVD release three months to fully articulate my thoughts. I think having time to let my thoughts breath and expand helped the review. It restores faith in Japanese films!

Genki-Jason-Jitensha-Shady

Belle

A wonderful film based on history that fascinates me (Britain’s colonial period) with a great central performance from Gugu Mbatha-Raw.

Belle (Mbatha-Raw) in Belle

Kimi no Tomodachi

This film came at me like a bolt out of the blue and one scene made me cry like a sissy. Every time I remember that scene it still gets to me. I chose this one as my last review of 2014.

Genki-Kimi-no-Tomodachi-Nakahara-(Fukushi)-and-Emi-(Ishibashi)

The World of Kanako

The World of Kanako is a beast of a film. People either roll with it and see exactly what makes it great or they get overwhelmed and rolled over and then miss how its brilliance. That sounds arrogant, I apologise. The film is technically complicated and yet it is executed with a style and flair that seems effortless. It has so much to say about the modern age and all of the perils of life and despite its darkness it is hugely enjoyable. It has great performances from my favourite actor, Koji Yakusho, and Satoshi Tsumabuki who is fab as a dandyish cop. Great cinema!

Genki-The-World-of-Kanako-Yakusho-and-Takahashi-Interview

The Snow White Murder Case

I worked on this one for a long time because there were so many interesting things to write about and I recognised parts of myself in Gou Ayano’s character.

The Snow White Murder Case Akahoshi (Ayano) 4

The Guest

I saw this with my ma and sis and we all laughed at this black comedy. I so wanted to be the titular character, a cool, handsome and deadly maniac. I am just a nutcase in real life, not cool or handsome ;_;

The Guest Dan Stevens Armed and Dangerous

Nightcrawler

Another film I saw with my ma and sis, only this time I was made uncomfortable by how similar my lifestyle is to main protagonist Lou Bloom’s… Jake Gyllenhaal is a great actor and I was swept up by his performance!

Genki-Nightcrawler-Arranging-the-Scene

How Selfish I Am!

This was three quarters of a fantastic film and filled with so many characters I cared about.

Genki-How-Selfish-I-Am-Mie-Crying-in-Frustration

Rentaneko

I wrote previews about the film for a couple of years but only got the chance to review it back in April. It was a delightful film with a singular protagonist which made reviewing it easy.

Rent-a-cat Heat

Rurouni Kenshin

I saw this one in 2013 but reviewed it in January. I love the film and enjoyed making Gifs out of it. The review has proven to be quite popular.

Rurouni-Kenshin-(Sato)-and-Kaoru-(Takei)-Meeting

aaaaand possibly Ping Pong: The Animation

Quite honestly, in a weak year for anime this stood out as a titan. I think this will be one of those anime people name-check when talking about Masaaki Yuasa and anime in general, much like Tatami Galaxy.

Ping Pong Christmas Eve 2

That’s a diverse list!!!

I’ll leave it up to you to decide if I did a good job or not (just humour me and pretend to care).

On the positive side, I can confirm that I didn’t bore people because I got a lot of great feedback for some of my reviews! I have been asked for guest posts and reviews on other sites as well, so that’s cool. I also got to interview and speak with a lot more directors and I also had my photo taken with them! I should put the pictures up on the blog but I’m weird…

So I met Tetsuya Nakashima (The World of Kanako) who was totally cool, intelligent and generous with his time and spoke with me for longer than expected!, Yosuke Fujita (Fuku-chan of Fukufuku Flats), who I also spoke with and told him of my admiration for Fine Totally Fine, which is a film that basically describes my life. He signed my Raindance programme and drew a cool doodle. I met Akira Nagai (Judge!) who I managed to make laugh when I asked if he was an otaku and we spoke in Japanese. I also met Hirobumi Watanabe and his brother Yuji Watanabe who worked on And the Mud Ship Sails Away and they were totally cool and nice!

Now we come to the most important bit:

My resolutions for 2015

  • I will stop being a coward and get this Japan trip underway,
  • I will continue to speak and write in Japanese every day and practice my conversation and comprehension skills with friends,
  • I will review more films and continue to write in different styles,
  • I will investigate the Japanese indie film scene much more,
  • I will update this blog’s reviews, pages, and post more images,
  • I will try not to bore you (because I really do appreciate those who visit my blog).

I want 2015 to be the year when I find out more about the real side of Japanese films and investigate different ways films are made and an actress I have singled out as one to watch (in a non-stalkerish way!!!).

I would like to thank everyone who has visited my blog and commented on it and I hope you continue to come back and share your opinions and film experiences with me.

Goodbye, 2014, goodbye. I have had a lot of happy memories this year and I hope to make more next year.

Yotsuba Fireworks

Happy New Year!

The Pinkie Here Comes 2015


Chitose no Itteki Dashi Shouyu, Cinema Kabuki Two Person Fuji Musume, Cinema Kabuki Nihon Furisode Hajime Japanese Film Trailers

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Welcome to 2015 and the first trailer post of the year! I hope I find you all in good health.

The Pinkie Here Comes 2015

The start of 2015 was a bit of a quiet one for me. My day off was spent foraging for food for pets, whiling away too many hours on Twitter and then started watching Samurai 7 and Ghost Hound (two anime I skipped while in university) whilst eating cake. I also practiced my Japanese and managed to complete a review for a film I saw in November of last year and this trailer post so it wasn’t a wasted day, just really relaxed. Other than that, I dug out my Dreamcast with the intention of playing Shenmue 1 and 2 again and completing Grandia II.

In terms of the blog, I posted my new year’s resolutions and updated old posts.

Over the next few weeks I’ll get my ‘Best Of’ posts out into the wild along with reviews for anime and films.

