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An Interview with Urara Matsubayashi and Mayu Akiyama on the Film “Kamata Prelude” at the Osaka Asian Film Festival 2020

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Mayu Akiyama (director) and Urara Matsubayashi (producer/lead actress) from the Osaka Asian Film Festival
Mayu Akiyama (director) and Urara Matsubayashi (producer/lead actress) from the Osaka Asian Film Festival

My final interview at the Osaka Asian Film Festival 2020 was with Mayu Akiyama and Urara Matsubayashi for the festival’s closing film Kamata Prelude.

Kamata Prelude is the brainchild of Urara Matsubayashi (lead actress in The Hungry Lion) who Kamata Prelude Film Posterproduced as well as took a lead role. She gives a portrayal of a struggling actress named Machiko who lives in the Kamata area of Tokyo. A four-part omnibus film, each section revolves around her in some way and aims to depict what it means to be a “woman” and an “actress” in society, but they are done in the unique style of each of the four directors.

Two of the directors are guys you may have heard of if you follow film festivals. Book-ending the film are Ryutaro Nakamura, whose works like Plastic Love Story and Silent Rain are full of lyrical imagery, and Hirobumi Watanabe, who has built a filmography based on his stories all being set in his native Tochigi prefecture and shot with distinct monochrome visuals while being shot-through with dry humour. The newer directors are two young women, Yuka Yasukawa, one of a number of emerging talents tapped to helm a section in the omnibus film 21st Century Girl, and Mayu Akiyama, whose debut work, Rent a Friend, won the MOOSIC LAB Grand Prix and was screened at the Tokyo International Film Festival 2018.

While Watanabe and Nakamura made sections that are delightful reveries about life and a love of movies/culture (albeit, tinged with melancholy in Nakamura’s case), Yasukawa and Akiyama provided subjects that feel more keyed in to the thorny issues of life as a young woman. Yuka Yasukawa gives a #MeToo story wherein Machiko goes to a casting call and finds herself facing a grossly exploitative panel of guys alongside a defiant fellow actress played by Kumi Takiuchi (It Feels So Good, Greatful Dead). Meanwhile, Akiyama’s section felt like a realistic depiction of a get-together of girls wherein false masks and the anxieties that women bear in society are exposed in an onsen in Kamata. This section is full of great actresses who are making waves in the entertainment world like Mayuko Fukuda (Good-Bye) and an especially acerbic Sairi Ito (Love & Other Cults). 

Sat with Matsubayashi and Akiyama at a rooftop bar, I enjoyed a lively talk with two intelligent and resourceful creatives who I felt would be making big things in the future. Their film is a refreshingly hip and contemporary set of stories where its unique approach to style and subject-matter rendered their address of important issues enjoyable, nuanced, and relevant for our age.

This interview was done at the festival and via email with their help and the invaluable help of Takako Pocklington who translated and added some interesting comments.

Jason: Thank you very much for doing this interview. I enjoyed watching the film. It has a fresh feeling due to it being shot in different styles by different directors. Making an omnibus film like this is an interesting set up. So, my first question is why did you create this project?

Urara Matsubayashi: I have been acting for seven to eight years but haven’t been so successful. I’d been contemplating myself and my situation and I thought I need to have a more positive stance as an actress, I should not just wait to be offered roles, I should also be expressing myself. That was my initial motive for doing this project, then I started to plan this project and scouted directors.

You worked with directors who have very different styles, why did you select them?

Matsubayashi: I was a fan of them so I just said to them, “Shall we make a film together?” without much consideration.

You were telling a young woman’s story. Often times it’s usually men interpreting women’s stories but with this film you have two men and two women. Was it always your intention to have two men and two women?

Matsubayashi: I didn’t have any intention to do that. There were three female directors and a male director to start with but due to various reasons, we ended up having two men and two women.

Did you give directors complete freedom to write and shoot what they wanted?

Matsubayashi: I presented them with the basic theme of an actress named Machiko and the location of the story, which would be in my home town of Kamata. I asked them to depict Machiko’s life, different aspects of her personality, her surroundings and the life of people related to her.

[To Mayu Akiyama] Your section is very interesting. You had a collection of really good actresses. Could you talk about what you wanted to achieve with your section?

Mayu Akiyama: Yes, the theme of my section is “Joshikai”(girls’ party), where Machiko has a reunion with her high school friends. They have all grown up and have different lives but their old relationship still occasionally lingers among them. It is a story about five women, who have a twisted relationship and go to a hot spa in Kamata together. Their relationship is a bit like a soap opera.

Could you talk about the writing and the rehearsal process?

Akiyama: I started the script with Machiko’s issues. Her occupation is an actress. People tend to see her occupation superficially and think she must be rich and her life must be very stylish. I depicted this with the dialogue. However, she is having trouble making a living by acting. She hasn’t had many casting opportunities or been paid much and she hides her situation. The rooftop party scene depicts the conversation and the real intentions of the characters which shift as they hide their inferiority complexes while casually boasting.

Then, the scenes at the hot spa, just as they take off their clothes and expose their naked bodies, they gradually reveal their true selves, their realities. There is only one person who doesn’t get in the bath though (Sairi Ito’s character, Hanna)

Kamata Prelude Image 2

I had a rather tight schedule. I shot the film in two and a half days including rehearsal. The actors are all unique, so I trusted their acting and we improvised in each scene. The scene at the rooftop, they didn’t have much space to move around so I depended on their facial acting. The later scenes at the spa, I used the place fully to render their feelings. I just let them act as they are and managed to finish the shooting.

So that was the reason there was so much naturalism. Sairi Ito’s character was kind of scary. She takes no prisoners. She is very honest. In some ways, that is quite healthy, because she acts like the catalyst for change.

Akiyama: She played a character that is persistent from the beginning to the end.

Why did you want a #MeToo story and how was it created with Yuka Yasukawa. Were those real stories?

Matsubayashi: In the #MeToo part of the film, I asked director Yuka Yasukawa to expand a story based on my actual experience. I told her that it must include the audition scene. I feel that women who are judged by men like this work, and that women who are targeted for exploitation are depicted realistically in terms of [a situation between an] actress and director.

In working on the transcription, Takako pointed out that there is a connection to the Kinji Fukasaku film Fall Guy (蒲田行進曲) in the use of music. Had you seen the film before making Kamata Prelude and is the reference to it deliberate?

Matsubayashi: Yes, of course! I watched Fall Guy (蒲田行進曲) directed by Kinji Fukasaku. Machiko’s favorite movie is Fall Guy. In the opening scene of Mayu Akiyama’s section with the “Joshikai” (girls’ party), Machiko is singing the theme song for Fall Guy.

My final question is to you, Matsubayashi-san. You are known as an actress. Do you think you will go on to produce more films?

Matsubayashi: Ummm, I don’t know. I had lots of moments to realise how hard it is being a producer. However, I felt I achieved my aim, which was to broaden both my acting skills and my view by experiencing the role of a producer. I am very grateful to the people (who helped me). If I had an opportunity, I might want to do it again though…

I’ve already been offered the chance to produce my next project. I need to promote this one first, so it can be seen by lots of people???

I really enjoyed the film. It’s rich character study, we see Machiko from many different perspectives and understand her career and her concerns and, by extension, concerns of people in her generation. It’s very enjoyable being around all the characters. Thanks for making it.

Kamata Prelude opens in select cinemas in Japan on September 25th (more details on the film’s website). You can read my review here.


Japanese Films at the Skip City International D-Cinema Festival 2020

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The Skip City International D-Cinema Festival runs from Saturday, September 26th Skip City International DCinema Festival Poster 2020to Sunday, October 4th, 2020. Skip City was one of the first international competitive film festivals to exclusively feature digital cinema and in 2020 the 17th edition of the festival will be a totally difital experience as organisers take the festival online for the first time ever. There are 24 films programmed and they will be viewable over at the website Cinema Discoveries, a new streaming service that started in April this year. In terms of subtitles, Skip City provides English ones for Japanese films, so I am assuming they will do so for this year’s edition.

This is my first ever post about the Skip City International D-Cinema Festival even though I have been aware of it for many years since it is a hotbed of new film talent from Japan and its English-language information has helped me write trailer posts and festival previews in the past. The main reason I decided to write about it is because it features two works I reviewed as part of the Osaka Asian Film Festival earlier this year. These two titles and the filmmakers whom I interviewed provide a bright future for the Japanese film industry and I hope more people can watch their films.

My rewrites will get rewritten eventually but, for now, I suggest that you go to the festival page to see a better synopses and more director information…

Here are the films. To find out more information about them, just click on the titles:

International Competition

Woman of the Photographs    Woman of the Photographs Film Poster

写真の女Shashin no Onna

Release Date: June 27th, 2020

Duration: 89 mins.

Director: Takeshi Kushida

Writer: Takeshi Kushida (Script),

Starring: Hideki Nagai, Itsuki Otaki, Toshiaki Inomata, Toki Koinuma, Takaaki Kikuchi, Keiko Katsukura, Ryo Tsuchida,

OAFF Website

Writer/director Takeshi Kushida makes his feature debut with Woman of the Photographs has been wowing people across the world with its pristine and inventive visuals and solid story of love in a time of social media madness.

Here’s my interview with the director and my review of the film.

Synopsis: Middle-aged photographer Kai (Hideki Nagai) is committed to living a bachelor’s life due to his gynaphobia but when an Instagram model named Kyoko (Itsuki Otani) crashes into his life, an offbeat meet-cute turns into a psycho-romance as her search for social media success draws him into helping her.

Japanese Film Competition (Feature Length)

Kontora   

コントラKontora

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 145 mins.

Director: Anshul Chauhan

Writer: Anshul Chauhan (Script) 

Starring: Seira Kojima, Wan Marui, Hidemasa Mase, Takuzo Shimizu, Taichi Yamada,

Twitter IMDB

This is a distinct and impressive sophomore feature from Anshul Chauhan after his debut, Bad Poetry Tokyo (2017) with its gorgeous monochrome sheen and absorbing dramatic acting and mysterious story. It won the Grand Prix at the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival and it is one I am looking forward to seeing at the Osaka Asian Film Festival n March. 

Here’s my review and an interview with the director Anshul Chauhan.

Synopsis: When Sora’s (Wan Marui) grandfather passes away she loses the last person she feels she can communicate with. Her relationship with her father is very uneasy and so, when Sora discovers her grandfather’s wartime diary which hints at hidden treasure, she hides it in the hopes it can provide some outlet for herself. At this time a mysterious mute vagrant who only walks backwards appears in town and his presence provides a catalyst for change between father and daughter.

Arano

あらののはてArano no hate

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 67 mins.

Director: Tomofumi Hasegawa

Writer: Tomofumi Hasegawa (Script), 

Starring: Hitomi Maki, Yusuke Takahashi, Yu Mashima, Harumi Shuhama, Takehiko Fujita, Miki Naruse

Synopsis: When high schooler Fuko poses for her art club classmate Alan early one morning, she didn’t expect that she would orgasm, let alone faint. This caused all sorts of problems as her homeroom teacher who happened upon the scene misread the situation and Alan was expelled from school, thus separating the two. Eight years later, Fuko still remembers that day and finds Alan to ask him to draw a picture of her again.

Cornflakes

コーンフレークKo-n Fure-ku

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 95 mins.

Director: Teppei Isobe

Writer: Teppei Isobe (Script), 

Starring: GON, Reiko Takada, Hinami Hino, Miyuu Teshima, Tomoki Kimura, Misato Namba, Kakeru Tsuchiya,

Synopsis: Miho and her boyfriend Yuya have lived happily together for seven years but while she works as an insurance salesperson, he lounges around half-hardheartedly pursuing dreams of being a musician. Their cosy life together comes to an end, one day, when they get into an argument and Miho throws Yuya out. Yuya has no place to go; Miho is all alone. After living together for seven years, the couple will spend this night apart.

B/B

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 77 mins.

Director: Kosuke Nakai

Writer: Kosuke Nakai (Script), 

Starring: Karen, Moshin Nakazawa, Kazane Nishimura, Honoka Kiba, Hitomichan, Taro Sanami, Ai Yonekura,

Synopsis from the festival: In 2020, the Tokyo Olympics have been cancelled due to the Olympic Minister’s corruption, and there was a failed poison gas attack by a new religion. In the shadows of these two major events, the brutal killing of a convenience store owner occurs. The incident is dubbed “Icarus.” Sana, who had contact with the owner’s son, Shiro, becomes the subject of interrogation by detectives. Suffering from dissociative identity disorder, she and the other personalities inside her each begin to recall events from their point of view.

The Rain’s Ark

雨の方舟Ame no Hakobune

Release Date: September 05th, 2020

Duration: 70 mins.

Director: Kao Senami

Writer: Kao Senami (Script), 

Starring: Nanaho Otsuka, Shohei Matsuzaki, Chihiro Kawashima, Yuto Uehara, Kikuno Ikeda, Manami Nakata,

Website

Synopsis: A young woman named Toko who wanders a forest finds herself in a home with four people who live a simple way of life based on living from the land but there is something strange about them and something mysterious begins to happen… 


Japanese Film Competition (Short Length)

Axandax

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 44 mins.

Director: Keita Niwa

Writer: Keita Niwa (Script), 

Starring: Hideaki Tani, Reno Yoshitsugu, Towa Suzuki, Mitsuo Tsuda, Ruka Hatori, Yuki Nakazono, Mikoto Matsushima,

Synopsis: In this dystopian film, in the near future, everything about us is digitised and easily accessible, leading to feelings of inferiority as we compare our lives. One man, Jin, chooses to leave civilisation and live far away in the mountains. When Naomi, a counsellor, visits him, Jin gradually tells her his story and why he lives isolated from others. 

Limelight

来夢来人Raimraito

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 36 mins.

Director: Ryuya Wakaba

Writer: Ryuya Wakaba (Script), 

Starring: Ryunsuke Ito, Sho Yakumaru, Iku Arai, Ritsu Otomo, Ikuma Nagatomo, Hideto Nitta, Gunma Kurio,

A neat little pun in the Japanese title which can be read as “raimraito” (limelight) but also means dream comes person comes. 来夢来人

No trailer

Synopsis: Kenji is experiencing a series of humiliations. He has given up his dream of becoming an actor and now works part-time as a courier and Harumi, his girlfriend of three years, has broken up with him and asks that he gets his things from her apartment. He arrives earlier than scheduled and meets his ex’s new boyfriend Yuji. The two start to have an awkward conversation that naturally goes to Harumi who comes home amid an uneasy atmosphere

Muito Prazer

ムイト・プラゼールMutio Puraze-ru

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 31 mins.

Director: Park Jen-gil

Writer: N/A

Starring: Chong Sun-yong, Debora Barbosa Eguchi, Mion Fujii, Rodrigo Sato, Yuki Yamazaki, Kazutoshi Kawabe,

Muito Prazer is Portuguese for “much pleasure” and it is the title of a drama shot with non-professional actors who explore an issue pertinent to our age which is experiencing demands for social justice.

Synopsis: High school teacher Kanamoto is the adviser of the international exchange club and she takes her charges to visit a school in Ibaraki for Brazilians of Japanese descent. What they get is a hostile reception as the Brazilian students have faced repeated discrimination and abuse. Will the two groups be able to bridge the gap between them?

Payment

つぐないTsugunai

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 38 mins.

Director: Kazuyuki Miyabe

Writer: Kazuyuki Miyabe (Script), 

Starring: Fusako Urabe, Daisuke Kuroda, Nanaka Shogaki, Shoichiro Suzuki, Masami Koba, Naoko Shimizu, Natsuko Nagahama,

Synopsis: Satomi’s  young daughter has gone missing and the police are stumped. She grows suspicious of the apartment building’s secretive janitor who seems to know something about the case and observes her…

Radio

レイディオReideio

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 45 mins.

Director: Kazuyuki Miyabe

Writer: N/A

Starring: Shunya Kato, Miyu Matsuoka, Jumpei Yoshii, Yuji Ishii.

Synopsis: Kato is a university student who is drifting through life and struggling to relate to anyone else but there is one person who shares his hobby of listening to a late-night radio programme and that is Matsuoka, a girl who tells him, “I want to live a life without regrets.” Kato feels attracted to her but soon realises she lives in a world different from his own.