What’s released in cinemas in Tokyo this weekend?

Chitose no Itteki Dashi Shouyu   

Chitose no Itteki Dashi Shoukyu Film Poster
Chitose no Itteki Dashi Shoukyu Film Poster

Japanese: 千年の一滴 だし しょうゆ

Romaji: Chitose no Itteki Dashi Shouyu

Release Date: January 02nd, 2015 (Japan)

Running Time: 100 mins.

Director: Shohei Shibata

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

The first Japanese film released in 2015 looks like food/nature porn. Slow motion shots of liquid droplets drizzling the air, diced mushrooms dropped into boiling water It’s all part of a co-production between Japan and France that looks at Japanese food culture over the last 1000 years. It’s based on an NHK documentary that was broadcast in December 2013 and has been edited to travel the world and show off things from something like the use of soy sauce and umami to things such as the impact that Buddhism has had on Japanese culinary culture.

Website

 

 

Cinema Kabuki Two Person Fuji Musume

Japanese: シネマ歌舞伎 二人藤娘

Romaji: Shinema Kabuki Futari Fuji Musume

Release Date: January 03rd, 2015 (Japan)

Running Time: 90 mins.

Starring: Bando Tamasaburo, Nakamura Shichinosuke II,

The Cinema Kabuki series is back and in this one the actors Nakamura Shichinosuke II and Bando Tamasaburo both take the lead role in the play Fuji Musume. Here’s a rundown of the story courtesy of zengarden.org:

Fuji Musume or “Wisteria Maiden”, is a famous classical dance out of the Kabuki theater in Japan. While I explain the history of Fuji Musume, to truly enjoy Kabuki Theater one must travel to Japan and see it from its source.

Fuji (wisteria) Musume (maiden), now performed independently, was first performed in 1826 as one of a set of five dances.

The figure of the wisteria maiden first came from the town of Otsu on the shores of Lake Biwa, where folk art called Otsu-e were sold as souvenirs. The wisteria maiden was the most famous of them. The other four dances in the original set also came from Otsu-e.

The dance Fuji Musume was first performed in 1826 at Nakamura-za, Edo (now Tokyo). Later in 1938, Onoe Baiko VII, the most famous Kabuki actor during his time, became associated with dance after his portrayal of Fuji Musume at the Kabukiza Theater in Tokyo. His choreography and refinement of this dance helped to make it stand out and remain today as one of the most popular and famous Kabuki dances.

Website

 

 

Cinema Kabuki Nihon Furisode Hajime

Japanese: シネマ歌舞伎 日本振袖始

Romaji: Cinema Kabuki Nihon Furisode Hajime

Release Date: January 03rd, 2015 (Japan)

Running Time: N/A

Starring: Bando Tamasaburo, Kankuro Nakamura, Yonekichi Nakamura

More Cinema Kabuki but this trailer features a little footage of Fuji Musume just before Nihon Furisode Hajime. Here’s the plot synopsis of the play (including spoilers) courtesy of the website Kabuki 21:

As the play opens we see local villagers bringing Princess Inada to the rock dedicated with a sacred rope which is the site where the annual sacrifice for the dragon is to be left.

As night falls, another princess, Iwanaga, appears. She is the jealous woman whose spirit has become the dragon. As she approaches the rock she sees many large vats of sake wine and begins to drink. Before long she is gloriously inebriated, but this is just as Susanoo has planned. The wine is poisoned but before Susanoo arrives at the scene, the dragon opens its mouth, devours the princess, and disappears into a cave. When the dragon reemerges, it is now in its true form–with eight hideously horned venomous heads (seven other actors are dressed identically to the leading actor and wear the same makeup so that when they move they seem like one creature). Susanoo and the dragon fight viciously and then suddenly the princess reappears. She has used a sword she found in the dragon’s tail to cut herself free through its belly. Susanoo then strikes a fatal blow to the dragon, which stands in a final defiant pose as the curtain closes.

Website

That was a short post! Here’s a music video for you:


Japanese Film Posters from 2014

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2014 has ended! Despite some melancholy, goodbye to all that!

Every weekend I post about the Japanese films that are released in cinemas in Tokyo. The information is scavenged from a variety of different sites like PIA, JFDB, IMDB and ones dedicated to various film festivals. I find it interesting (although I sometimes wish I had some help to do it) and I love looking at the posters that are created to advertise the films.

Last year I compiled all of the posters into a single blog post so people could see what was on offer and I have done it again for 2014. There are multiple posters for various releases (Snow White Murder Case and The World of Kanako, films with ensemble casts that are used on a poster to sell the movie, come to mind) and I may miss some. My own personal favourites are a contradictory bunch I like to go with the most visually entertaining – lots of action or dramatic poses – but then the most simple ones occasionally capture my imagination. I managed to get my hands on a poster or two this year as well :)

I sometimes make mistakes especially with the use of romaji so apologies in advance for any spotted.

Other than that brief intro… You can track down the film’s details by clicking in a poster and entering gallery mode to find its name and then searching for it by month or you can just hover the mouse pointer over a poster and select it’s name. Your choice.

Here’s music for you to browse to:

 

January 2014

I Don't Have Many Friends Film Poster Killers JPIndo Film Poster Topaz Tokyo Decadence Film Posterr Dakshimetai Film Poster Nuiguruma- Z Film Poster Chiisana Akari Film Poster Kanagawa University of Fine Arts, Office of Film Research Film Poster THE IDOLM@STER MOVIE Kagayaki no Mukogawa e Film Poster My Father Iemoto Film Poster Little House Film Poster Genome Hazard Film Poster Fireworks Ideas Film Poster Bilocation Film Poster Futaridetsukuru Film Poster The Love and Death of Kaoru Mitarai Film Poster Plastic Love Story Film Poster Toshiue no Hito Film Poster Hanadama Film Poster Half Grey vs Yakuza Film Poster Zyuden Sentai Kyoryuger vs Go-Busters Dinosaur Film Poster Kazu-chan to Ore Film Poster Message from Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium Sea Film Poster The Story of CNBlue Never Stop Film Poster Black Butler Film Poster Au revoir lete Film poster Seventh Code Film Poster Idol is Dead 2 Film Poster Judge 2014 Film Poster Oh! My! God!!! Kamisama Kara no Okurimono Film Poster Trick the Movie - Last Stage Film Poster Shippu Nijimaru-gumi Film Poster Ho Scars of Desire Film Poster Keisuke Yamauchi Film Poster Croquette Impersonates Musashi FIlm Poster Hitman Tomorrow Gunshot Film Poster

February 2014

Typhoon Family Film Poster Sukima Onna Gekijouban Film Poster Neko Samurai Film Poster Love's Whirlpool Film Poster Touching the Skin of Eeriness Film Poster Kuro no Su Chronus Film Poster Paroru no Mirajima Film Poster Okii Ichinensei to Chiisana Ninensei Film Poster Harmonie Film Poster Machiyya Film Poster Shun ka Film Poster Hello Supernova Film Poster Refugee in Tokyo Film Poster Train Heroes Film Poster Ikeshima Tanka Film Poster Bodacious Space Pirates Abyss of Hyperspace Film Poster Kamen Teacher The Movie Film Poster Red x Pink Film Poster Buddy Fight Presents World Wrestling 3D eighth edition 1.4 Tokyo Dome 2014 Film Poster Nakajima Miyuki Girls' Festival Film Poster Giovanni's Island Film Poster 2 GameCentre CX The Movie 1986 Film Poster Wonderfull Film Poster Aragure Roppongi vs Shibuya Film Poster Taekwondo Soul REBIRTH Film Poster Fukushima Rokkasho Mirai E no Dengon Film Poster Metamorphosis Film Poster Hōmuresu Riji-chō Taigaku Kyūji Saisei Keikaku Film Poster Murakami Kazuo Dokyumento `SWITCH' Idenshi ga Mezameru Shunkan Film Poster Ryusei Film Poster Hello Junichi FIlm Poster The Mole Song Film Poster What You Will See in the Eating Film Poster Dear Girl stories the Movie 2 Ace of Asia Film Poster Exte Girl The Movie Film Poster Fankī Katō My Vu~oisu Fan Mon kara Aratana Mirai E The Tale of Iya Film Poster Buddha 2 Film Poster Nishino Yukihiko no Koi to Boken Film Poster Tiger and Bunny The Rising Film Poster Kami-sama to no yakuso ku tainai kioku o kataru kodomo-tachi Film Poster Kokkuri San Film Poster Earth Defense Widow Film Poster Basu Jakku Film Poster Hadaka no Minako R - 18 Film Poster Seven Day Report Film Poster

March 2014

Dream Doctor of Cattle Film Poster Geki × cine ZIPANG PUNK Goemon Rock III Film Poster Happy Negative Marriage Film Poster Heisei Rider vs. Showa Rider Kamen Rider Taisen feat. Super Sentai Film Poster Team Batista Final Kerberos's Portrait Film Poster Apple of Eyes Film Poster The Snow White Murder Case Fim Poster Tokyo Doppelkonzert Film Poster The Lion Dance Film Poster Tangerines on Cat Film Poster Inu Michi Film Poster In His Chart 2 Film Poster I Will Walk with Friends Film Poster Grand Cinema Bando Tamasaburo Nihonbashi Film Poster Zero Black Blood Film Poster 1000 Years to the Future 3.11 Testimony of a Public Health Nurse Film Poster JuOn The Beginning of the End Ultraman Ginga Theater Special Ultra Monster Hero Battle Royale Film Poster Girl's Recipe Film Poster Gekisha Madly in Love Film Poster Sakamoto-kun wa Mitame Dake ga Majime Film Poster Sekai-ichi Hatsukoi Yokozawa Takafumi no Baai Film Poster GET ACTION!! Film Poster Absolute Territory Film Poster Adventures of Cherry Boy and The Limit of SLeeping BEauty FIlm Poster Try 600,000 times Film Poster Pretty Cure All Stars New Stage 3 Eternal Friends Film Poster Shirojima Film Poster Pretty Rhythm All Star Selection Prism Show Best Ten Film Poster Hakuōki Dai-nishō Shikon Sōkyū Film Poster Cinema Travel Machu Picchu Nazca Angkor Ruins of World Heritage Journeys Edition View in cinema movie theater FIlm Image Idai Naru Shurarabon Film Poster Silver Spoon Film Poster Stand By Me Doraemon Film Poster Go! Go! Kaden danshi The Movie Afureko Panikku Film Poster Zetsu ōkami Zero Black Blood Shiro no Fumi Film Poster Kizuna Futatabi no Sora e Blue Impulse Film Poster Itsutsu Kazoereba Kimi no Yume Film Poster Puzzle Film Poster Yuigon genpatsu sae nakereba Film Poste Court of Zeus Film Poster