Ritsuko & Ken-chan

リッちゃん、健ちゃんの夏。Ricchan, Kenchan no Natsu

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 31 mins.

Director: Ayumi Omori

Writer: Ayumi Omori (Script), 

Starring: Iriya Take, Kenta Oikawa, Chiona Okuni

This was shot in the World Heritage site of Kuroshima in Nagasaki Prefecture and uses its history of Christianity as a backdrop for the film’s story.

Synopsis: Highschooler Ritsuko will move to Tokyo during summer break which means leaving her beloved Japanese language teacher, Ken-chan, behind. She follows him to Kuroshima where his parents reside and tries to get his attention. 

Sitting at an Angle

ななめの食卓Naname no shokutaku

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 27 mins.

Director: Ayaka Kishi

Writer: N/A

Starring: Tomoko Takama, Tomohiko Kiyota, Kiyomi Tanigawa, Yuya Tamaki, Makoto Yamashita,

Synopsis: Tatsunori is a widower who lives with his mother-in-law Nobuko. Both are awkward with each other, their one link, Haru, having died suddenly in a traffic accident. Although they eat together, they each face an empty seat and struggle to decide what to do about the future.

Stay

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 38 mins.

Director: Naoya Fujita

Writer: Suzuyuki Kaneko (Script),

Starring: Keita Yamashina, Ruka Ishikawa, Takaki Uda, Yumi Endo, Kenta Yamagishi, Kohei Nagano, Suzuyuki Kaneko,

I saw this one as part of the Osaka Asian Film Festival 2020 and felt an atmosphere of desolation running through it. Beautifully shot and with intriguing human relations but the disappearances were terribly desolate…

Synopsis from the filmmaker: People who have no obvious connection with one another live in an abandoned house that has fallen into disrepair, coming and going as they please. Yajima is a village official who shows up at the house with an eviction notice in hand. However, he gets drawn into the pace of the people living there, especially the central figure Suzuyama, and fails to persuade them to leave. Unable to perform his job, Yajima ends up staying the night there.

Then I Add Colors to a Panda and a Zebra.

そして私はパンダやシマウマに色を塗るのだ。Soshite watashi wa panda ya shimauma no iro wo nurunoda

Release Date: N/A

Duration: 39 mins.

Director: Karin Takeda

Writer: Karin Takeda (Script), 

Starring: Yuki, Kansaku Shinohara, Ryota Takeda, Kayoko Kimura, Keiji Murata, Mako Shimizu,

Synopsis: Shirahoshi is a girl who is a perfectionist. If she can’t be the best, then she might as well give up. That’s why she quit her dream of being a manga artist when she won the runner-up prize in a contest and that is why she is shocked when her boyfriend, who was her perfect match, dumps her. Looking for a new job and trying to cope with rejection, she meets a suspicious man and self-proclaimed ghost who warns her that not everything has to be “black or white.”

“Performing KAORU’s Funeral”– A Kickstarter Project by Noriko Yuasa

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Noriko Yuasa has a new project on Kickstarter and it is for a feature-length film called Performing KAORU’s Funeral. A successful campaign will help finance this film which is based on an original script that she wrote in 2017 and has been working on since last year. It is described as, “A tragic and comical story of one woman’s final days, mixed with irony and love”.

Judging from the initial teaser trailer for the film, this looks like it could be something that brings tears mixed with laughter as a dark-dark drama plays out.

 

Performing KAORU’s Funeral  Performing Kaoru's Funeral Film Poster

Release Date: 2021

Duration: N/A

Director: Noriko Yuasa

Writer: Takato Nishi (Script), 

Starring: N/A

Website

Synopsis: When Kaoru Washizu, an infamously greedy screenwriter, dies suddenly in a traffic accident, it brings together a collection of characters from the constellation of her life for her funeral.

First and foremost is her impoverished ex-husband Jun Yokotani. While he claims to be an actor himself, he teaches at a school to make ends meet. Kaoru has assigned him the role of chief mourner in her will and so he must carry out her last demands. Arriving in Okayama he meets people with conflicting feelings such as Kaoru’s co-workers who are helping arrange things but hold bitterness in their hearts for her. There is also Kaoru’s daughter who greets Jun with the colds words, “this funeral was the last wish of my mother. You have to hold the service perfectly, not missing a thing from her will. Your only reason for being here is to do so.”

Performing Kaoru’s funeral will be difficult for Jun as he finds himself facing a tough crowd but, together, these people will be able to see different aspects of the woman who has drawn them all together with her final requests that will get them to understand what it means to be a family.


Noriko Yuasa states that the story is based on her experience of losing her friend and it looks like it is combined with her experience in the movie world. It will be interesting to see how reality and fiction are combined as the story will take audiences into the behind the silver screen and into the private lives of a wide range of movie-related archetypes that crash together in a mourning period. Big comic moments are seen from some of the more exuberant characters in the trailer but I have a feeling that the genuine emotions of what it means to be connected to another person will be sheathed in that comedy and strike hearts hard as the film hits on what the obligations of family are.

This film is an international co-production with talent from Japan and Spain involved and Yuasa has global ambitions for the film with the hopes of taking it to the Venice Film Festival as well as Busan.

Speaking of global, this is also a production that has been affected by global events as it was scheduled to start shooting in November of this year but then the Covid-19 pandemic arose. While the virus presents a lot of challenges, it adds poignancy to this film which has a very universal story of people saying goodbye to loved ones and learning to value others. 

So, production on the film has been pushed back to January 2021 with a view of completing it in early May 2021 and the Kickstarter campaign will help.

As written on the Kickstarter page, the first goal of crowdfunding will be to get the necessary funding that covers some of the pre-production fees listed below:

  • Scenario & pre-location hunting pre-production fee
  • Crew pre-production fee
  • Advance advertising pre-production fee
  • Translation operating pre-production fee
  • Overseas staff pre-production fee
  • Costs associated with casting auditions

As Yuasa says,

The aim of this crowdfunding is not only to gain as much support as possible, but also to reach the widest possible audience in the world. The amount of funding that will be raised here has a direct impact on our project in terms of quality, project sustainability and passion and motivation of the staffs.

There are various levels of support people can pledge, ranging from 1000 yen to 1,000,000 yen, and the rewards that backers can get include a”thank you” message from Noriko Yuasa and producer Mika Shimoeda, a “making-of” movie and a scene from the finished film, a digital photo album of the cast and crew on the festival circuit as well as digital access to two of Yuasa’s short films, and the chance to have your name in the credits. There is even a chance to get a limited edition T-shirt connected to the film, as made by Art Director Ina Takayuki.

Since this film is linked to traditional Japanese culture – through the unique scenes of a funeral, there are some rewards that focus on that and offer more luxurious and experiences as explained on the Kickstarter page:

 

It’s exciting project and one you can have faith in since Noriko Yuasa is highly experienced and she has the backing of producer Mika Shimoeda whose other credits include the award-winning 2015 film Rolling (dir: Masanori Tominaga) and Under the Turquoise Sky (dir: Kentaro, 2019).

I have reviewed a number of Noriko Yuasa’s works such as Looking for my Lost Sunflowers (2014),  Girl, Wavering (2015) and Ordinary Everyday (2017), and Coming Back Sunny (2019), all of which I absolutely loved for their artful use of colours. Indeed, Ordinary Everyday was one of my favourite films of the last decade. However, this one feels more subdued based on the teaser video, so it will be interesting to see how this project goes. I’ll definitely be backing it.

If you want to support the project or find out more, please visit the film’s Kickstarter page where you can read more. You can also check out a YouTube channel to see videos with various members of the crew and get more background on everything.

The deadline for Performing KAORU’s Funeral is October 10th and so there’s still plenty of time to get involved and spread word. By doing this, you can help support a talented indie filmmaker who has the experience and the ability to pull off this project.

 

 

 

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/norikokyuasa/international-feature-film-performing-kaorus-funeral-1st

 

Kamata Prelude, Midnight Swan, My Sweet Grappa Remedies, Keep Your Hands off Eizouken! Live-Action, How Neya Ryoka Became a Director, ATEOTD – At the End of the Day and Other Japanese Film Trailers

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Happy weekend, everyone.

We have made it through another week.

I have been busy posting things such as a round up of the Japanese films at the Vancouver International Film Festival, the London Film Festival, Skip City D-Cinema Festival and an interview with Urara Matsubayashi and Mayu Akiyama for their work on Kamata Prelude and a post about the Kickstarter campaign for Noriko Yuasa’s latest project, Performing Kaoru’s Funeral. In terms of films watched, I have ploughed through the MOOSIC Lab works that are free to view for the remainder of this month and I have watched John Woo’s The Killer and a Japanese film from 2018, Lovers on Borders. Oh, also more episodes of The Boys season 2!

What is released this weekend?

Kamata Prelude    Kamata Prelude Film Poster

蒲田前奏曲  Kamata Sensoukyoku

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: 115 mins.

Directors: Ryutaro Nakagawa, Mayu Akiyama, Yuka Yasukawa, Hirobumi Watanabe

Writers: Ryutaro Nakagawa, Mayu Akiyama, Yuka Yasukawa, Hirobumi Watanabe (Script)

Starring: Urara Matsubayashi, Kotone Furukawa, Ren Sudo, Sairi Ito, Mayuko Fukada, Noa Kawazoe, Ryutaro Ninomiya, Ryutaro Kondo,

Website    IMDB

The directors involved are a new generation of talent from the Japanese movie industry including Ryutaro Nakamura whose work ranges from Plastic Love Story to Silent Rain, the latter of which was screened at both the 2019 Busan International Film Festival and Tokyo Filmex where it won the Audience Award. Mayu Akiyama’s debut work, Rent a Friend, won the MOOSIC LAB Grand Prix and was screened at the Tokyo International Film Festival 2018. Hirobumi Watanabe’s film Cry won Best Director at the Tokyo International Film Festival 2019 in the Japanese Cinema Splash section. Yuka Yasukawa was one of a number of emerging talents tapped to helm one of the shorts from 21st Century Girl which has been screened around the world.

Urara Matsubayashi, the film’s producer and one of its cast, is a rising star active on the stage, TV drama, and on film. She will be most familiar with her performance in The Hungry Lion which was screened at the Rotterdam International Film Festival and New York Asian Film Festival in 2018. She is joined by many seasoned actors, including Sairi Ito (Love & Other Cults) and Kumi Takiuchi (It Feels So Good, Greatful Dead) and Ren Sudo (Last Judgement).

Here’s my review and, again, here’s my interview with producer/star Urara Matsubayashi and director Mayu Akiyama.

Synopsis: A four-part film done in the unique style of each director, Urara Matsubayashi gives a portrayal of a struggling actress named Machiko who lives in Kamata. Machiko is the central axis of the movie as the film comically depicts what it means to be a “woman” and an “actress” in society through showing the patterns of life as conducted by her and the people that surround her.

Midnight Swan    Midnight Swan Film Poster

ミッドナイトスワンMiddonaito Suwan

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: 124 mins.

Director: Eiji Uchida

Writer: Eiji Uchida (Script), 

Starring: Tsuyoshi Kusanagi, Misaki Hattori, Asami Mizukawa, Tomorowo Taguchi, Sei Matobu, Eriko Sato, Toshie Negishi, Yusuke Hirayama,

Website IMDB

From Eiji Uchida, the director of Love and Other Cults (2017) and Greatful Dead (2014), a film that sounds a little like Close Knit (2017), the quietly affecting transgender drama from Naoko Ogigami. It stars Tsuyoshi Kusanagi, former member of SMAP in the lead role, Asami Mizukawa (A Beloved Wife) and Tomorowo Taguchi (Tetsuo: The Iron Man).

Synopsis: Nagisa (Tsuyoshi Kusanagi) started life as a guy in Hiroshima but moved to Shinjuku, Tokyo, and transitioned to a woman. Her life is changed when a distant relative named Ichika (Misaki Hattori) comes to stay with her. She has been neglected by her mother Saori (Asami Mizukawa) and has nowhere else to go but it won’t be easy for Ichika and Nagisa to get along. However, over time, a bond develops between the two as they influence each other and Nagisa discovers her maternal instincts.

My Sweet Grappa Remedies   My Sweet Grappa Remedies Film Poster

甘いお酒でうがいAmai osake de ugai

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: 107 mins.

Director: Akiko Ooku

Writer: Jiro (Script), Yoshiko Kawashima (Original Novel)

Starring: Yasuko Matsuyuki, Hana Kuroki, Hiroya Shimizu, Kanji Furutachi, Kozo Sato, Tomoya Maeno,

Website IMDB

The writer of the film is Jiro. He is a member of the manzai group Sissonne and he has written a novel in the voice of a woman named “Yoshiko Kawashima”. The novel is a diary that notes her thoughts and it has been adapted for the big screen. This is Jiro’s second collaboration with Akiko (Tremble All You Want) Ohku after they worked on Marriage Hunting Beauty.

Synopsis: Yoshiko (Yasuko Matsuyuki) is a single woman in her 40s who works in a publishing company and enjoys drinking grappa and writing in her diary. She enjoys her simple life but when she is introduced to a younger guy in his 20s, she falls in love and a new, welcome complexity changes her easy days…

Keep Your Hands off Eizouken! Live-Action    Keep Your Hands off Eizouken! Live-Action Film Poster

映像研には手を出すな!Eizouken niwa Te wo Dasuna!

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: 113 mins.

Director: Tsutomu Hanabusa

Writer: Tsutomu Hanabusa, Minato Takano (Script), Sumito Oowara (Original Manga)

Starring: Minami Hamabe, Minami Umezawa, Yura Someno, Asuka Saito, Eiji Akaso, Wakana Matsumoto,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: Midori Asakusa dreams of making an anime, but is too timid to try it herself. However, with her friend, the money-mad Sayaka Kanamori, and Tsubame Mizusaki, one of the school’s elite who secretly harbours dreams of becoming an animator, Midori set up the Eizouken (Video Research Club) to make an anime.

How Neya Ryoka Became a Director    How Neya Ryoka Became a Director Film Poster

根矢涼香、映画監督になる。Neya Ryōka, eiga kantoku ni naru.

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Naho Kamimura

Writer: N/A

Starring: Ryoka Neya, Atomu Mizuishi, Misao Ueda, Saya Kobayashi, Arisa Kunugi, Koji Seki,

Website

Ryoka Neya is an up-and-coming actress and I reviewed her latest film, Idol, last week Friday. She gave a riveting performance in that and she takes the lead in this film which was originally set for a release in May.

Synopsis: Ryoka Neya plays a version of herself, a person who loves movies and has a dream of becoming a director. So far, she has risen through the ranks to work as an assistant director, but has not been able to make any of her own works. She also struggles to convey her love to Keita, who she has been in love with since college. Will Ryoka be able to seize her dreams and her man?

Moshi moshi Atashitachi ga Saisai Janakattara. HERO DOCUMENTARY FILM    Moshi moshi Atashitachi ga Saisai Janakattara. &HERO DOCUMENTARY FILM Film Poster

もしもあたしたちがサイサイじゃなかったら。&HERO DOCUMENTARY FILMMoshi moshi Atashitachi ga Saisai Janakattara. HERO DOCUMENTARY FILM

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: 90 mins.

Director: Tomohiro Takahashi

Writer: Tomohiro Takahashi (Script),

Starring: Sumire Yoshida, Hinako Umemura, Aina Yamauchi, Yukako Kurosaka,

Website

The four-member girl band Silent Siren, nicknamed “Sai Sai”, is celebrating its 10th anniversary since its formation in 2010 with this movie which asks “What if we weren’t Saisai?” This is an adaptation of an original drama of the same name which stars the members of the band. It contains footage from their concerts, such as Year-end Special Live 2019, as well as an alternate timeline story.

Synopsis: During a Silent Siren concert, a performance by lead vocals & guitarist Su (Sumire Yoshida) stops time sends the band to a parallel world where Saisai doesn’t exist…

Mouseman: Ai no Katamari    Mouseman Ai no Katamari Film Poster

マウスマン 愛の塊Mausuman: Ai no Katamari

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: 51 mins.