April 2014

Jingu Watashi no Sama Film Poster Sora no Otoshimono Final Eternal My Master Film Poster Tamako Love Story Film Poster Ride for Life the Eigo Sato Story Film Poster Number 10 Blues Sayonara Saigon Film Poster Kuro Film Poster Ueshima Jane Beyond Film Poster Partners the Movie III Film Poster Goodbye Cake and Mysterious Lamp Film Poster All For One Film Poster Naked Ring Finger Film Poster Thermae Romae 2 Film Poster Crayon Shinchan Robot Dad Film Poster Aru Himori no Naka Film Poster Shi no Jikkyo Chukei Gekijouban Film Poster Detective Conan Sniper From Another Dimension Film Poster Nihon'ichi Shiawasena Jūgyōin o Tsukuru! Hoteruasoshia Nagoya Tāminaru no Chōsen Film Poster The Light Shines Only There Film Poster Route 42 Film Poster White Feather “Light from Phony” Film Poster Bright Audition Film Poster Shiba Jōmonken no Yume Film Poster Koi ni Tsukimono Film Poster KAZUYA Film Poster LDK Film Poster Gachiban Ultra Max Film Poster Crows Explode Film Poster Eagle Talon 7 Film Poster Real Jinro Game Crash Room of Shudder Film Poster The Next Generation Patlabor Film Poster The Next Generation Patlabor Film Poster 2 1 11 One Eleventh Film Poster One Third Film Poster Adult Drop Film Poster Sakura saku Film Poster Out Tomorrow Film Poster Walk Together Film Poster

May 2014

Mother of the Bride Film Poster Oyako Present to the Future Film Poster Beautiful People Film Poster Samurai Zombie Fragile Samurai Pirates Film Poster Robot Girls Z Film Poster A Minute More Film Poster All-Round Appraiser Q The Eyes of Mona Lisa Film Poster Monsterz Film Poster Rose Color’s Buko Film Poster The Assorted Horizons Film Poster Nemurihime Dream On Dreamer Film Poster June Light’s 3 Sisters Film Poster SAYAMA Mienai Tejo o Hazusu Made Film Poster Yuto-Kun Ga Iku Film Poster Uwakoi Film Poster Sad Tea FIlm Poster The Next Generation Patlabor Chapter 2 FIlm Poster Death Blog Film Poster Haunted School The Curse of the Word Spirit Film Poster The Right Way to Forget Film Poster (2) Haunted School The Curse of the Word Spirit Film Poster 2 Bolt from the Blue Film Poster Bolt from the Blue Film Poster 2 Eagle and Hawk Film Poster Oh! Father Film Poster Sake-Bomb Film Poster 2 Our Family Film Poster Kikaida_Reboot-p1 Kawashita-san wa nando mo yattekuru Film Poster Gundam Unicorn 6 Ushijima the Loan Shark Part 2 Film Poster FOOL COOL ROCK! ONE OK ROCK DOCUMENTARY FILM Film Poster Flower and Snake Zero Film Poster The Undying Dream We Have Film Poster Recently, My Sister is Unusual Film Poster No no Nanana no Ka Film Poster Bellring Girl HEart Sixth Dimension Film The Black Square Film Poster Recently Butterfly… Film Poster Yoshinaka densetsu Yoshinaka ana Film Poster We’re a Bounty Hunter Team Film Poster Resshya Daikoushin Sa Mubi shinkansen to Wakuwaku den sha dai shugo Film Poster Distonia Film Poster Panpaka Pantsu Film Poster Lupin III Castle of Cagliostro Film Poster A2-B-C Film Poster Wood Job Film Poster My Pretend Girlfriend Film Poster Live 2014 Film Poster Senritsu Kaiki Fairu Kowa Sugi! Shijou Saikyou no Gekijouban Film Poster Kuchita teoshi-sha Film Poster The Spirit of Science Film Poster My Little Nightmare FIlm Poster 2 My Little Nightmare The Movie Film Poster 1 The Summer of Whales Film Poster Jakarta, Where Punk Lives - MARJINAL Film Poster Kabukicho High School Film Poster

June 2014

Taiyou Kara Purancha Film Poster Ju-on The Beginning of the End Film Poster Sugisawamura Toshi Densetsu Gekijouban Film Poster Showa Gokudo Kai Ibun Jingaira Jin ga Inu Nishi Film Poster Hana no Okudo e Film Poster The Ghost in the Shell ARISE border 3 Ghost Tears Film Poster gakki rokku Film Poster Blue Ray Film Poster A Peephole Film Poster The Hole of a Woman Film Poster Me & 23 Slaves Film Poster The World of Kanako Film Poster Ishikawa Bun’yo wo Tabi suru Film Poster Chichi no Kokoro Film Poster Aibiki Film Poster Fukushima (Town of Love and Hope) Film Poster Mission Impossible Samurai Film Poster Uwakoi 2 Film Poster Round Table Film Poster China Japan My Country Film Poster Nothing Parts 71 Film Poster Saint Seiya Legend of Sanctuary Film Poster Lupin the IIIrd Daisuke Jigen's Gravestone Film Poster Inazuma Eleven Hyperdimensional Dream Match Film Poster Oh Invisible Man Invisible Woman Sweet Poolside Film Poster Maria no Chibusa Film Poster My Hawaiian Discovery Film Poster My Man Film Poster Fig Tree’s Forest Film Poster High Kick Angels Film Poster Climbing to Spring Film Poster Otaku’s Daughter Film Poster Ninjani Sanjo! Mirai e no Tatakai Film Poster Disregarded People Film Poster Jossys Film Poster We Are the Reds The Movie Film Poster Persona 3 the Movie #2 Midsummer Knight’s Dream Film Poster Portrait Film Poster Hana Inochi Nakagawa Yukio Film Poster Godzilla Film Poster Sukurīn de miru kōza shinema rakugo Film Poster Tokyo Densetsu Kyofu no Ningen Jigoku Film Poster Inochi no Koru Misesuinga o Shitte Imasu ka Film Poster The World of Kanako Film Poster 2