Director: Pierre Ito

Writer: Pierre Ito, Takumi Yagihashi (Script), 

Starring: Yoshimasa Hosoya (Mikio Nezumi/Mouseman), Akane Fujisaki (Hiroko), Miwako Natsukawa (Rika), Ai Hoshikawa (Ai no Katamari), Shinji Ozaki (Mama), Ai Fujisawa (rena),

Website ANN

A self-produced animation made remotely, this is the movie culmination of a series of shorts (numbering 70) that director Pierre Ito has been working on between 2016 and 2018. It has been released in the year of the rodent, which is perfect.

Synopsis: 32-year-old Mikio Nezumi lives a dull life until he is suddenly transformed into a cyborg by a mysterious national institution. He is thrust into a battle with an unknown invader as the cyborg “mouseman.” He cannot leave his old life behind as he is reunited with his former lover in a battle…

ATEOTD – At the End of the Day    ATEOTD Film Poster

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: 25 mins.

Director: Takumi Saitoh

Writer: Takumi Saitoh (Script),

Starring: Mugi Kadowaki, Hio Miyazawa,

Website

Actor/director Takumi Saitoh has been very busy both in front of and behind the camera and this short film is his latest work and it stars the super-talented actress Mugi Kadowaki (Double Life, Her Sketchbook).

Only a music video is available.

Synopsis: “ATEOTD” is an abbreviation of the phrase “At the end of the day”. It’s the title of a story set in the year 2120. Similar to our world, there is an epidemic once every 100 years, only this one seems to signal the end world as people have been forced to live in shelters. The story focuses on two people, a man and a woman, both of whom live lonely lives after losing their family to this new sickness. Only hope carries them individually but they do form a connection…

Eiga Ningen Isu Bando Seikatsu San Juu-nen    Eiga Ningen Isu Bando Seikatsu San Juu-nen Film Poster

映画 人間椅子 バンド生活三十年 Eiga Ningen Isu Bando Seikatsu San Juu-nen

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: 98 mins.

Director: Yuichiro Iwaki

Writer: N/A

Starring: Ningen Isu: Shinji Wajima, Kenichi Suzuki, Nobu Nakajima,

Website

Synopsis: NINGEN ISU (which translates to “The Human Chair” Edogawa Rampo) formed in 1987 and made their major debut in 1990 with their first album “Ningen Shikkaku (No Longer Human)”. This documentary celebrate 30 years of their adventures mixing Japanese classical literature, the folk culture of their place of birth, Aomori, and various forms of rock music, the most consistent being progressive. The film shows a live performance at Nakano Sun Plaza Hall in Tokyo from their 30th anniversary tour. There are also snippets from the bands tours in Germany and the UK in 2008 and behind-the-scenes moments.

HARAJUKU Seven Days Given by an Angel    HARAJUKU Seven Days Given by an Angel Film Poster

HARAJUKU 天使がくれた七日間HARAJUKU tenshi ga kureta nanukakan

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: 94 mins.

Director: Keita Matsuda

Writer: Keita Matsuda (Script), 

Starring: Ryoma Baba, Izo Shinata, Ryo Hirano, Akane Sakanoue, Aki Takajou,

Website

This film was shot entirely on an iPhone.

Synopsis: The main character of this movie inherits a public bath which is located in the middle of Harajuku. It is here that an angel appears to take the main character to heaven, but the angel becomes fascinated by the hip and fashionable surroundings of Harajuku and this allows the main character to negotiate an extension to his life with the promise that he will teach the angel about the area.

Yume wo Ataeru    Yume wo Ataeru Film Poster

夢を与える Yume wo Ataeru

Release Date: September 25th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Isshin Inudo

Writer: Izumi Takahashi (Script), Risa Wataya (Original Novel)

Starring: Nana Komatsu, Rinko Kikuchi, Shingo Ohta, Tasuku Nagaoka, Min Tanaka,

Website IMDB

All four episodes of WOWOW’s serial drama will be screened at a cinema and divided into an A (1 and 2) and B (3 and 4) screening.

Synopsis: Mikiko (Rinko Kikuchi) had grand ambitions for her daughter Yuko to become a star and, after getting spotted at an audition, it seems it will come to pass. As a young woman, Yuko (Nana Komatsu) is popular and appears on the cover of magazines, variety shows and drama series but Yuko feels torn inside about the difference between her professional and personal feelings. When she meets and falls in love with a dancer, things start to go wrong…

The Name of that God is Jealousy    Sono Kami no na wa Shitto Film Poster

その神の名は嫉妬 Sono Kami no na wa Shitto

Release Date: September 26th, 2020

Duration: 85 mins.

Director: Kensuke Ashihara

Writer: Kensuke Ashihara (Script), 

Starring: Kensuke Ashihara, Tomoaki Nakagawa, Iku Arai, So Kusakabe, Yumi Goto, Ryutaro Ninomiya, Koji Matsushita,

Actor Kensuke Ashihara has appeared in films for Hirokazu Kore-eda (After the Storm) and Ryutaro Ninomiya (Ojo-chan) and now he will make his directorial debut with a film he starred in, wrote and edited which is a cynical drama about a man who is jealous of a friend’s success.

Synopsis: Masuda diligently works at a real estate company and has a nice quiet life with his girlfriend Tomoko. However, there is a problem: Masuda’s friend Muto is a TV star and it seems that Tomoko likes him a lot. Furthermore, Muto is on TV a lot. Masuda is becoming jealous and this is when a suspicious man who calls himself a priest appears in front of Masuda at a point when he cannot control his jealousy.

Creepy クリーピー 偽りの隣人 Dir: Kiyoshi Kurosawa (2016)

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Creepy       

Creepy Film Poster
Creepy Film Poster

クリーピー 偽りの隣人 「Kuri-pi- Itsuwari no Rinjin」 

Running Time: 130 mins.

Release Date: June 13th, 2016

Director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa

Writer: Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Chihiro Ikeda (Screenplay), Yutaka Maekawa (Original Novel)

Starring:  Hidetoshi Nishijima, Teruyuki Kagawa, Yuko Takeuchi, Masahiro Higashide, Haruna Kawaguchi, Ryoko Fujino, Toru Baba, Misaki Saisho,

Website IMDB

I have been sitting on this film review for nearly two years. Due to the tragic death of Yuko Takeuchi, I have released it in her honour. This film is available to view for free on Amazon Prime in Japan and the UK, so please take the time to watch it and see Yuko Takeuchi in action.

Kiyoshi Kurosawa has crafted some chilling antagonists in his horror films, all based on original scripts. The amoral magnetism of the mesmerist Mamiya from Cure and the ghosts of Pulse are some of the most memorable, but they were just the symptom and not the cause of the main character’s true conflicts. Alienation caused by society was at fault for channelling these monsters into everyday settings. This sense of disconnection is something Kurosawa masterfully utilised in the family drama Tokyo Sonata where a patriarch and his clan lose their cohesion after he loses his job and the family each reformulate their sense of place in the world. With family time made unbearable by the barely suppressed anger and disappointment each character feels, it strikes a very realistic chord whilst being scary like much of Kurosawa’s horror output. Creepy is based on a book by Yutaka Maekawa and while Kurosawa may not have scripted the antagonist, he is one of his most odious bad guys yet.

He gave me the creeps.”

Ex-detective Koichi Takakura (Hidetoshi Nishijima) quits the Tokyo police force after a psychopath almost kills him. He ups roots and moves with his wife Yasuko (Yuko Takeuchi) to the suburbs and takes up work as a university lecturer in criminal psychology. Their new life seems stable enough. He thinks his job is fun, she is busy as a housewife and their new house seems pleasant but things turn sour when they introduce themselves to their next door neighbours. One set, the Tanakas’, aren’t interested in getting to know them and then there is Mr. Nishino (Teruyuki Kagawa) who seems to hide his wife and daughter Mio (Ryoko Fujino) from the outside world.

Both Koichi and Yasuko are put off by his creepy behaviour, an unpredictable and elemental force that can flip between sudden turns of anger and cloying niceness as he adheres to and breaks social protocols. However, relations continue haltingly and often behind Koichi’s back because he is at university while Yasuko sees Nishino around the neighbourhood and social niceties must be upheld. Meanwhile, as Yasuko holds down the fort, Koichi is delving into cold cases, one involving a missing family where only one person survived, a girl named Saki Honda (Haruna Kawaguchi). He sees it as a challenge for him to solve the case as his old detective instincts kick in. What he least expects to happen is that his work will affect his home life because when Nishino’s daughter confronts Koichi and tells him that her father is a stranger, he sees a link and realises Yasuko is in danger. This is when things get really creepy…

Creepy Film Image Yuko Takeuchi and Teruyuki Kagawa
Creepy Film Image Yuko Takeuchi and Teruyuki Kagawa

That Nishino, he’s a monster.”

Kiyoshi Kurosawa is the master of creepy and in terms of story this echoes one of his masterpieces, Cure in that it is a police procedural that leads us down a dark and foreboding narrative that is grounded in realism but has occasional forays into horror territory.

The script is solid in setting up and bringing the characters together but it excels in its characterisation and examination of how people adopt false masks, especially Nishino, as it makes everyone’s behaviour disturbingly opaque.

The Japanese title is Creepy – False Neighbour. For a society like Japan where a lot of the population live closely together and there is a demand to observe social mores and neighbourly activities to get along together the film explores what happens when we don’t know that person.

Nishino is the unknown neighbour and is creepy and he establishes this mood by being deliberately erratic in order to manipulate others. Sometimes nice, sometimes nasty, he is hard to judge and that is how he operates. Nishino takes advantage of how society has become increasingly atomised, our awareness and understanding of others fragmenting as we lead our individual lives without regard for others and don’t check in on neighbours and loved-ones and how we pretend to be alright for the sake of others.

Nishino shows up, dazzles people with his unpredictability which leaves them open to his charm and then essentially inveigles his way into people’s lives, isolates them and then takes control of them through nefarious means. This is a film that demands a lot from Teruyuki Kagawa as a performer and he delivers an oily, manipulative and insidious villain. He displays the theatricality of his character so viewers can see when he is trying to shift gears and be normal. When he works his charm he is persuasive and that is when he slips into people’s lives for he has a sharp mind for preying on people who he senses are alienated.

The hows and whys are part of the suspense of the story as is his history but there is a lot of build up throughout the film as Takakura and an ex-colleague on the police force, Nogami (Masahiro Higashide), research different cases and find out more about Nishino’s M.O. and the more we learn the more the suspense turns into intense foreboding which is where Kurosawa really cranks up his style in key scenes to subvert normality. 

Kurosawa shows his mastery of tone with absolutely genius location selection and light design, camera movement and pitch-perfect acting to give us the chills that come from being immersed in superbly created atmosphere. University life and suburban living is the terrain the film plies. The sorts of winding streets you find in Chiba and Saitama. Koichi Takakura goes throughCreepy Hidetoshi Nishijima and Teruyuki Kagawa familiar routines with a commute outside of the city centre leading to long walks through leafy streets that rise and fall on hillsides. It is unremarkable and rather peaceful but there are the typical visual motifs familiar from past Kurosawa films that make things a little off-kilter like the reflection of rippling water on walls as seen in Retribution, billowing curtains a la Penance and Dutch angles and the camera pulling back and holding a long shot on something menacing like plastic sheeting fluttering around an entryway. These disruptive images match the way that Koichi delves deep into the minds of his criminal case subjects and disrupts the placid surface people often present as a false mask to get through social situations.

The way the atmosphere invokes these deep dives is perfectly felt in the sequence where Koichi explores Saki Honda’s memories of her family’s Creepy Film Image Hidetoshi Nishijimadisappearance at the university. It takes place in a glass-fronted university building with the sun lighting the scene. Saki’s face is the focus and as she goes deeper into her memories she moves around the tight set with the camera trailing her and the male actors in the immediate vicinity carefully re-positioning themselves in her orbit while the extras come and go in the background. We are in reality but slowly being dragged into her mind thanks to the way the lighting changes and Saki’s voice dominates the soundtrack.

The lights dim to an intimate darkness at first but get darker, like clouds have covered the sun outside or maybe Saki has gone underground. Then the soundscape gives the impression we are going underground or into some cavernous space. Ambient noise fades away to silence so we only hear Saki. Occasionally, we hear booming echoes as if heavy boxes are being shifted around a warehouse as Saki sorts through her memories. As Saki recounts her memories her words and tone ratchet up the tension, how some strange man managed to sneak into her family and devour everybody one by one over time. This continues until she surfaces from the dark memories and the lights come back and there’s a rush of chatter from outside. I felt my stomach in knots during this sequence which is masterfully shot.

The second sequence to highlight is actually two parts but they occur in the same place and one builds upon the other. It is when two characters enter Nishino’s house. It is our first true view of the inside. They stand in the genkan and view their surroundings, the pea-green paint of the décor really off-putting and the clutter making it claustrophobic. There is also the sound of something industrial which can be heard in the distance, like a metal lathe moving slowly as it cuts through something. Nishino grins as he leads people inside the hallway but they stop in that genkan and stand there rooted to the spot. The camera in these scenes is often off-kilter. Tilted slightly at a strange angle. It captures the actors in a close-up as fear passes over their face. They sense something wrong. Perhaps its the metal doors or the dingy corridor that leads to the basement. We all know something bad happens in basements and in Nishino’s house the suspense is off the charts as we watch the characters hesitate to look inside despite his cloying and creeping friendliness.

Most dangerous criminals seem super nice to their neighbours so I guess we’re safe.”

That line shows how off characters are about his erratic behaviour.

The full reveal of his machinations comes after such a torturous and elaborate set-up and, of course, it takes place in the basement, a mentally and physically oppressive space that matches the horror of, say, the studio in the Yasuzo Masamura classic Blind Beast. It lives up to the long shadow his character has cast and it is, of course, all hidden behind the normal-looking facade of the house. The method of killing is absolutely fiendish and sort of believable and plays into the notion that we don’t know what lies in the hearts of others. You can imagine it happening in your neighbourhood. Kagawa is complex but always creepy and uses his piranha-like grin to be off-putting. His performance is reminiscent of the one he gave in Kurosawa’s earlier thriller The Serpent’s Path (1998).

Indeed, the lead actors have worked with Kurosawa before, Hidetoshi Nishijima in License to Live and Teruyuki Kagawa as the lead in Tokyo Sonata. Both Nishijima and Kagawa have collaborated on great dramas together with Mozu and Double Face and have a good chemistry here with Nishijima playing something of a square-jawed hero to the more insidious and cunning character that Kagawa portrays. Strong support is provided by Masahiro Higashide (The Kirishima Thingand Haruna Kawaguchi (POV: A Cursed Film) whose characters help flesh out the story immensely. Yuko Takeuchi, who starred with Hidetoshi Nishijima in Strawberry Night (2013), proves to be a dynamic link for the two men. She sensitively essays a woman who has put her dreams on hold and plays a part for her husband whilst decaying inside. Her souring with frustration is gradual but gripping. It is a complicated performance of surfaces that eventually collapse and, more importantly, it works in service of the idea that people can live together but have separate lives which a character like Nishino can exploit. This sets up an ending with one of Kurosawa’s apocalyptic skyscapes as seen in Charisma as all these alienated people, sucked into a madman’s games, face destruction if they don’t try to understand each other. Getting to this point is an excruciating and thrilling experience.

Creepy Film Image Hidetoshi Nishijima and Yuko Takeuchi

You’re on the verge of a breakthrough.”

Apologies for the length of the review but I enjoyed the film a lot. 2016 saw Kurosawa re-embrace his past as an auteur in the horror film genre. Two films were released, Daguerreotype and Creepy, and both were of a high standard of narrative and tonal cinema that after a career bump like Real (2015) it was good to see him back on track diving under the skin of people in order to make atmospheric tales of obsession and peeling back the veneer of society in order to show what sort of monsters lurk in everyday places.

If you made it all the way to the end and read everything, thank you very much. 

Yuko Takeuchi, RIP.

Kokutai 國體 (2019) Dir: Ryushi Lindsay

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Kokutai    Kokutai Poster 02    

國體 「Kokutai

Release Date: September 23rd, 2020

Duration: 10 mins.

Director: Ryushi Lindsay

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

Website IMDB

Baseball has never looked so menacing.

Kokutai is roughly translatable as ‘body politic’ and it is the title of Ryushi Lindsay’s debut movie. An experimental documentary, Kokutai looks askance at the pomp and ceremony of high school baseball in Japan and, through careful and selective assemblage of footage, reveals the fascist aesthetics that are present.

Baseball is not normally thought of as a place of violent political leanings but this 10-minute montage strikes a defiantly different note as it plays out sequences from Koshien baseball tournaments and goes heavy displaying imagery drenched in fascist overtones. 

We witness formations of players and marching bands moving with regimented precision and martial vigour. There is an abundance of uniforms – a lot looking very militaristic with their braids, laurels and epaulettes. Flags are fluttering as they are held aloft by serious-faced young men. The physical prowess of the players is displayed as these examples of ubermensch throw and strike balls. The Hinomaru, Japan’s national flag, is repeatedly cut to as it flies proudly. The crowd and NHK cameras lap everything up.

Kokutai Film Image

Overall, we witness people subsuming themselves into a spectacle with nationalist overtones. Shot in black and white and played back in slow motion, this feels like a blast from our collective warlike past of the 1930/40s rather than our present which is defined by unjust peace. These aesthetic choices are a nice form of manipulation to create that link to an earlier age of global trauma.

This link to the past is reinforced by the score by Andy Trewren (Soundcloud link) which is reminiscent of Arnold Schoenberg’s modern classical music. It is the perfect accompaniment for this parade of imagery as it makes it more menacing. It is an uncomfortable score that is alternately aggressive and pregnant with foreboding, full of trilling and stabbing melodies and offbeat percussion that strikes in the quieter moments.

Taken together, both audio and visuals suggests the seeding of fascist thought in a seemingly innocuous setting of sport. A European mind will immediately feel discomfort, like these are uncomfortable visual references to Nuremberg Rally. 

Okay, that reference to that notorious point in history can be considered hyperbole but it indicates how far the documentary goes to show that what is normally taken to be an innocent pastime can be used by dark political forces to further their own aims.

Shorn of any politics, one could imagine these sights are thrilling to be a part of. With Lindsay’s aesthetic choices and collection of footage and the music, this film subverts everything to an extreme and so this makes it a good documentary, perfect for an age where so many countries around the world are gripped by nationalistic politics and increasing numbers of people are caught between accepting the false consciousness of government/media and lies peddled on social media.

By the way, I had to throw in Patlabor 2: The Movie.

Third Window Films Release World’s First Blu-ray Edition of Gentle Warped Comedy “The Taste of Tea” on October 05th, 2020

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Third Window Films are going to issue the world’s first blu-ray release of the offbeat comedy The Taste of Tea on October 05th. Here are the details on the extras on the disc.

The Taste of Tea Bluray Cover 1

Extra features:    

Extra features (*in standard definition):
90 minute Making Of
‘Super Big’ – Animation
Reversible sleeve art

Here’s the trailer and synopsis and a little extra info:

The Taste of Tea    The Taste of Tea Film Poster

茶の味  Cha no Aji

Release Date: July 17th, 2004

Duration: 143 mins.

Director: Katsuhito Ishii

Writer: Seiji Tanaka (Screenplay),

Starring: Tadanobu Asano, Takahiro Sato, Maya Banno, Satomi Tezuka, Tatsuya Gashuin, Tomokazu Miura, Anna Tsuchiya, Ikki Todoroki, Hideaki Anno,

IMDB

The Taste of Tea is probably one of the early works of Katsuhito Ishii. He is probably best known for this and Funky Forest: The First Contact (2005).

After making his debut with Shark Skin Man and Peach Hip Girl (1998) and following that up with Party 7 (2000), Ishii spent four years making this and it was the opening work of the 2004 Cannes International Film Festival Director’s Fortnight.

The film was shot in Motegi Town, Tochigi Prefecture, and its beautiful natural scenery makes a nice contrast to the surreal happenings that go on.

Synopsis: Uncle Ayano (Tadanobu Asano) takes a break from his job as a music producer to visit the rest of the Haruno family who are living a quiet life in a rural town north of Tokyo. Parents Yoshiko (Satomi Tezuka), an artist, and Nobuo (Tomokazu Miura), a hypnotist, are raising their son Hajime (Takahiro Sato), who is experiencing first love, and daughter, Sachiko (Maya Banno), who is seeing bizarre visions. Ayano has his own issues as he wants to visit his family and confront his feelings for the ex-girlfriend who married another man after he moved to the city.

As lazy days pass by, each member of the family is followed in a series of episodic vignettes.

The Asadas!, Architecture Time and Kazuyo Sejima, Our Story, Gekijouban BEM BECOME HUMAN, Meishi Game, Love Stage!!, Idol Sniper The Movie, Yokohama Mary, All the Things We Never Said, Share the Pain and Other Japanese Film Trailers

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Happy weekend, everyone!

Creepy Film Image Hidetoshi Nishijima and Yuko Takeuchi

I hope you are all doing well.

I will be recording an episode of the Heroic Purgatory podcast tonight so I spent this week watching pistol operas from John Woo – A Better Tomorrow (1986), Hard Boiled (1990) and The Killer (1989). The last title is the one my co-host John and I will be talking about for the Heroic Purgatory podcast.

Anyway, other Heroic Purgatory podcast episodes covered Police Story (1984) – podcast -,  Battle Royale (2000) – podcast – and A Bittersweet Life (2004) – podcast.

This week I posted reviews for the Kiyoshi Kurosawa thriller Creepy (2016), the experimental documentary Kokutai (2019), and a preview of the next Third Window Film release, The Taste of Tea (2004). My review for the Atsushi Funahashi film Lovers on Borders (2018) was published on V-Cinema on Thursday evening.

What is released this weekend?

The Asadas!    The Asadas! Film Poster

浅田家! Asadake!

Release Date: October 02nd, 2020

Duration: 127 mins.

Director: Ryota Nakano

Writer: Ryota Nakano, Tomoe Kanno (Script),

Starring: Kazunari Ninomiya, Satoshi Tsumabuki, Haru Kuroki, Masaki Suda, Jun Fubuki, Makiko Watanabe, Maho Nonami,

Website IMDB

Ryota Nakano is famous for his films Capturing Dad and Her Love Boils Bathwater. Both are dramas and both have netted him awards, the former Best Director and SKIP CITY AWARD at the 9th Skip City International D-Cinema Festival, and the latter many prizes, including an award for Best Actress for Rie Miyazawa at the 40th Japan Academy Prize. This one has star wattage that could power a city with ex-Arashi member Kazunari Ninomiya, actors union-starter Satoshi Tsumabuki (Judge!, Villain), Makiko Watanabe (Love Exposure), Masaki Suda (The Light Shines Only There), and Haru Kuroki (The Bride of Rip van Winkle).

Synopsis: Masashi Asada (Kazunari Ninomiya) is an aspiring photographer who has an older brother Yukihiro (Satoshi Tsumabuki) and parents. He enters a photography vocational school and chooses to reproduce scenes of memories of his family and wins an award. After graduating, he works in pachislot but decides he wants to return to photographing his family again and starts a professional career. Then, one day, the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami strikes…

Architecture, Time and Kazuyo Sejima    Architecture Time and Kazuyo Sejima Film Poster

建築と時間と妹島和世 Kenchiku to jikan to sejimakazuyo

Release Date: October 03rd, 2020

Duration: 60 mins.

Director: Takashi Honma

Writer: N/A

Starring: Kazuyo Sejima

Website IMDB

This one has shades of the documentary A Room of Her Own – Rei Naito and Light and a great jazz score.

Synopsis: Kazuyo Sejima (Wikipedia page) is a world-famous architect who has worked on a number of buildings including the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa (where the Kanazawa Film Festival is held) and she has won the Pritzker Prize, the Nobel Prize in the architectural world. This documentary follows the construction of a building she designed for The Department of Art Science, Osaka University of Arts. Sejima links art, science, and technology to create the new school building that is a “park-like building” on a hill with a good view that anyone could stop by. The documentary recording lasted 3 years and 6 months from the concept to the completion, and was created by Takashi Homma, a photographer who has photographed Sejima architecture since the 1990s.

Our Story      Our Story Film Poster

小説の神様 君としか描けない物語 Shousetsu no Kamisama: Kimi to Shika Egakenai Monogatari

Release Date: October 02nd, 2020

Duration: 106 mins.

Director: Sigeaki Kubo

Writer: Tetsuo Kamata (Script), Sako Aizawa (Original Novel)

Starring: Taiki Sato, Kanna Hashimoto, Ryuji Sato, Kyoka Shibata, Riko, Mirai Yamamoto, Ainosuke Kataoka, Emi Wakui,

Website

Synopsis: High school students Ichiya Chitani (Taiki Sato) and his classmate Shiina Koyurugi (Kanna Hashimoto) are both published writers, but while Ichiya never made a hit, Shiina writes stories everyone loves to read. One day, an editor asks Ichiya and Shiina to collaborate and write a novel together, but these two have very different personalities…

BURN THE WITCH    BURN THE WITCH Film Poster

Release Date: October 02nd, 2020

Duration: 63 mins.

Director: Tatsuro Kawano

Writer: Chika Suzumura (Script), Tite Kubu (Original Manga)

Starring: Sasami Tano (Ninny Spangcole), Yuina Yamada (Noel Niihashi), Chikahiro Kobayashi (Bruno Bangnyfe), Rie Hikisaka (Osushi-chan), Saori Hayami (Macy Baljure), Haruka Shimizu (Sullivan Squire)

Animation Production: Studio Colorido, team Yamahitsuji

Website ANN MAL

Synopsis: In an alternative reality, dragons roam the world and in Reverse London, the hidden “reverse” side of the city, witches and wizards must work hard to keep them under control.

Two witches are Noel Niihashi and Ninny Spangcole who are protection agents for Wing Bind (WB), an organisation for dragon conservation and management. Their mission is to protect and manage the dragons within London on behalf of the people.

WAVE!! Surfing Yappe!!    WAVE!! Surfing Yappe!! Film Poster

WAVE!!~サーフィンやっぺ!! WAVE!! Sa-fi-n Yappe!!

Release Date: October 02nd, 2020

Duration: 83 mins.

Director: Takaharu Ozaki

Writer: Kazuyuki Fudeyasu (Script), MAGES (Original Creator)

Starring: Jin Ogasawara (Sho Akitsuki), Tomoaki Maeno (Masaki Hinaoka), Nobuhiko Okamoto (Rindo Fuke), Takuya Sato (Kosuke Iwana),

Animation Production: Asahi Production

Website ANN MAL

Synopsis: Masaki and Sho are two students in Oorai, Ibaraki prefecture. Sho introduces Masaki to surfing and through the sport, he begins to make friends but he will also drift apart from them as he grows up. What remains constant is his love of surfing.

 

Gekijouban BEM BECOME HUMAN 

劇場版 BEM BECOME HUMAN    BEM BECOME HUMAN Film Poster

映画 ギヴン Gekijouban BEM BECOME HUMAN 

Release Date: October 02nd, 2020

Duration: 90 mins.

Director: Hiroshi Ikehata

Writer: Atsuhiro Tomioka (Script), 

Starring: Katsuyuki Konishi (Bem), Kensho Ono (Belo), M.A.O (Bela), Koichi Yamadera (Manstoll), Nana Mizuki (Emma), Shizuka Itou (Greta),

Animation Production: Production I.G

Website ANN MAL

Synopsis: The movie version of the 2019 TV anime “BEM”. The story is set in Librati, a city where magnificence and decadence, prosperity and poverty coexist across canals. This is the beat of detective Sonia, who pursues a series of mysterious incidents in the city, including three monster humans, Bem, Bella, and Bello, who work in the shadows helping protect the city from monster threats.

Cinema Kabuki Mitani Kabuki TSUKIAKARI MEZASU FURUSATO Fūunji tachi    Cinema Kabuki Mitani Kabuki TSUKIAKARI MEZASU FURUSATO Fūunji tachi Film Poster     

シネマ歌舞伎 三谷かぶき 月光露針路日本 風雲児たち Shinema kabuki Mitani kabuki TSUKIAKARI MEZASU FURUSATO Fūunji tachi

Release Date: October 02nd, 2020

Duration: 138 mins.

Director: Koki Mitani

Writer: Koki Mitani (Script), Taro Minamoto (Original Manga)

Starring: Koshiro Matsumoto, Ennosuke Ichikawa, Ainosuke Kataoka, Matsuya Onoe, Norito Yashima, Shingo Bando, Omezo Ichikawa, Komazo Ichikawa, Yajuro Bando,

Website Kabuki Web

Comedy specialist Koki Mitani works in film, theatre and kabuki. He adapted a manga by Taro Minamoto for a play that was shown at Tokyo’s Kabuki-za in June last year.

Synopsis from Kabuki Web: In 1782 when Japan pursued a policy of national isolation, the merchant vessel Shinshōmaru sailed out from Ise to Edo (the old name for Tokyo) and was caught in a violent storm, losing its sail and rudder. The crew, 17 men under the captain, Daikokuya’s son Kōdayū, lost control and the vessel was left to drift on the open sea.

After 8 months they land on Amchitka island in the territory of Russia. Kōdayū starts his life there puzzled by the foreign language and culture. Some of the crew dies, but Kōdayū survives and sets sail for the Russian mainland in the vessel they make for themselves.

They go further into Russia to carry out procedures of departure. People help them wherever they go and they finally manage to have an audience with Empress Catherine.

Meishi Game    Meishi GamSe Film Poster

名刺ゲーム Meishi Ge-mu

Release Date: October 02nd, 2020

Duration: 138 mins.

Director: Hisashi Kimura, Yusuke Taki,

Writer: Ryohei Watanabe (Script), Osamu Suzuki (Original Novel)

Starring: Shinichi Tsutsumi, Masaki Okada, Karen Otomo, Aoba Kawai, Motoki Ochiai, Yurina Yanagi, Keisuke Horibe, Tomorowo Taguchi,

Website IMDB

Ryohei Watanabe, director of Shady (2012), adapted a mystery novel into a four-part TV drama for WOWOW. All four episodes of the were broadcast in 2017 and have been packaged up for a limited screening wherein two episodes are put together for A (episodes 1-2) and two for B (episodes 3-4). Another drama was shown in cinemas last week.

There are some really good performers including Shinichi Tsutsumi (Why Don’t You Play in Hell?) who takes the lead.

Synopsis: Kanda (Shinichi Tsutsumi) is a producer for the quiz show “Mystery Spy”. One day, he wakes up in a basement and finds himself wearing a mysterious necklace and surrounded by meishi (business cards) scattered. His daughter Mina (Karen Otomo) is also there and also wearing a necklace. Then, a mysterious man calling himself X (Masaki Okada) appears and informs Kanda that he will play the “Meishi Game” with a 2 hour time limit. The rule of the game is that Kanda has to return to business cards to their owners, but, if Kanda makes a mistake, his daughter’s collar will blow up. Kanda accepts the challenge to save his daughter but…

Love Stage!!  Love Stage!! Film Poster

Release Date: October 02nd, 2020

Duration: 84 mins.

Director: Hiroki Inoue,

Writer: Eiki-Eiki (Script), Taishi Zaou, Eiki-Eiki (Original Manga)

Starring: Mahiro Sugiyama, Hiroki Nakada, Shinichi Wago, DAIGO,

Website IMDB

The latest in the ongoing wave Boy’s Love films, this is the live-action adaptation of a manga which was subject to an anime adaptation in 2010, or so. I remember watching that and finding it entertaining enough.

Synopsis: Izumi Sena comes from a family of famous entertainers but he lives a normal life as a college student studying manga. However, after he stars in a television commercial, he attracts the attention of Ryoma, a super-famous and super-handsome celeb, who begins to pursue him.

Idol Sniper The Movie    Idol Sniper The Movie

アイドルスナイパー THE MOVIE Meishi Ge-mu

Release Date: October 03rd, 2020

Duration: 84 mins.