July 2014

Minna ikite iru kainushi no inai neko to kurashite Film Poster Hoete mo Todokanai Film Poster Tsugunai Shinjuku Go-rudengai no Onna Film Poster Little Finger Rhapsody Film Poster NMB48 Geinin! THE MOVIE Returns Film Poster Koppa Mijin Film Poster Still the Water JApanese Film Poster Time Trip App Late Edo Period High School Film Poster Z Zetto Film Poster Eight Ranger 2 Film Poster Kyary Pamyu Pamyu Cinema John Film Poster Goddess with Gun Film Poster Gun Woman Film Poster Pokémon the Movie Diancie and the Cocoon of Destruction Film Poster Hontou no uta roudoku geki `gingatetsudounoyoru' o otte Film Poster I’m Ten, Then I’ll Catch Eleven Film Poster Ryugu, Akatsuki no Kimi Film Poster Everyday is Alzheimer’s 2 Director Sekiguchi Goes to England Film Poster The Yasukuni Shrine, Earthquakes and the Emperor Film Poster Kamen Rider and Ressha Sentai ToQger Film Poster Chotto Kawaii Iron Maiden Film Poster When Marnie Was There Film Poster The Next Generation Patlabor Chapter 3 Film Poster Say “I Love You” Film Poster Uzumasa Limelight Film Poster Gift Film Poster K Missing Kings Film Poster Cinema Kabuki classic temple solicitation book film Poster South Wind Film Poster mayonaka kimi wa kiba o muku Film Poster Naniwa zenido Film Poster Children of the Revolution Film Poster Girls & Panzer This is the Real Anzio Film Poster Documentary of AKB48 The Time Has Come Film Poster Blue Demon FIlm Poster Soreike Anpanman Ringo Boya to Minna no Negai Tanoshikute Asobi Mama ni Natta Kokin-chan Film Poster Danchi no Yume Film Poster Koudou no Kioku Tankou Eshi Yamamoto Sakube Film Poster Ogiwara Ikuzou, 63 Years Old Film Poster Hoso Dekinai Kindan Re Eizo Gekijoban Film Poster

August 2014

Spochan Anime Film Poster Mizu no Koe wo Kiku Film Poster Magic Knight Film Poster Idol 7 x 7 Kantoku Vol. 2 Kizu Joshi Film Poster The Next Generation Patlabor Chapter 4 Film Poster Jinroh Game Best Side Film Poster Lupin the Third Live Action Film Poster Little Forest Summer & Autumn Film Poster Marching to Tomorrow Film Poster Shishunki Gokko Film Poster Lilou’s Adventure Film Poster Mouichido Film Poster Tokugawa Maizokin Densetsu Dai Hakkutsu Purojekuto 2014 Shogunke no Film Poster Tamashi no Riarizumu Gaka Noda Hiroshi Film Poster Gundam G no Reconguista Film Poster Shutorumu Und Doranggu Film Poster Short Hope Film Poster Kobito Dukan Kakuremomojiri no Himitsu no Momozono Film Poster Harajuku Cinema Film Poster The End of the Special Time We Were Allowed Film Poster Tokyo Fantasy Sekai no Owari Film Poster Hot Road Film Poster Forma FIlm Poster Initial D Anime FIlm Poster Stand By Me Doraemon Film Poster Space Brothers 0 Film Poster Ittsuuu the Movie 2 Film Poster Kurage to ano Musume Film Poster Chain Japanese FIlm Poster Yamaguchi Fujio Minagoroshi no Barado Film Poster Tokyo Tribe Film Poster Rurouni Kenshin Kyoto Inferno Film Poster Drive in Gamo Film Poster Ittsuuu the Movie Film Poster Ryugu no Tsukai Film Poster Houkago Rosuto Film Poster Blue Eyes in HARBOR TALE Film Poster Shimotsukare Girl film Poster Shelly Film Poster Prototype Love Poster Homeland Film Poster

September 2014

Mother Film Poster Over Your Dead Body Film Poster Zero Japanese Film Poster Tokyo Tribe Film Poster LAST LOVE Koibito Film Poster Higurashi no Ki Film Poster Taiyo no Suwaru Basho Film Poster Ogawa-cho Serenade Film Poster Love Session Film Poster The New World of Synthesizer in Osaka Film Poster Soba ni iruyo! Jiheishou (Oodizumu) to Kurumasiu no Kantoku Film Poster Iro-do Shijuhatte Takarabune Corporation Film Poster Saru Uindou Puriodo Film Poster Kamatoto Film Poster Kabadeen! Hanafubuki Koko hen Film Poster Mono oki no Piano Film Poster Fuja Film Trailer Hunger Z Film Poster Danger Dolls Film Poster 2 Gargantia on the Verdurous Planet -Meguru Kōro, Haruka- Film Poster Phantom Limb Film Poster Konna Watashi-tachi ga Nariyuki de Heroine ni Natta Kekka www 'Narihero www' Film Poster Akira No 2 Girls High School Film Poster gdgd Fairies the Movie — Wonder What Kind of Movie That'll Be… Film Poster Bon Lin Film Poster Gajimaru Shokudo no Koi Film Poster Goose Bumps The Movie 2 Film Poster Zakurozaka no Adauchi Film Poster Karaage USA Yoju Mameshiba Bokyo hen Film Poster Gekijouban Inagawa Kaidan Katari be Film Poster Boku-ra wa Doubutsu Tanken-tai Fuji Safari Paaku de dai Bou ken Film Poster Strike Witches Operation Victory Arrow Vol. 1 Film Poster Yowamushi Pedal ReRIDE The Pinkie Film Poster Club Andalusia Ginza Namiki Street Film Poster Atorie Iroiro Film Poster Cardfight Vanguard The Anime Movie Neon Messiah Film Poster Cardfight Vanguard The Live Action Movie Neon Messiah Film Poster Murder Workshop Film Poster Umi wo Kanjiru Toki Film Poster Maiko wa Lady FIlm Poster Honey Flappers Film Poster Rurouni Kenshin The Legend Ends Film Poster Ghost in the Shell ARISE border 4 Ghost Stands Alone Film Poster Hozuki-san Chi no Aneki Film Poster In the Hero Film Poster A Record of Sweet Murder Film Poster