Director: Tsukasa Inaba

Writer: Tsukasa Inaba (Script), 

Starring: Mitsuki Endo, Yurie Seno, Kee Maeda, Riko Fukuyama, Miyuu Inamori, Nao Torizumi, Honoka Yabuki,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: This is the movie version of “Idol Sniper”, a serialised story where idols work secretly as assassins. Rei, of the underground idol group “Destiny”, must save the day when members of the dark organisation Shigara sneak into a venue full of fans celebrating their group and their live venue becomes a battlefield.

Yokohama Mary    Yokohama Mary Film Poster

ヨコハマメリー Yokohama Meri-

Release Date: October 03rd, 2020

Duration: 92 mins.

Director: Takahiro Nakamura

Writer: N/A

Starring: Michiko Godai, Hideo Mori, Ganjiro Nagato, Setsuko Shimizu, Giho Sugiyama, Yoko Yamazaki,

Website IMDB

A film made in 2005. The info comes from the Viennale website.

Synopsis: The search for Yokohama Mary, an infamous former prostitute who went missing over a decade ago, becomes a journey through Japan’s post-war past. Yokohama Mary was a prostitute in the Japanese port-city during the years following the end of World War II. In the decades since then, she became a Yokohama icon of sorts – an eccentric bag lady in geisha-like face paint – until her disappearance in 1995. Filmmaker Nakamura Takayuki sets out to uncover the story of this mysterious figure. In his attempts to separate fact from mythology and to divulge Yokohama Mary’s eventual fate, he sketches a profile of Japan’s past as a country struggling to reinvent itself in the desperate post-war years.

All the Things We Never Said    All the Things We Never Said Film Poster

生きちゃった Ikichatta

Release Date: October 03rd, 2020

Duration: 91 mins.

Director: Yuya Ishii

Writer: Yuya Ishii (Script), 

Starring: Taiga Nakano, Yuko Oshima, Ryuya Wakaba, Park Jung-bum, Yuuno Ota, Miyu Yagyu, TOBI,

Website IMDB

According to this review in the Japan Times director Yuya Ishii – The Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue (2017), The Great Passage (2013), Mitsuko Delivers (2011), Sawako Decides (2010) – was part of a project created by the Hong Kong International Film Festival Society and China’s Heaven Pictures, which “tapped six Asian directors to make “Back to Basics” features on a meagre budget of about ¥15 million each. Taking advantage of some unexpected downtime after a scheduled shoot in South Korea was postponed, Ishii wrote a script in three days and started shooting a couple of months later.”

Synopsis: Atsuhisa, Natsumi, and Takeda have been close friends since high school. Atsuhisa and Natsumi married and have a daughter who is five years old when we enter their lives. Atsuhisa (Taiga Nakano) returns home, one day, to find that Natsumi (Yuko Oshima) is sleeping with another man. Their marriage begins to collapses and Takeda (Ryuya Wakaba) finds himself caught in the middle…

Share the Pain    Share the Pain Film poster

シェア ザ ペイン Shea za Pein

Release Date: October 03rd, 2020

Duration: 49 mins.

Director: Shunsuke Nakajima

Writer: Shunsuke Nakajima, Takeshi Okamoto (Script),

Starring: Chikara Toh, Arisa, Kotaro Kawamura, Yu Kushima, Momoka Kobayashi,

The theatrical film debut of Shunsuke Nakajima who has worked on music videos and commercials. Apparently, this work was created from the director;s experience of having a relationship with someone of the same sex when he was a junior high school student.

Synopsis:  In an alternate reality Japan, the “SP Law Article 1” requires all boys to have sex with an adult man before their first sexual experience. Main protag, Yuki has the hots for Ayako but does not want to get together with a guy. However, when she is being targeted by the playboy Yamada, he is forced to make a decision…


The Taste of Tea 茶の味 Dir: Katsuhito Ishii (2004)

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The Taste of Tea    The Taste of Tea Film Poster

茶の味  Cha no Aji

Release Date: July 17th, 2004

Duration: 143 mins.

Director: Katsuhito Ishii

Writer: Katsuhito Ishii (Screenplay),

Starring: Tadanobu Asano, Takahiro Sato, Maya Banno, Satomi Tezuka, Tatsuya Gashuin, Tomokazu Miura, Anna Tsuchiya, Ikki Todoroki, Hideaki Anno,

IMDB

Katsuhito Ishii is probably best known for making weird films and while The Taste of Tea is one of his most restrained, it is probably his most popular work. At its simplest, The Taste of Tea is a cross between Yasujiro Ozu’s gentle comedy Good Morning (1959) and the playfully bizarre Survive Style 5+ (2004). Try to imagine the styles of the two melding with and diluting each other and you come close. The result is a film where everyday characters and their small dramas are given the odd flights of fancy that burst out from beneath the surface of normality.

Like in a typical Ozu film, we follow multiple generations of a family. Here, we are spending time with the Haruno family who live in an old-fashioned house in a small mountain town just north of Tokyo. They consist of the mother, Yoshiko (Satomi Tezuka), Nobuo (Tomokazu Miura), the father, their son Hajime (Takahiro Sato), Sachiko (Maya Banno), their daughter, and eccentric grandfather Akira (Tatsuya Gashuin). They will soon be joined by uncle Ayano (Tadanobu Asano) who is taking a break from his job as a music producer to visit for a few days.

Each member of the family has some weight that is tugging at their heart. With her kids in school, Yoshiko is trying to balance housework with her old career as an animator by working on an indie project named Super Big in her spare time. High schooler Hajime bitterly regrets never telling his first love his feelings for her before she transferred to another school but is soon in love with another girl. Sachiko has just entered elementary school and is haunted by a huge alter ego of herself that stares down at her from time to time, something which makes her very uncomfortable. Nobuo finds his work as a hypnotherapist stable but boring. Ayano has returned to confront his feelings for ex-girlfriend Akira Terako (Tomoko Nakajima) who married another man. Grandpa, meanwhile, is senile and spends his time singing and re-enacting the character poses of anime and reminiscing about his wife. Over the course of Ayano’s visit, their lives and the lives of others will change in a series of surreal and small-scale dramas that occur in a series of vignettes.

The Taste of Tea Haruno Family

Prior to The Taste of Tea, Ishii’s films were the superficial and stylish hitman movies Shark Skin Man and Peach Hip Girl (1998) and Party 7 (2000) which were populated by knife-wielding and gun-toting characters. Here, Ishii dials down the silliness for the more normal and heartfelt to create easy to relate to slices of reality. He then uses his oddball sense of humour and visual imagination to add surreal moments that are sure to draw laughter from the audience but, more importantly, underline the emotional lives of the characters in a meaningful way.

The film was shot in Motegi Town, Tochigi Prefecture, and its beautiful scenery makes a nice contrast to the surreal happenings that go on.

Rice fields, haunted forests, schools and the Ayano’s traditional house form the landscape, as do the miles of roads and countryside which the characters traverse. The soundtrack is alive with birdsong and the song of the wind. The summer sun shines gently on everyone and the pace is slow, lazy even, as the film wends its way through each characters stories.

The slow build effect is immersive so that we get caught up in their lives and pick up details without the need for unnatural dialogue that shovels in exposition. We aren’t shown the sketches that Yoshiko is working on until an animated film is played but all the while, we see her balance home and artistry and we come to understand her former career through visits by former colleagues (one played by Evangelion director Hideako Anno). Hajime’s romance is really touchingly told, from the moment that he falls in love with a transfer student named Aoi Suzuishi (Anna Tsuchiya) and his excitement that she plays the board game go just like him, to their walk in the rain which allows the film to indulge in some sweet aiaigasa (相合傘) action that ends with a long-held overhead shot following a beaming Hajime as he runs, the sheer exhilaration of love powering him through.

The Taste of Tea Anna Tsuchiya and Go

The awkward homecoming Ayano experiences is bittersweet to behold as he and his former love dance around their past while Sachiko’s story sees her very sombre even as ridiculous things happen around her. It is a sweet existential self-examination from a child’s perspective with a fine performance from a child actress. One thread running through these stories is the eccentric grandfather who is easy to write off simply as a comic character but Ishii has an emotional gut-punch of an ending that had me crying as it spoke to the importance of family bonds and memory.

The comedy comes from the odd characters who pop up and do odd things, which feel totally in character. The variety shows that have concepts and participants that are not too outrageous to break the sense of reality but are laugh out loud funny, the eccentrics who have heartfelt desires that are odd but actually play into the idea of the importance of self-expression as exhibited in various stories. Then there is the Mountain Song which everyone who watches this film remembers.

Aside from the anime interlude, images of a giant Sachiko, a ghost yakuza, and a train departing from young Hajime’s forehead, and adventures in the realm of hypnosis, most of the proceedings look and feel natural and even relaxing, the CG, physical effects and stylings of Ishii’s other works kept to a minimum. The best special effects are the acting and all of the performers do well to capture their characters, playing them straight with just a shade of comedy to provide a nod and wink to the audience.

Each individual’s story gets taken seriously and given enough screen time to ring true and evoke a rich medley of emotions. Nobody is an archetype and it feels like Ishii loves everyone on screen, a feeling that I also felt as a viewer.

Overall, it’s just fantastic spending time with these characters, whether it is watching father and son play go on the engawa, Yoshiko create anime, or Sachiko puzzle through life, the odd entertainment shows on TV and the sense of community which feels close to reality. Watching this is to get sucked into an ever so slightly warped (but never too much to distract) version of life that feels rich with emotion that lingers long after the film has finished. The film mixes comedy, light and dark so well that it feels effortlessly done like the best of Japanese cinema. I am so glad I got reacquainted with the taste of tea.

Third Window Films issued the world’s first blu-ray release of The Taste of Tea on October 05th. Here are the details on the extras on the disc.

The Taste of Tea Bluray Cover 1

Extra features:    

Extra features (*in standard definition):
90 minute Making Of
‘Super Big’ – Animation
Reversible sleeve art

On top of the improved visuals, this Third Window Films release has the animation Super Big that Yoshiko was working on in thee film. It’s sort of like Dead Leaves, the anime, in look and style. It’s a fun little aside and it is subbed for those who want to know just what is said.

The biggest prize is the 90 minute Making Of film which features substantial behind-the-scenes footage and interviews with cast and crew. Director Katsuhito Ishii goes into great detail about his working method, which is fascinating, and how he related to each of his actors and we hear from the principal cast about their thoughts. This gives a real sense of what it was like to work on the film and it’s also fun hearing about the mishaps (a fight scene that turned bloody), the happy accidents and the way everyone bonded together and tried out different acting styles. It is also fun seeing the many and varied members of the cast give their personal opinions – the names are really impressive and cover Hideaki Anno, Tsuyoshi Kusanagi, Ryo Kase and Anna Tsuchiya. Special mention goes to the laid back and wise Tomokazu Miura and the adorable Maya Banno who worked so hard.

The Taste of Tea Image

Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival 2020 (Online) – Free Films and Workshops Via YouTube and Zoom October 24/25

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I wrote two news posts on Anime UK News covering the Kotatsu Festival and have decided to merge them here.

Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival Banner

The Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival 2020 is a free two-day event (Oct 24-25) where a whole host of animation and workshops will be online for anybody around the world to view. If you are an animation student or just curious about Japanese animation, this is an unmissable occasion because you can interact with real-deal award-winning animators and see a whole host of different works from professionals to students from across Japan. All that is required is an internet connection, viewing things via the fest’s YouTube channel, attending workshops via Zoom, and your attention.

Here’s what’s up:

The Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival has announced that it will hold its 10th anniversary celebration on October 24th and 25th with a line-up of screenings and events people will be able to participate in for free via the festival’s YouTube channel and through various Zoom sessions.

Over the course of two days, the festival will screen 40 films, including 30 works from students studying at 5 different Japanese universities, such as Tama Art University and Kyoto Seika, as well as 10 works from 5 award-winning animators, including Oscar nominated Koji Yamamura (who I last wrote about here) whose latest films, Dreams Into Drawing and Water Dreams, will be shown.

Click to view slideshow.

The full list of professional animators also includes Makiko Watanabe, Shin Hosokawa, Chie Arai and Miho Yata.

The full list of universities is Tokyo Zokei University, Tama Art University, Kyoto Seika University, Hiroshima City University, and Kyoto University of the Arts. There are introduction from course leaders and the students who made their works, so this is a great chance to see the next generation of talent and emerging trends in Japanese/world animation. The titles include The Balloon Catcher by Isaku Kaneko which was at Annecy earlier this year.

Click to view slideshow.

This will also be the first time that Kotatsu collaborates with F-Rated, an organisation dedicated to supporting women in film, and it has secured an F-Rating for its ongoing campaign to show the works of female film makers and also for this event where 75% of the films are directed by women.

 

Here is the full line-up of events/films:

Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival 10th Anniversary Timetable

24th October 

11:00 YouTube Screening – Films by Koji Yamamura, Shin Hosokawa, Miho Yata, Chie Arai, Makiko Sukikara

13:00 Zoom Event – Miho Yata / Takeshi Yoda – Director & Musician Q&A

18:00YouTube Screening – Student Work (Part 1)

 

 

25th October   

12:00 Zoom Event – Chie Arai Animation Workshop

14:00 Zoom Event – Fusako Yusaki Director Q&A and Clay Animation Workshop

16:00 YouTube Screening – Student Work (Part 2)

18:00 YouTube Screening – Films by Koji Yamamura, Shin Hosokawa, Miho Yata, Chie Arai, Makiko Sukikara

 

Alongside the films, the Japan Foundation London and Kotatsu Festival have arranged free online workshops via Zoom that will allow participants to meet the creators behind some of the works being screened. All that is required to join is advanced booking. The details are as follows:

 

Knitting into Animation

Online Talk with YATA Miho and YODA Takeshi

Who could have imagined that colourful wool threads could be transformed into a cute and fun animation with lots of sheep! YATA Miho, a Japanese animation creator, mesmerized viewers when her work was streamed as part of the Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival special in July. Together with YODA Takeshi, composer and theremin player who performed the memorable music in The King of Amechau Country, they will talk about their creative processes and their sources of inspiration in this online talk. Their presentations will be followed by a conversation with Abigail Addison.

Saturday, 24 October from 13:00 (BST)

Book here

 

Animation Workshop with ARAI Chie

Online Workshop

ARAI Chie is the creator behind the twinkling and friendly mascot of the Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival. She is also an animator who created the festival’s opening animations and other short films. Her drawings are quite often seen in the form of flip books, and bring to mind a similarity to manga. In this workshop, she will explain where the idea for the cute character came from, illustrating step-by-step the process of her creation. Participants will be invited to join a brief session in which they can try and test their skill on paper to check their potential for being a future animator! Moderated by Shangomola, a London based manga artist.

Sunday, 25 October from 12:00 (GMT)

Book here

 

Clay Metamorphosis

Online Talk with YUSAKI Fusako

Having lived and worked in Italy, YUSAKI Fusako is an award-wining female creator and a pioneer of Japanese clay animation. Metamorphosing clay into a lively animation rich in colours defines her work and her philosophy: nothing remains the same. In this very special talk, in conversation with Robin Lyons – a producer of animation works and the Managing Director of Calon – YUSAKI will explore her long-standing career and how her life and work has changed shape like the ever-malleable materials she loves. This is a rare opportunity not to be missed.

Sunday, 25 October from 14:00 (GMT)

Book here

All events listed above are free. For a full schedule of films and events, please check the festival website.

Notes on the Animators and Musician:

Koji Yamamura

Yamamura Koji (山村 浩二)

After graduating from Tokyo Zokei University in 1987, he founded Yamamura Animation, Inc. in 1993 and has worked steadily, refining his style while making films for children. His most famous work is the short “Mount Head” (2002) which was nominated for an Oscar for Best Animated Short. Other titles include “Franz Kafka’s A Country Doctor” (2007) and “Muybridge’s Strings” (2011). His films have been awarded more than 90 prizes including the grand prizes of major international animation festivals such as Annecy, Ottawa and Hiroshima. He has also received the Medal with Purple Ribbon from the Japanese government in 2019. He is member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and a professor of Tokyo University of the Arts.

 

Yusaki Fusako (湯崎夫沙子)

Yusaki is an award-winning claymation pioneer who emerged in the 1960s after moving to Milan and establishing her own independent studio, Studio Yusaki. Her works consist of commercials, films, and children’s television programmes which were made for public broadcasters such as RAI and NHK. Yusaki’s famous works include claymation advertisements for the liqueur Fernet-Branca, and “Peo the Blue Dog”, a popular TV character in Switzerland. Yusaki will lead a claymation workshop and do a Q&A with Kotatsu.

 

Yata Miho (やたみほ)

Born 1974, Yata studied Children’s Literature and Children’s Culture at university. While studying, she was inspired by “Wallace and Gromit” and started to have an interest on stop motion animation. In 1999 she started knit-animation and creating picture books. Since then, she has become famous for “Wool Fairies Knit and Wool”(NHK・NEP)and the picture books “Sakasa mo Sakasa” (Demadosha Co.,Ltd.) “What is This Yan?”(CHILD HONSHA Co., Ltd.). She is currently a member of the Japan Animation Association and she is teaching at Shirayuri University Department of Children’s Culture.

 

Hosokawa Shin (細川晋)

A graduate of Tama Art University’s Master’s Program Design Course, he now works as a writer, director, animator and is an assistant professor at Tokyo Polytechnic University. His latest work, “Dino!”, a stop motion animation, has been programmed by Kotatsu.

 

 

Arai Chie (荒井 知恵)

A graduate from the Department of Fine Arts, Northern Arizona University, after working at an animation studio, Arai has been a freelancer since 2002. Her techniques include hand-drawn animation and illustration and she creates books and animation videos including “Dreams”(2008), which has been programmed by Kotatsu. Since 2006, she has been orchestrating “Flip Book Manga Cafe Exhibition”, a collective of writers and artists who love to make wonderfully varied flip books. Their exhibitions have been held in many places. As well as creating her own art, she guides others and works as an associate professor at Bunka Gakuen University Department of Art and Design.

 

MakikoSukikaraSukikara Makiko (鋤柄真希子)

Born in 1982, Sukikara studied at the Film School Zlin in the Czech Republic. Since 2010, she has been animating and has created works by multiplane camera, many of which have been screened at international festivals. She creates stories with animals as the main characters with titles like “While the Crow Weeps” (2013) and “Deep Sea’s Rainbow”(2019). The latter has been programmed for Kotatsu’s forthcoming stream.

 

Yoda Takeshi (ヨダタケシ)

Yoda is a composer who plays an electronic instrument known as a theremin, a device that makes sound without the musician touching it. He is active across genres and creates music for video works as well as for live events. He will be in a Q&A with Miho Yata during a Kotatsu Zoom session.

 

An Interview with Ryushi Linday, director of Idol (2020) and Kokutai (2019)

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Ryushi Lindsay PhotoRyushi Lindsay (website) is an Anglo-Japanese filmmaker working in both Japan and the UK. He currently has two very different films on the festival circuit, the experimental documentary Kokutai (2019) and the drama Idol (20120). The former’s examination of baseball is delivered with a more expressionistic quality created by the rigorous use of formalist aspects of film while the latter is more naturalistic with carries a critique of social conditions in Japan as well as the idol industry. It is clear that underlying it all is a keen awareness of the world which is refreshing to see and engaging to view. Lindsay took the time to answer questions via email about his background, his inspirations as a filmmaker, his motivation for making Kokutai, and the many ideas and collaborations that went into making Idol.

Jason: My first question is which film was the catalyst that made you embark on a career in film?

Ryushi Lindsay: It’s hard to say, really. This is a version of a story that’s been told by so many filmmakers, but growing up, I loved all the tokusatsu stuff and would rope my family into being in little movies I made. My dad has always been disappointed by how much I enjoy Star Wars; as a kid, THAT, was what I wanted to make. I’m actually a sucker for cinematic spectacle, on a very base, emotional level. In a way, my film Kokutai is a confrontation with my own

I wouldn’t say there was one film, when I was a little older, that made me sit up and think, yes, I’m going to make films too. I’m fortunate to be very middle class and to have grown up around artists and filmmakers so it never felt impossible to find success in this industry. It all evolved very organically but I encountered New German Cinema as a student and that definitely played a big role in me considering how and why I made films; Straub-Huillet and Alexander Kluge are inspirations to me, as, of course, is Fassbinder. Adachi Masao’s AKA Serial Killer was my gateway drug to making documentaries in Japan – I was fortunate to go to a 35mm screening in Ebisu a couple years ago, which Adachi did a Q&A at. He advised filmmakers to just get on with it and shoot without worrying about permits, which was something I had been concerned about doing in Japan. That film introduced me to the Japanese New Wave, and gave me lots to think about.

The first project of yours that I was aware of was one where you were involved as a producer, Make-Believers. I must admit that I haven’t seen it but it came across as a pleasant musical with dramatic elements with all its dance routines. It seems to be a world away from your own output which is political, explicitly so in your debut, Kokutai, to your sophomore work, Idol, which is a drama.

Why the interest in politics?

We live in a world of profound inequality. How can one not be political?

Kokutai

Kokutai Poster 02

Kokutai is a ten-minute expressionistic documentary that presents the pomp and ceremony seen in Japanese high school baseball tournaments in such a way as to make parallels with fascist events of the past. The imagery drawn from the games are shown via a back and white sheen and in slow motion. This manipulation serves to heighten the sense of historical echoes, a sense reinforced by the music which is reminiscent of modern classical music from the turbulent era of the early 20th century. It is a convincing parallel. As a viewer, I felt a tension, even dread, develop as the documentary played out. This feeling is proof that the film worked.

What gave you the idea to make Kokutai?

As I mentioned, I really love the New German Cinema, which, as a student, got me thinking about filmic reckonings with a fascist past. Of course, Germany and Japan have a shared history there.

Kokutai started as a rip-off of (or perhaps an intertext with) Alexander Kluge’s Brutalität in Stein, a film that examines the Nuremberg Party Rally Grounds. I was initially thinking about the Diet building in Tokyo; I used to work around the corner from it, and it sort of haunted me on my commute every morning. There is some scholarly debate about whether early-Showa/WWII Japan was fascist or not, but, for me, a large component of fascism is the aesthetics, which Japan certainly ticked the box for, and continues to do so. I’m particularly uncomfortable with the epic monumentalism of the Diet Building, and wanted to explore that on screen.

I started considering other emblems of fascism in contemporary Japanese culture and remembered doing a lot of marching and standing in formation when I spent time in Japanese schools (my parents wanted me to have at least a taste of Japanese education so I spent a couple weeks in elementary school when I was 7 and 10). I think with the Olympics coming up, that naturally led to Koshien, which was always such a staple of childhood holidays spent in Japan.

I shot some footage of the Diet Building but could never get it to work how I wanted it to, so scrapped that and focused on baseball.

When at a sporting event, when you are caught in the moment with the colours and the sounds, it might be easy to miss the parallels between the pomp and ceremony around a game and fascist events of the past but the film does a good job of finding those parallels and is filled with what feel like visual references to militarism.

Why did you pick up on it?

I find it so easy to draw a parallel between Koshien and the 1936 Olympics, or at least the aesthetics of Riefenstahl’s Olympia, as I obviously didn’t witness Berlin 1936 firsthand. Koshien is this erotic death orgy; we watch young men at the peak of their fitness sacrificing themselves for their school, and there’s this idea of training until they vomit, bleed, or pass out. Many carry lifelonKokutai Film Imageg injuries as a result of the gruelling practice and long games. And it’s a national spectacle: it’s on NHK, my grandmother watches it, they play the finals on public screens. Twice a year, the nation’s attention turns to this massive sporting event and the heroes are immortalised in public memory.

It’s this idea of spectacle that I find so easy to link to fascism, influenced by Susan Sontag’s essay, ‘Fascinating Fascism’.

What was your approach to the creation of the film? Did you shoot a lot of footage and shape something out of it or was there a lot of preplanning involved?

I had ideas of what I wanted to shoot, having watched a lot on TV as a kid and doing subsequent research. I had a basic list of the areas I wanted to film, but no explicit structure in mind. I shot and edited myself, and it was a process of finding the film in post. I was really uncertain whether it worked, until we put the score to it, and everything came together cohesively. Andy’s score carries the film and helps move the film from glorification to more critical engagement with spectator sports.


Idol

Idol Poster No Creds Laurel 02

Idol is Ryushi’s latest film and it is a 20-minute drama closer to social realism. The story concerns a single mother named Miyabi (Ryoka Neya) and her young daughter Kasumi (Miyu Sasaki from Shoplifters), who is a member of an idol group. When Kasumi is dropped from the group, her mother takes drastic action to get her back in the line up lest they face financial ruin. It recently played as part of the Short Shorts & Film Festival Asia and features different shades of criticism of idol culture and Japanese society.

Idol looks quite different again. It’s your first drama. What was the inspiration for the film?

For Idol, I read an article about the child idol industry, and the power imbalance between the looked-at idols and the looking-at audience really struck me. I had been watching a lot of short films and realised I needed a strong story beat for the story to revolve around, which is where the kidnapping came from. It recently occurred to me that, as a child, I had an almost paralysing fear of being kidnapped, so I think that’s the origin of that idea.

Did you feel any trepidation embarking upon a drama?

I had made fiction films with friends as a teen, and as a student, so in some ways I had more narrative than documentary experience. Certainly, I was a little nervous to direct in Japanese; even though I’m fluent in everyday situations I still don’t know all the industry jargon. The industry politics are a little different here too, so it was about navigating all of that.

I recommended this film to a friend who went on to watch it at the Short Shorts Film Festival and she said it is a clear example of Kishotenketsu. Would you agree? How did you come up with the story and what did you do in terms of research for the world of idols?

I’m glad to hear you recommended the film to a friend. I wasn’t writing towards kishotenketsu but I’m happy some Japanese-ness comes through unconsciously. I read some yonkoma manga like Sazae-san and Kobo-chan at some point so it’s perfectly possible I absorbed that storytelling structure. I do think short films lend themselves to that style.

It’s a very anti-idol film because it lacks the glamour in locations, effects, and the camera placement and distancing from characters etc. The jump into colours is obviously a huge difference. You use very specific colour palettes, with pinks and purples for the performance, darker and sickly colours for the more disturbing scenes, and a warm peachy colour for the more intimate ones.

What was your inspiration and was there a lot of pre-planning/storyboarding involved?

Our cinematographer, Matt De Sousa, and I did a fair bit of research and planning in preproduction. We wanted very specific colour schemes and lighting to construct a sort of heightened reality; people who know Japan will recognise, for example, the green-tinged light in Rie’s apartment.

I always wanted to frame a little wider and avoid closeups, trying to be less scopophilic and less commercial, and also to let the viewer’s eye rove. I wanted to distort the image slightly as well, to create a sense of unease and, again, disrupt the beautification of our cast, so I did a lot of research into lenses. We looked at the cinematography of Wong Kar-Wai’s Fallen Angels a fair bit, and though I couldn’t find the 6.5mm lens they shot that film on, I did find a set of hand-made Cineovision lenses in a rental house here that had the perfect imperfection. We landed on shooting the entire film on an 18mm, which also let us be a bit more Wellesian in our blocking. We went in with a very specific plan, and thanks to a really great crew, were able to execute that plan as intended.

Ryoka Neya is the centre of the film. She gives a fantastic performance as the mother. How did you discover her and what qualities made you cast her?

We shot the film in late 2018, and by then, Neya was already a star in the indie scene. I was introduced to her by our casting director, and both her look and her previous work meant I knew she was perfect for the role.

Her character’s behaviour takes a shocking turn that works for a dramatic film. However, when talking about the role with Ryoka Neya, were there any concerns about the audience’s suspension of disbelief?

Akira Takanohashi as the manager

I never really had any concerns about suspension of disbelief. People do irrational things on-screen and real life all the time and I believed the audience would follow along. In developing the character, I really let her take the lead, and while we did some rehearsal to get everyone comfortable, I think it’s important that the role come organically from the actor.

Akira Takanohashi was also another standout in the film. I liked his verbal combat with Miyabi, especially, the line, “How about getting a job?” just before slamming the door in her face. That like was very cutting. How did you find him and why cast him?

We auditioned a lot of people for that part, and he was really the standout. He embodied the character physically; he has brilliant presence on screen, and nailed the perfect level of nastiness. In real life, he’s the loveliest guy – he even brought snacks for everyone on set.

You have two child actresses in the film, Miyu Sasaki and Sawa Takahashi, and they both give very sympathetic performances. Why cast them and what was it like to work with child actors?

Miyu Sasaki and Ryoka Neya

Of course, Miyu Sasaki is best known for playing Yuri in Shoplifters. She’s an incredible actor, and when our casting director mentioned her, she was the obvious choice. We must have auditioned about ten actors for Ami, and Sawa Takahashi was the right amount of innocent and mature for the part. Both were amazing to work with, contrary to W. C. Fields’ adage.

What was your process for working with the actors? Did you do lots of rehearsals and create backstories or did you allow the cast freedom to act?

As usual, we didn’t have the budget for extensive rehearsals, but we did have some time with almost all the cast. Rehearsal was about building character relationships, and building comfort and familiarity between our adult and younger cast. I have a theory that actors generally have a better idea about what they’re doing than the director; usually the director is the least experienced person on set by virtue of (generally) working on at most one film a year. I wanted the performances to be natural and to come from the actors, so I was receptive to their ideas. That doesn’t mean I didn’t direct the cast at all; it was a collaborative process.

Watching the film, I was impressed with the setting and mise en scene, and I read an implicit criticism of society with regards to poverty and single mothers as well as a critique of idol culture. Forgive the glib comment but, it’s reminiscent of Shoplifters. Are you inspired by Kore-eda or maybe Ken Loach?

While I wrote Idol before I saw Shoplifters, it is a wonderful film and the comparisons are understandable (and flattering), especially considering our cast. I love Kore-eda’s films and I wish I had his optimism and ability to find and create beauty in tragic settings.

Filmmakers like Ken Loach and Andrea Arnold are definitely more conscious inspirations for me. Now that I think about it, there’s a kidnapping in Fish Tank, isn’t there. The more I reflect on my work, the clearer the influences become. Having grown up in the UK, filmmakers like Loach and Arnold loom so large over our film culture, in a positive way, and I admire and revere their work so much. I hope one day to be half the filmmaker they are.


Having made a drama and a documentary as a director, what do you see the strengths of each format?

I can only really answer this from a very personal and pragmatic perspective. With Kokutai, that was for the most part just me and a camera, so the film cost very little to make. I find it liberating to make documentary because there’s more room for experimentation and lower stakes; failure is less scary because there are fewer people for me to let down!

On Idol we were fortunate to have an amazing executive producer, who put up the budget and gave us complete freedom to do what we wanted. This allowed me to bring on a brilliant cast and crew, with whom I could collaborate, with whom I could discuss how to make the film, who brought fresh ideas and approaches to the table. It’s this ability to work with so many people that I think is the true strength of narrative.

Making Idol, I truly discovered what a difference having money makes. This is, in fact, the weakness of fiction filmmaking – one needs access to so many resources. Even the “we made this film for no money” story we hear so often is myth. If, for example, you’re not paying your cast and crew, they are effectively putting up the budget by donating their time and their previous financial/temporal investment into their own skills and investment.

We’ve been hearing for a good decade now that technology has democratised filmmaking – this is barely the case. You still need a cast and crew and locations. You still need skill, which is a time and money investment. You still need knowledge, which is a time and money investment. You need access to all the above, which the average person is not likely to encounter on the street. Filmmaking is not accessible, and it really needs to be. We (speaking from a British-Japanese perspective) need more accessible funding from start to finish. Make education and experimentation possible for people who currently can’t afford not to work. Fund their films. Investing in the arts results in tangible and intangible cultural and economic benefits, and we need more of it.

You have two films on the festival circuit right now. Do you have any more ideas for films?

I’m hoping to make Idol into a feature film. I do think we maximised the plot of the short, though, and it has evolved very naturally into a fairly different script, though the themes and essence remain the same.
I’m also starting preliminary work on a short documentary about the Daigo Fukuyu Maru incident, which I hope to shoot this year or next.
I have other projects in various stages of development, and what I do next is rather dictated by covid at the moment.