October 2014

Enbu Seminar 2014 Cinema Project Film Poster The Tone of the Light The Back Horn Film Poster Wonogawa Film Poster Muchi no Chi Film Poster Hatachi no Kuzu Film Poster Tori no Michi wo Koete Film Poster Akane Clarinet FIlm Poster Clover 2014 Film Poster Bay Blues 25 Years and 364 Days Film Poster Sofuten Film Poster Oyaji Danyuu Z Film Poster Shanti Days 365 Days, Happy Breath Film Poster Oh Brother, Oh Sister! Film Poster Planet Mizsa Film Poster Prince of Tennis Musical Seigaku vs Shitenhouji Film Poster The NExt Generation Patlabor Chapter 5 Film Poster The Kumamoto Dormitory Film Poster Kenjuu to Medama-shou Film Poster Kids=Zero Film Poster Itsuka no, Genkan Tachi to Film Poster God Tongue Kiss Pressure Game The Movie 2 Psychic Love Film Poster Tsuma ga Koishita Natsu Film Poster Endless Affair Owari Naki Jouji Film Poster The Tenor Film Poster Space Battleship Yamato 2199 Remembrance Film Poster Happiness Charge Precure! The Movie The Ballerina of the Land of Dolls Film Poster Kabadeen! Gekitotsu Koko hen Film Poster From Kumano Film Poster Sengoku Bloody Agent Film Poster Fukushima A Record of Living Things Episode Two Disruption Harmonics Minyoung Film Poster Housoukinshi Sennou – Jaaku Naru Tetsu no Image Film Poster Kin Kyori Film Poster Cape Nostalgia Film Poster A Drop of the Grapevine Film Poster 2 A Drop of the Grapevine Film Poster

November 2014

Radwimps 4x4 2014 Documentary Film Poster The Nut Cracker Animated Film Poster Hikoki Film Poster Yuruyuri Nachu Yachumi Film Poster Kono Danshi, Sekika ni Nayandemasu Film Poster Fruit of Love Film Poster Coming Out Film Poster Patlabor The Next Generation Part 6 Film Poster Yokudou Film Poster Hanahasu Karen Film Poster Umaneru Zutto, Issho Film Poster The Obroaders Film Poster The Wages of Resistance Narita Stories Film Poster Attack on Titan Part 1 Crimson Bow and Arrow Film Poster Yugami. Norowareta Heisa Kuukan Film Poster Hibi Rock Film Poster 3 Until the Day Comes Film Poster Miracle Devil Claus' Love and Magic Film Poster Mindset Film Poster Ecotherapy Getaway Holiday Film Poster Short Movie Crash 2nd Film Poster Eiga toshite no Ongaku Film Poster Asahiza Film Image Far Away from Futaba The Second Part Film Poster Tanikawa-san, Please Create One Poem Film Poster Peeping Life WE ARE THE HERO Film Poster Rakuen Tsuiho Expelled From Paradise Film Poster Crimson Pledge FIlm Poster Paper Moon Film Poster 0.5 mm Film Poster Night, Because Film Poster Tokyo Here, City of Glass Film Poster Sakana Kami Film Poster Kowasugiru Hanashi Gekijouban Film Poster Twilight Film Poster A Courtesan with Flowered Skin Film Poster Saido no Imochi Film Poster As the Gods Will Film Poster 2 As the Gods Will Film Poster 1 Hibi Rock Film Poster 2 Hibi Rock Film Poster Parasyte Film Poster

December 2014

Two Homelands, One Love – Lee Joong-Seop’s Wife - Film Poster And the Mudship Sails Away Film Poster Aikatsu! Film Poster Ao Haru Ride Film Poster Yume Haruka Film Poster Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Drive & Gaim Movie War Full Throttle Film Poster Kinki Film Poster Dagu Auto no Mukou Iwa wo Ikiru to iu koto Film Poster Kato-kun kara no Messeji Film Poster Over The L'Arc-en-Ciel Film Poster Bump of Chicken Willpolis 2014 Film Poster Space Battleship Yamato 2199 Star-Voyaging Ark Film Poster Hozuki no Reitetsu (OAV) Film Poster The Last Naruto The Movie Film Poster Lying Girlfriend Film Poster Otogi Banashi Mitai Film Poster Wa Film Poster Wanesu Unmei Hikiyose no Kogane Ritsu Film Poster Nouka no Yome Anata ni Aitakute Film Poster Chonouryoku Kenkyu-bu no 3-nin Film Poster 100 Yen Love Film Poster My Wife’s Illness Dementia with Lewy Bodies Film Poster Death Forest Film Poster Yōkai Watch the Movie It's the Secret of Birth, Meow! Film Poster Chibi Neko Tom no Dai Bōken Film Poster The Vancouver Asahi Film Poster Princess Jellyfish Film Poster Five Minutes to Tomorrow Film Poster Izaihou Film Poster Sokyu no Fafner Dead Aggressor Exodus Film Poster