I would like to thank Ryushi Lindsay for taking the time to answer these questions.

You can see Kokutai online as part of the Spain Moving Images Festival 2020 (available globally, I believe)

You can see Idol at the Asian American International Film Festival 2020 (US) until October 11th and at the Aesthetica Short Film Festival 2020 (UK) in November

Japanese Films at the Busan International Film Festival 2020 (21st-30th October)

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Busan International Film Festival Logo

The full programme for the 2020 edition of the Busan International Film Festival was announced earlier this month as was the format of the festival.

This year’s edition is smaller than previous years where there would typically be multiple screenings of 300 features and shorts. Now there are 192 films from 68 countries and each film will screen only one time.

The reduced format sees all but a handful of physical screenings and events cancelled or moved online. This includes the opening and closing ceremonies, receptions, on-stage greetings, talks and guest meetings. The priority is safety but people can still enjoy films, many of which are available to view online via (Korea only).

So, the fest will take place from October 21st to the 30th and it features a great selection of films from across the world. Titles that I have already reviewed (forgive me for plugging my own writing) are Happy Old Year and Beasts Clawing at Straws. I have not seen any of the Japanese titles, many of which look awesome.

Here’s the line-up:

Closing Film

 

Josee, the Tiger and the Fish   

Josee The Tiger and the Fish Film Poster

ジョゼと虎と魚たち Josee to Tora to Sakana-tachi

Release Date: December 25th, 2020

Duration: 90 mins.

Director: Kotaro Tamura

Writer: Sayaka Kuwamura (Script), Seiko Tanabe (Original Short Story)

Starring: Kaya Kiyohara (Josee), Taishi Nakagawa (Tsuneo Suzukawa), Chiemi Matsutera (Chizu Yamamura), Kazuyuki Okitsu (Hayato Matsura), Lynn (Kana Kishimoto), Yume Miyamoto (Mai Ninomiya),

Animation Production: BONES

Website ANN MAL

This is an anime adaptation of Seiko Tanabe’s novel of the same name, which was made into a live-action movie by director Isshin Inudo in 2003.

Synopsis: Tsuneo is a university student studying marine biology and working part time. His dream is to see a phantom fish that lives in Mexico. One day, he sees a young woman in a wheelchair plunge down a slope. When he goes to check on her, he discovers she is Josee and she has rarely gone out of the house by herself due to her being unable to walk. She spends most of her days reading and painting and occasionally going out with her grandmother Chizu but her encounter with Tsuneo is the catalyst for her to face the real world. It also helps that Chizu offers Tsuneo a part-time job as a helper.

Gala Presentation

 

Wife of a Spy    Wife of a Spy Film Poster

スパイの妻Supai no tsuma

Release Date: October 16th, 2020

Duration: 115 mins.

Director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa

Writer: Ryusuke Hamaguchi, Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Tadashi Nohara (Script),

Starring: Yu Aoi, Masahiro Higashide, Hyunri, Issey Takahashi, Yuri Tsunematsu, Takashi Sasano, Chuck Johnson, Ryota Bando, Minosuke    Wife of a Spy Film Poster 2

Website IMDB

This is the theatrical cut of the NHK drama of the same name which aired on June 06th, 2020. Directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa and scripted by Ryusuke Hamaguchi (Happy Hour) and Tadashi Nohara, the film is a period piece that reunites the central couple of Romance Doll Yu Aoi (Hana and Alice) and Issey Takahashi (Shin Godzilla). This is the second time that Yu Aoi has worked with Kurosawa, following Penance and it is the second time for Masahiro Higashide following Creepy

To differentiate it from the television version, the movie version will have a new screen size and colour tone.

Kurosawa won the Silver Lion – Award for Best Director at the Venice International Film Festival for this film.

Synopsis: Japan in the 1940s is very dangerous if you have an opinion that dissents from the wartime rhetoric of the government. As the nation gears up for the Pacific War, a businessman from Kobe named Yusaku (Issey Takahashi) risks everything when he tries to tell the world of a barbaric act he witnessed while on a business trip to Manchuria. For this choice in exercising his right to speak out, he is accused of being a traitor. His wife Satoko (Yu Aoi) swears to stand by her beloved husband whatever the cost. This is her story. The story of Satoko as the wife of a spy. 

 

Also in the Cannes 2020 Section is the next film:

 

True Mothers    True Mothers Film Poster

朝が来る Asa ga kuru

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 139 mins.

Director: Naomi Kawase

Writer: Naomi Kawase, Izumi Takahashi (Script), Mizuki Tsujimura (Original Novel)

Starring: Arata Iura, Hiromi Nagasaku, Miyoko Asada, Taketo Tanaka, Ren Komai, Go Riju, Hiroko Nakajima, Reo Sato,

Website IMDB

True Mothers is the latest movie by Naomi Kawase (Sweet Bean (2015), Radiance (2017)) and is based on a novel by Mizuki Tsujimura. It was turned into an eight-episode series based on broadcast in 2016 and has now been given a feature film treatment so fine that it was going to be screened at Cannes 2020 but the fest was cancelled due to Covid-19. This was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival and San Sebastian Film Festival.

Synopsis: Kiyokazu Kurihara and his wife Satoko had given up trying for a baby after years of struggle but were talked into a special adoption by a company. Since then, they have spent six happy years with their son, Asato, but when a young woman named Hikari appears and claims to be the one who gave birth to him, she shakes the family to its core. Satoko decides to confront Hikari… 

 

Icons

 

Minamata Mandala

水俣曼荼羅 Minamata Mandara

Release Date: 2021

Duration: 371 mins.

Director: Kazuo Hara

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

Website IMDB

Kazuo Hara (The Emperor’s Naked Army Marches On) follows up his last documentary, Reiwa Uprising (2019) with this look at the people affected by Minamata disease. The origins of this story were turned into a film starring Johnny Depp that was released at Berlinale earlier this year.

Synopsis: In 1932, life for the people of Minamata, Kumamoto Prefecture, would change when a chemical company named Chisso began producing acetaldehyde and dumping methyl mercury in Minamata Bay. By 1956, cases of severe mercury poisoning were occurring amongst people since the locals would eat the sealife in the bay. The prefectural government and Chisso corporation did little to help the community who continue to be affected by the pollution in the bay and the people left with neurological problems stemming from Minamata Disease. Documentarian Kazuo Hara shows the lingering pain by following some of the people affected including an old man in his 90s who has battled in court for more than 20 years, a medical school professor striving to identify the cause of the disease, and a fisherman providing disease samples for medical examinations.

 

World Cinema

 

The Works and Days (of Tayoko Shiojiri in the Shiotani Basin) The Works and Days (of Tayoko Shiojiri in the Shiotani Basin) Film Poster

Release Date: February 27th, 2020

Duration: 480 mins.

Director: C.W. Winter, Anders Edström

Writer: C.W. Winter, Diary entries by Tayoko Shiojiri (Script), 

Starring: Tayoko Shiojiri, Hiroharu Shikata, Ryo Kase, Mai Edström, Kaoru Iwahana

Website IMDB

This one was at Berlinale earlier this year where it was the winner of the Award for Best Film in the Encounters Competition.

Synopsis: Shot over a 14 month period in a village populated by 47 people in the mountains of Kyoto Prefecture, it is a depiction of the lives of farmers over five seasons. There will be intermissions in the film.

A Window on Asian Cinema

All the Things We Never Said    All the Things We Never Said Film Poster

生きちゃった Ikichatta

Release Date: October 03rd, 2020

Duration: 91 mins.

Director: Yuya Ishii

Writer: Yuya Ishii (Script), 

Starring: Taiga Nakano, Yuko Oshima, Ryuya Wakaba, Park Jung-bum, Yuuno Ota, Miyu Yagyu, TOBI,

Website IMDB

According to this review in the Japan Times director Yuya Ishii – The Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue (2017), The Great Passage (2013), Mitsuko Delivers (2011), Sawako Decides (2010) – was part of a project created by the Hong Kong International Film Festival Society and China’s Heaven Pictures, which “tapped six Asian directors to make “Back to Basics” features on a meagre budget of about ¥15 million each. Taking advantage of some unexpected downtime after a scheduled shoot in South Korea was postponed, Ishii wrote a script in three days and started shooting a couple of months later.”

Synopsis: Atsuhisa, Natsumi, and Takeda have been close friends since high school. Atsuhisa and Natsumi married and have a daughter who is five years old when we enter their lives. Atsuhisa (Taiga Nakano) returns home, one day, to find that Natsumi (Yuko Oshima) is sleeping with another man. Their marriage begins to collapses and Takeda (Ryuya Wakaba) finds himself caught in the middle…

Living in Your Sky    Living in Your Sky Film Poster

空に住む Sora ni Sumu

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 118 mins.

Director: Shinji Aoyama

Writer: Shinji Aoyama, Chihiro Ikeda (Script), Masato Odake (Original Novel)

Starring: Mikako Tabe, Yukino Kishii, Rie Mimura, Takanori Iwata, Shingo Tsurumi, Nao Ohmori, Masatoshi Nagase, Shingo Tsurumi, Yo Takahashi, Akira Emoto, Hisafumi Iwashita,

Website IMDB

Shinji Aoyama made the film Eureka which is regarded by many as a brilliant title. I have the Artificial Eye DVD release but have yet to unwrap it. Anyway, this new film looks a lot lighter than Eureka with some Exile Tribe members in the cast.

Synopsis: Following the death of her parents, Naomi Kobayakawa (Mikako Tabe) moves into a high-rise apartment building in the city at the behest of her uncle and his wife. She tries to continue with her life, working at a small publishing company and meeting people who care for her, but she lives her life with a sense of loss and loneliness. Then she meets a popular actor who lives in the same apartment building and they develop a romantic relationship which may help her settle down again.

Ora, Ora Be Goin’ Alone    Ora Ora Be Goin' Alone Film Poster

おらおらでひとりいぐも Ora Ora de Hitori Igumo

Release Date: November 06th, 2020

Duration: 137 mins.

Director: Shuichi Okita

Writer: Shuichi Okita (Script), Chisako Wakatake (Original Novel)

Starring: Yuko Tanaka, Yu Aoi, Masahiro Higashide, Gaku Hamada, Amane Okayama, Machiko Washio, Kankuro Kudo, Munetaka Aoki, Tomoko Tabata,

Website IMDB

Shuichi Okita, director of A Story of Yonosuke (2013), The Woodsman and the Rain  (2012), gathers together a great cast to bring to life a story that looks a little like a tear-jerker.

Synopsis: Momoko (Yuko Tanaka) is seventy-five-years old and lives alone in Tokyo. It wasn’t always like this. In 1964, Momoko (Yu Aoi) arrived in Tokyo and met a handsome man named Shuzo (Masahiro Higashide) who she married. An increase in their family soon followed as she gave birth to two children but then her husband dies and Momoko is left bereft in life. Then, she begins to go to a library and finds solace and companionship in the books on offer. These books become the voices in her heart (played by various actors) and they help her change her life. 

 

Soiree    Soiree Film Poster

ソワレSuware

Release Date: August 28th, 2020

Duration: 111 mins.

Director: Bunji Satoyama

Writer: Bunji Satoyama (Script), 

Starring: Nijiro Murakami, Haruka Imou, Takashi Okabe, Noriko Eguchi, Kanami Tagawa,

Website

This sounds like it could be a powerful drama that looks at the suffering of the younger generation in a society that crushes people’s spirits. It stars two young talents who are making waves, Nijiro Murakami (The Gun, Destruction Babies) and Haruka Imou (Sayounara).

Synopsis: Shota Iwamatsu (Nijiro Murakami) is a young man who left Wakayama to go to Tokyo to become an actor but he is struggling and forced to make ends meet with his acting skills as part of scams. He is in a theatre troupe but his time there is pretty tough due to a merciless director. When that troupe heads to Wakayama to conduct an acting workshop at a nursing home for the elderly, Shota meets a young woman who works there named Takara Yamashita (Haruka Imou) who is suffering abuse at the hands of a man. The two encounter him on their way to a summer festival and an incident happens…

 

Your Eyes Tell    Your Eyes Tell Film Poster

きみの瞳(め)が問いかけている Kimi no Me ga Toikakete Iru

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 123 mins.

Director: Takahiro Miki

Writer: Yuichi Toyone (Script), Chisako Wakatake (Original Novel)

Starring: Yuriko Yoshitaka, Ryusei Yokohama, Kyosuke Yabe, Kanna Moriya, Akane Sakanoue, Yoshinori Okada, Jun Fubuki,

Website IMDB

Takahiro Miki is known for doing all those glossy movie adaptation of manga (We Were There, Blue Spring Ride etc.). For this project, he adapts the Korean movie Always, which was the opening film of the 16th Busan International Film Festival. He gets good actress Yuriko Yoshitaka (Noriko’s Dinner Table) in a lead role and BTS to do the movie’s song “Your Eyes Tell”.

Synopsis: Akari (Yuriko Yoshitaka) lost her eyesight and family in a car accident. Despite this, she tries to live her life as cheerfully as she can. Her brightness warms the life of Rui (Ryusei Yokohama), a loner who used to be a kickboxer. They soon develop feelings for each other and it looks like love is on the horizon but an incident from his past connects him to her and when Rui discovers it (he could just watch the trailer), he decides to take part in an underground fight to pay for Akari’s eye surgery.

 

New Currents

 

A Balance

由宇子の天秤 Yuuko no Tenbin

Release Date: November 06th, 2020

Duration: 137 mins.

Director: Yujiro Harumoto

Writer: Yujiro Harumoto (Script), Chisako Wakatake (Original Novel)

Starring: Kumi Takiuchi, Yumi Kawai, Masahiro Umeda, Yuuya Matsuura, Misa Wada, Ryo Ikeda, Hiroki Kono, Yota Kawase, Ken Mitsuishi,

Yujiro Harumoto made waves with his feature debut Going the Distance. He has a great cast of actors for his latest, a social drama as seen through the eyes of a documentarian played by an actreess who is really coming into her own in recent years, Kumi Takiuchi (Greatful Dead, Kamata Prelude, It Feels So Good). 

Synopsis: Yuko returns to her hometown as a documentary filmmaker determined to examine an instance of school violence that resulted in suicides three years ago while she was teaching classes at her father’s cram school. Yuko discovers a hidden truth that makes her become deeply involved in the lives of the families of the stuents and also causes a shock that upends her own life. 

Open Cinema

 

The Asadas!    The Asadas! Film Poster

浅田家! Asadake!

Release Date: October 02nd, 2020

Duration: 127 mins.

Director: Ryota Nakano

Writer: Ryota Nakano, Tomoe Kanno (Script),

Starring: Kazunari Ninomiya, Satoshi Tsumabuki, Haru Kuroki, Masaki Suda, Jun Fubuki, Makiko Watanabe, Maho Nonami,

Website IMDB

Ryota Nakano is famous for his films Capturing Dad and Her Love Boils Bathwater. Both are dramas and both have netted him awards, the former Best Director and SKIP CITY AWARD at the 9th Skip City International D-Cinema Festival, and the latter many prizes, including an award for Best Actress for Rie Miyazawa at the 40th Japan Academy Prize. This one has star wattage that could power a city with ex-Arashi member Kazunari Ninomiya, actors union-starter Satoshi Tsumabuki (Judge!, Villain), Makiko Watanabe (Love Exposure), Masaki Suda (The Light Shines Only There), and Haru Kuroki (The Bride of Rip van Winkle).

Synopsis: Masashi Asada (Kazunari Ninomiya) is an aspiring photographer who has an older brother Yukihiro (Satoshi Tsumabuki) and parents. He enters a photography vocational school and chooses to reproduce scenes of memories of his family and wins an award. After graduating, he works in pachislot but decides he wants to return to photographing his family again and starts a professional career. Then, one day, the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami strikes…

 

Wide Angle – Shorts and Documentary Competition

 

Mishima: The Last Debate    Mishima The Last Debate Film Poster

三島由紀夫vs東大全共闘 50年目の真実  Mishima Yukio vs Tôdai zenkyôtô: 50 nenme no shinjitsu

Release Date: March 20th, 2020

Duration: 108 mins.