My Favourites

Paper Moon Film Poster Planet Mizsa Film Poster The Pinkie Film Poster Atorie Iroiro Film Poster Over Your Dead Body Film Poster Short Hope Film Poster Shutorumu Und Doranggu Film Poster Lilou’s Adventure Film Poster Little Forest Summer & Autumn Film Poster Koppa Mijin Film Poster Still the Water JApanese Film Poster When Marnie Was There Film Poster Persona 3 the Movie #2 Midsummer Knight’s Dream Film Poster Fig Tree’s Forest Film Poster Round Table Film Poster The Right Way to Forget Film Poster (2) Recently Butterfly… Film Poster Snow White Murder Case Film Poster Snow White Murder Case Film Poster 2 My Little Nightmare The Movie Film Poster 1 The Spirit of Science Film Poster Tamako Love Story Film Poster Puzzle Film Poster Hello Supernova Film Poster Typhoon Family Film Poster Nuiguruma- Z Film Poster Black Butler Film Poster Au revoir lete Film poster The Snow White Murder Case Fim Poster Fireworks Ideas Film Poster 100 Yen Love Film Poster Nouka no Yome Anata ni Aitakute Film Poster The World of Kanako Film Poster 2 Mizu no Koe wo Kiku Film Poster Sengoku Bloody Agent Film Poster

ST MPD Scientific Investigation Squad, Psycho-Pass Movie, Strike Witches: Operation Victory Arrow Vol. 2 Goddess of the Aegean Sea, ITECHO 凍蝶圖鑑, The Next Generation Patlabor Chapter 7 Japanese Film Trailers

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Hello dear audience! I hope you are well!

ST MPD Scientific Investigation Squad Film ImageWinter has finally arrived in the UK with cold temperatures, rain and powerful winds wracking the nation. That’s a good excuse to stay indoors when not going to work so this week I have had the pleasure of watching a whole lot of anime – Tokyo Ghoul season 2, Cute High Earth Defense Club LOVE!, Yurikuma Arashi, Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure: Stardust Crusaders Battle in Egypt, and Parasyte. Looking back on the TV anime aired already, there is a lot on offer for a wide variety of people and my weekly viewing is going to be packed. On top of those shows, I’m also watching Ghost Hound, Samurai 7 and The Real Ghostbusters.

In terms of films I watched As Above So Below (2014), the Japanese horror film Greatful Dead (2013), and The 39 Steps (1935, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock) – I love this film and have it on DVD. I posted about the Japanese Film Posters from 2014 and started writing reviews for the anime I watched last year.

What’s released in cinemas in Japan this weekend?

ST MPD Scientific Investigation Squad   

ST MPD Scientific Investigation Squad Film Poster
ST MPD Scientific Investigation Squad Film Poster

Japanese: ST赤と白の捜査ファイル

Romaji: ST Aka to Shiro no

Release Date: January 10th, 2015 (Japan)

Running Time: 110 mins.

Director: Toya Sato

Writer: Bin Konno (Original Novel), Yusuke Watanabe (Screenplay),

Starring: Tatsuya Fujiwara, Masaki Okada, Mirai Shida, Masataka Kubota, Sei Ashina, Hiroki Miyake, Atsuro Watabe, Asaka Seto, Kento Hayashi, Yuki Shibamoto,

Oh yeah, more of the ST antics and on the big screen. There have been two TV seasons of this rather amusing and nice detective dorama where the guys chasing the criminals are super intelligent but have all sorts of social quirks. It looks like more of the same but fans of the dorama (like me) will probably be very happy with that especially with more of Tatsuya Fujiwara (Battle Royale) and Masaki Okada (The Lightning Tree) doing their double-act!

The Scientific Taskforce from the Metropolitan Police Department is back and the super genius (and also super awkward due to social phobias) Akagi (Fujiwara) and his good-natured police partner Yurine (Okada). When a hacker uses a computer virus to start a prison break and a corpse is discovered, Akagi is blamed and locked up and the ST group are disbanded! Yurine believes Akagi is innocent and tracks down a woman named Naomi who may know the hacker who created the virus.

Website

 

Psycho-Pass Movie   

Psycho-Pass The Movie Poster
Psycho-Pass The Movie Poster

Japanese: 劇場版 サイコパス

Romaji: Gekijouban Saiko Pasu

Release Date: January 09th, 2015 (Japan)

Running Time: 110 mins.

Chief Director: Katsuyuki Motohiro, Director: Naoyoshi Shiotani

Writer: Gen Urobuchi, Makoto Fukami (Screenplay),

Starring: Kana Hanazawa (Akane Tsunemori), Ayane Sakura (Mika Shimotsuki), Tomokazu Seki (Shinya Kougami), Shizuka Itou (Yayoi Kunizuka), Kenji Nojima (Nobuchika Ginoza), Kazuhiro Yamaji (Jouji Saiga),

The second season of Psycho-Pass was disappointing. It was essentially a retread of the first but with a set of dumber crimes. Gone were the amazing antagonist Shogo Makashima and the gripping strained father/son dynamics between the members of the detective squad. Even the animation and music seemed bad. It wasn’t an awful television show but the first season was so good that it felt like a major drop in quality. Part of the problem can be attributed to the fact that the writer Gen Urobuchi left his project in the hands of writers who are less talented and the animation studio Production I.G weren’t animating. Nope, I.G was making this film. Trailer and synopsis from Anime News Network:

Year 2116—The Japanese government begins to export the Sibyl System unmanned drone robots to troubled countries, and the system spreads throughout the world. A state in the midst of a civil war, SEAUn (the South East Asia Union), brings in the Sibyl System as an experiment. Under the new system, the coastal town of Shambala Float achieves temporary peace and safety. But then SEAUn sends terrorists to Japan. They slip through the Sibyl System and then attack from within. The shadow of a certain man falls on this incident. In charge of the police, Tsunemori travels to Shambala Float to investigate. The truth of justice on this new ground will become clear.

Judging by the plot, we can pretend the second season never happened and pretend we’re at the end of the first. I’m all for that! Also, check out the website which is fantastic.

Website

 

 

Strike Witches: Operation Victory Arrow Vol. 2   Goddess of the Aegean Sea

Japanese: ストライクウィッチーズOperation Victory Arrow Vol 2 エーゲ海の女神

Romaji: Sutoraiku Uicchi-zu Operation Victory Arrow Vol 2 E-ge umi no megami

Release Date: January 10th, 2015 (Japan)

Running Time: 55 mins.

Director: Kazuhiro Takamura

Original Creator:  Huikane Shimada

Starring: Kaori Nazuka as Lynette Bishop, Saori Seto as Mio Sakamoto, Ami Koshimizu as Charlotte E Yaeger, Misato Fukuen as Yoshika Miyafuji, Chiwa Saito as Francesca Lucchini,

The episode will be the second of three 30-minute short OVAs that take place at the end of the second TV series which depicted the lives of the members who returned to their respective homes and before the 2012 Strike Witches movie. (according to Anime News Network).

Website

 

 

The Next Generation Patlabor Chapter 7       

The Next Generation Patlabor Chapter 7 Film Poster
The Next Generation Patlabor Chapter 7 Film Poster

Japanese: THE NEXT GENERATION パトレイバー第7

Romaji: THE NEXT GENERATION PatlaborDai 7Shou

Release Date: January 10th, 2015 (Japan)

Running Time: N/A

Director: Mamoru Oshii

Writer: Mamoru Oshii, (Screenplay), Masami Yuki (Original Novel)

Starring: Erina Mano, Toshio Kakei, Seiji Fukushi, Rina Ohta, Shigeru Chiba, Yoshinori Horimoto, Yoshikatsu Fujiki, Hinako Saeki, Daisuke Takashi,

The 07th Chapter of the new live-action Patlabor series contains the 12th and final episode of Patlabor and preps the movie which gets a release on May 01st (during Golden Week). The last episode has the title “Ooinaru Isan” (Great Expectations) and is told as a sequel to the 1993 anime film Patlabor 2 (one of my top ten films of all time). The focus seems to be Yukihito Tsuge, the main antagonist in Patlabor 2. This final episode is scheduled to be screened at selected Japanese theaters for limited time of two weeks from January 10, 2015.

Here’s a teaser for the film:

Website

 

ITECHO 凍蝶圖鑑   

ITECHO 凍蝶圖鑑 Film Poster
ITECHO 凍蝶圖鑑 Film Poster

Japanese: ITECHO 凍蝶圖鑑

Romaji: ITECHO 凍蝶圖鑑

Release Date: January 10th, 2015 (Japan)

Running Time: 75 mins.

Director: Yukio Tanaka

Writer: Bin Konno (Original Novel), Yusuke Watanabe (Screenplay),

Starring: Tatsuya Fujiwara, Masaki Okada, Mirai Shida, Masataka Kubota, Sei Ashina, Hiroki Miyake, Atsuro Watabe, Asaka Seto, Kento Hayashi, Yuki Shibamoto,

This documentary is all about ‘sexual minorities’ some of whom we may normally see mocked in films and not taken too seriously in general because of the titillation factor and what not. I could try and interpret the tales told but I’d rather let the website’s English language page elaborate and the trailer, too. There are more stories on the site which is worth checking out just to see the range of people involved.

:

The film starts in a homeless encampment on the banks of the Yodo river, in Osaka.

A makeshift barrack, with a great view of Osaka’s skyscrapers, serves as a shelter for a homeless man. Dogs and ducks are his roommates. An LGBT group held a BBQ party called “Kansai Refugee Day” here. Miro Daikokudo, a gay man who organized the party, says “Gays cannot deliver children. Instead, we deliver arts. I want to revive underground the culture of the Showa-era. (1926-1989)” The camera follows Miro, who is also a comic-book artist/event producer/bar owner, showing his roots in Shin-sekai, a neighborhood in the south of Osaka known for its erotic spots. Miro is the key character connecting people who appear in the film.

Atsushi Tani’s photograph exhibition takes place in Paris

Atsushi had a successful exhibition, ”Histoire de l’oeil,” at the Eroticism Museum in Paris. He showed thirty-six of his works and all of them sold. The camera follows his visit to Auvers-surOise, where Van Gogh died, along with Yoshifumi Hayashi, an artist living in Paris.

Diedrich’s visit to a hidden temple

Diedrich visits Ishidoji temple, which has tons of stone-buddhas and stone-pagodas. “I’ve always looked up to non-human beings. I don’t want to live either as a man or as a woman. I just want to live as Diedrich, that is me.” Every evening, Diedrich changes his dress to drag, wears make-up, and goes to work at a bar.

HORI-SHLA

HORISHLA became a tattoo artist after spending three years in jail. He asks young customers what it means for them to get tattoos, “Tatoos are not just about fashion. Are you ready to have this in your whole life?” I have a deep inferiority complex. I am a pessimist.

Rubber and Wet & Messy fetishes

“Underline” has a rubber fetish. He really likes the skin-like feeling of rubber. Ai’s fetish is getting wet and messy. They both like being wrapped or covered. The camera got into one of their events, where many young people gather.

A French woman fascinated by Japanese rope arts

Vivienne has been living in Japan for 13 years. She is fascinated by Kinbaku-bi, or beauty of tight binding. She performs around the world with her husband who is a body modification artist. In this documentary, we see footage of her show in a traditional house in Kyoto.

Website

Aaaaaaaaaaand that’s it for badly translated trailers.ST MPD Scientific Investigation Squad Tetsuya Fujiwara

Not so random music videos, the opening titles for Tokyo Ghoul Season 2 and Yurikuma Arashi, two brilliant openers to start the year with:


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