Directors: Keisuke Toyoshima

Writers: N/A

Starring: Yukio Mishima, Osamu Kimura, Masahiko Akuta, Masahiro Higashide (Narrator)

Website IMDB

Synopsis from JFDB because it was so good: During the time of mass movement rising in late 60’s all over the world, an internationally acclaimed author, poet, playwright, actor, film director and critic Yukio Mishima, took part in a heated discussion with 1,000 members of the student movement at the University of Tokyo in 1969, just a year before Mishima’s ritual suicide. The original master footage of his last debate with students has been found after 50 years from the filming.

Though they have different opinions to each other, Mishima addressed to and influenced the young audience with respect. Through the restored 4K footage and interviews of the people involved in the discussion, the people who knew Mishima at that time, journalists and authors of our times, the film pursues timeless thoughts of Mishima which appeals to the people even today.

Past coverage:

BIFF 2019

The Real Thing, Mechanical Telepathy, Under the Stars, Tokyo Telepath 2020, Super Mikincorinista, Wish, Fruitful and Other Japanese Film Trailers

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Happy weekend, everyone!

The Taste of Tea Anna Tsuchiya and Go

I hope you are all well.

I started the week with a review of the gentle family comedy The Taste of Tea (2004) and followed that with a preview of the free films and events at the Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival 2020, an interview with Ryushi Linday, director of Idol (2020) and Kokutai (2019), and a look preview of the Japanese films at the Busan International Film Festival. The filmic highlight of the month has to be The Taste of Tea which I enjoyed a lot but I have been able to watch more…

In terms of films watched three horror movies, After Death (1989), Society (1989) and Spellcaster (1988), and three films by Hirobumi Watanabe.

What is released this weekend?

The Real Thing (Movie Version)    The Real Thing (Movie Version) Film Poster

本気のしるし 劇場版 Honki no Shirushi Geekijouban

Release Date: October 09th, 2020

Duration: 232 mins.

Director: Koji Fukada

Writer: Shintaro Mitani, Koji Fukada (Script), Mochiru Hoshisato (Original Novel)

Starring: Win Morisaki, Kaho Tsuchimura, Kei Ishibashi, Akari Fukunaga, Yukiya Kitamura, Shohei Uno, Shugo Oshinari, Masaki Naito,

Website IMDB

Koji Fukada (Human Comedy in Tokyo and Harmonium). will be feted at the Tokyo International Film Festival 2020 which runs from October 31st to November 9th and his latest film, The Real Thing will be one of the titles in play. Before then, it is in cinemas.

This is a feature film adapted from a Nagoya Broadcasting Network TV drama that is based on a manga by Mochiru Hoshisato. So, the TV show has been edited down for a movie version. It was named as one of the Cannes Film Festival’s 2020 Official Selection. Koji Fukada has a lot of other films to his name and you can find a list of films reviewed by me on this page (if you are interested). It stars Win Morisaki from the Steven Spielberg film Ready Player One.

Synopsis: Billed as a suspense, the story follows Kuzumichi Tsuji (Win Morisaki). He has a good reputation and lives a boring life. Even though he is involved with two women in his workplace, he feels he has never fallen in love but when he saves the life of Ukiyo Hayama (Kaho Tsuchimura), who was stuck at a railroad crossing, his heart is swayed. Ukiyo has a mysterious aura that sucks Kuzumichi in… 

 

Mechanical Telepathy    Mechanical Telepathy Film Poster

メカニカル・テレパシー  「Mekanikaru Terepashi-   

Release Date: October 09th, 2020

Running Time: 76 mins.

Director: Akiko Igarashi

Writer: Akiko Igarashi (Screenplay),

Starring: Ryuichi Yoshida, Nanami Shirakawa, Yoshio Shin, Aoi Ibuki, Riku Tokimitsu, Ayaka Matsui, Yukina Aoyama,

Website   IMDB

This is a re-edited version of Visualized Hearts (review) which I saw at the Osaka Asian Film Festival 2017. I hope it does well!

Synopsis: An accident happens during an experiment involving a machine which visualises human hearts. Masaki goes to the laboratory to announce the official cancellation of the experiment, and is attracted to Aoi, the wife of the machine’s inventor, who has lost consciousness due to the accident. Masaki learns that the only way to reconnect Aoi and her husband’s hearts would be the success of the experiment.

Is the human heart identical with the real human? This sci-fi drama, based on an experimental short film by the director, depicts love and scepticism through the relationships between researchers who visualise human hearts. Actors from the CO2 Actor Scholarship Project play the main roles, including the lead Masaki portrayed by Ryuichi Yoshida, Aoi who is portrayed by Nanami Shirakawa, the inventor who is played by Yoshio Shin and Asumi, who feels for Masaki, who is played by IBUKI Aoi.

Under the Stars    Under the Stars Film Poster

星の子 Hoshi no Ko

Release Date: October 09th, 2020

Duration: 109 mins.

Director: Tatsushi Omori

Writer: Tatsushi Omori (Script), Natsuko Imamura (Original Novel)

Starring: Mana Ashida, Masaki Okada, Kohei Otomo, Kengo Kora, Haru Kuroki, Masatoshi Nagase, Tomoyo Harada,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: Chihiro (Mana Ashida) is a middle school student who is friends with Nabe-chan (Ninon), a popular classmate admired for her looks and she has a crush on her handsome math teacher (Masaki Okada). What neither of these people know is that Chihiro’s family belong to a cult. Her parents (Masatoshi Nagase and Tomoyo Harada) turned to their help when she was a child suffering severe eczema and a miracle water seemed to provide a cure. Since then, they have been a part of the cult but as Chihiro deals with the idea that others will consider her parents strange, she begins to question their beliefs.

Tokyo Telepath 2020    Tokyo Telepath Film Poster

Release Date: October 10th, 2020

Duration: 49 mins.

Director: Maiko Endo

Writer: Maiko Endo (Script) 

Starring: Natsuko, Luka, Tomoya Matsumura, Yuasa Ema, Kaito Niwa, Crystal Performer Masaki

Website IMDB

This is a mid-length film that has a sci-fi edge to it as it casts its gaze to the future of Tokyo. It comes from Maiko Endo, a director, producer and composer who has worked around the world and won awards. This film was at the International Film Festival Rotterdam earlier this year

Synopsis: Changes are afoot in Tokyo in the run-up to the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games as new buildings spring up and the populace unite behind the idea of being digitised in the ‘Fusion’ programme which will allow authorities to monitor and control their minds. There are some who resist such as two teen girls with special gifts and their special mission.

Super Mikincorinista    Super Mikincorinista Film Poster

スーパーミキンコリニスタ Super Mikinkorinisuta

Release Date: October 10th, 2020

Duration: 97 mins.

Director: Naoya Kusaba

Writer: Naoya Kusaba (Script), Natsuko Imamura (Original Novel)

Starring: Mariko Takaya, Akari Matsukawa, Teruhiro Imamura, Musuko Kintoki, Jinmen Usagi,

Website IMDB

This is the debut work of director Naoya Kusaba, who takes his experiences working with extras as an assistant director in TV and movies to make an original story about someone with the passion for acting. At the last Pia Film Festival, it won the Entertainment Award (Horipro Prize) and Gemstone Award (Nikkatsu Prize).

Synopsis: Mikincorinista (Mariko Takaya) is a wannabe actress who is working on the edges of the industry as an extra. She is about to turn 25 and she wants to make her impact soon but a mistake on set sees her dropped by her agency. She still has a huge passion for acting and something unique about her, so she renames herself Super Mikincornista and continues to work hard.

Azami-san no koto dare demonai koibito-tachi no fukei vol. 2  Azami-san no koto dare demonai koibito-tachi no fukei vol 2 Film Poster

あざみさんのこと 誰でもない恋人たちの風景 vol.2 Azami-san no koto dare demonai koibito-tachi no fukei vol. 2

Release Date: October 10th, 2020

Duration: 113 mins

Director: Michio Koshikawa

Writer: Michio Koshikawa (Script), Gaku Yakumaru (Original Novel)

Starring: Ena Koshino, Eita Okuno, Goichi Mine, Yoichiro Saito, Natsu Miyamoto,

Website

Synopsis: Azami (Ena Koshino) left her family at the age of 17 and became the lover of an editor named Kitajima (Yoichiro Saito) even though she may have been considered underage. She stretched herself to become a woman who matched him, but Kitajima prioritised work, which left Azami feeling lonely. She soon started dating but the loneliness persisted until she meet Noda-kun (Eita Okuno), who was a completely different type of man from Kitajima-san. Around the same time, Azami reunites with her despised mother and experiences death and soon starts to reconsider loving and living.

Wish        Wish Film Poster

望み Nozomi

Release Date: October 09th, 2020

Duration: 108 mins.

Director: Yukihiko Tsutsumi

Writer: Satoko Okudera (Script), Shusuki Shizukui (Original Novel)

Starring: Shinichi Tsutsumi, Yoshie Ichige, Yuriko Ishida, Kaya Kiyohara, Shota Matsuda, Kenshi Okada, Raita Ryu,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: Kazuto Ishikawa iand his wife Kiyomi have an ideal life. He is an architect and she is a proof reader and they live in a house designed by Kazuto in the leafy suburbs with their high schooler son, Tadashi, and their junior high schooler daughter, Miyabi. Things turn sour when an injury causes Tadashi to quit playing for the school football team. He begins to hang out with delinquents and soon stays out all night without permission. One evening, Tadashi disappears. Kazuto and Kiyomi become concerned and their worries grow when he is implicated in the murder of a classmate. They want to believe in his innocence but the police suspect him…

Fruitful    Minori Yuku Film Poster

実りゆく Minori yuku

Release Date: October 09th, 2020

Duration: 87 mins.

Director: Junichiro Yagi

Writer: Junichiro Yagi (Script), Shusuki Shizukui (Original Novel)

Starring: Kazuki Takeuchi, Yoji Tanaka, Eeima Tanaka, Koyuki Hashimoto, Takahiro Miura, Mayumi Ono,

Website

Synopsis: This is a drama about a relationship between a son and his father who live on a family-run apple farm in Nagano prefecture. The son goes to Tokyo on weekends to perform live comedy while managing the farm with his father, but their relationship becomes difficult when his mother passed away and the son struggles to make his father happy whilst pursuing his own dreams. It stars Kazuki Takeuchi, one half of a Manzai duo.

Akuto: Kagaisha Tsuiseki Chosa      Akuto Kagaisha Tsuiseki Chosa Film Poster

悪党 加害者追跡調査 Akuto: Kagaisha Tsuiseki Chosa

Release Date: October 09th, 2020

Duration: 87 mins.

Director: Takahisa Zeze

Writer: Kenichi Suzuki (Script), Gaku Yakumaru (Original Novel)

Starring: Masahiro Higashide, Yutaka Matsushige, Yua Shinkawa, Akira Emoto, Sayaka Yamaguchi, Ikkei Watanabe, Sho Aoyagi, Misako Renbutsu, Yuka Itaya,

Website IMDB

From May 12th to June 16, 2019, 6 episodes of this  WOWOW serial drama were broadcast. They have been repackaged for a cinematic run. The screenings will be divided into two shows, A (episodes 1-3) and B (episodes 4-6). This is the third week a WOWOW drama has been given this treatment.

No trailer

Synopsis: When Shuichi Saeki was younger, his older sister was murdered. As an adult, he became a detective in order to seek revenge, but he quit his job and now works at a detective agency. One day, a couple hires the agency to find a man named Sakagami who killed their son. The boss of the agency, Masato, sends Shuichi out on the case. As he operates, his investigation brings him closer to his  sister’s killers…

OP PICTURES+FEST 2020 Films (October 16th – 29th)

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OP PICTURES + Fes 2020

OP Pictures is back for another year and it comes in the middle of the Covid-19 OP Pictures Fest 2020 Posterpandemic, a time when intimacy is to be shunned lest the virus get you. These films were mostly made last year before Covid-19 went global and just before the actor Takuya Sakurai died (he appears in a number of these titles). These films are screening between October 16th – 29th at Theater Shinjuku, Tokyo.

Just like last two year’s events (2018 and 2019), this is a collection of pink films produced by Okura Movie and screened over a number of evenings and there is a selection of films from Hideo Jojo who I spoke to at this year’s Osaka Asian Film Festival due to the screening of his film On the Edge of Their Seats – you can find the interview here. A wonderful irony about this is that I have compiled this list of titles and I don’t think I’ll watch them myself but this list might prove useful to others.

It goes without saying that this stuff is NSFW so you have been warned.

Here’s a festival trailer, the films will follow below… 

Here are the films:

Abnormal Rodeo Blues

アブノーマル・ロデオ・ブルース Abuno-maru Rodeo Buru-su

Release Date: October 20th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Masaoki Hirota

Writer: Masaoki Hirota, Takayuki Imanara (Script), 

Starring: Miku Chibana, Kanna Shinozaki, Megumi Maeno, Hidenobu Abera, Tomoyuki Miura,

Website

Synopsis: When he was a teenager, Hideo was on the verge of making his breakthrough as an actor but due to an incident involving his friend Koji, he was forced to retire. Since then, he took over his parents’ car repair shop but then Koji reappears… 

Ossan to Watashi

おっさんとわたし Ossan to Watashi

Release Date: October 28th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Daisuke Yamanouchi

Writer: Daisuke Yamanouchi (Script), 

Starring: Sakura Kizuna, Yukine Sakuragi, Toko Namiki, Manzo Shinra, Yuuya Ishikawa,

Website

Apparently, Sakura Kizuna is retiring from making films and this is her last appearance.

Synopsis: A dandy old man named Misawa charms a woman named Mizuki and some other young women who find a mysterious but attractive quality to him. 

Female Fraudster Ren ~ Chase the Affair! ~

女詐欺師レン ~キケンな情事を追え!~ On’na sagi-shi ren ~ kiken’na jōji o oe! ~

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Kenichi Fujiwara

Writer: Kenichi Fujiwara (Script), 

Starring: Nao Jinguji, Mako Okada, Riri Koda, Kentaro Shimazu, Sosuke Yamamoto,

Website 

Synopsis: Ren and her brother grew up without parents. They were taken under the wing of a fraudster named Ryozo. Ren’s brother worked as a host while Ren was trained as a fraudster. The target of Ryozo’s scam is a musician and a female manager but the situation becomes confused when yakuza become involved. 

Killer Tenant

キラー・テナント Kira- Tenanto

Release Date: October 27th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Takesehi Furusawa

Writer: Takesehi Furusawa (Script),

Starring: Yukine Sakuragi, Tsubaki Kato, Takeshi Furusawa, Waka Misono, Yuya Ishikawa,

Website

Synopsis: Murata gets dumped by his girl Chihiro and is forced to move out of his apartment due to being behind on the rent. He’s still in the place when another couple move in…

Koyoi, kiseki ga okiru onsen de.

今宵、奇跡が起きる温泉で。 Koyoi, kiseki ga okiru onsen de.

Release Date: October 26th, 2020

Duration: 97 mins.

Director: Tetsuye Takehora

Writer: Kosuke Komatsu (Script),

Starring: Ayumi Kimito, Chie Aragaki, Yuka Chiba, Noriaki Yoshida, Moe Sakura,

Website

Synopsis: Asuka and her boyfriend Tomorow visit a small hot spring inn which has memories of her late parents. Asuka is saddened by the loss of her parents and recalls a mysterious event that happened at the inn that is linked to a way to reunite with the dead…

Saikou no Bakayarou Aomori Junjou-hen

サイコウノバカヤロウ 青森純情編 Saikou no Bakayarou Aomori Junjou-hen

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Tetsuye Takehora

Writer: Kosuke Komatsu (Script),

Starring: Nanami Kawakami, Shoko Kudo, Yui Tatsumi, Takuya Sakurai, Yoshitaka Hosokawa,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: A sequel to Saikou no Bakayarou, where Teru reeturns to his parents’ house in Aomori and reunites with his childhood friends Michio, who has returned from Tokyo, and Masami…

I Want to See Ayako Tachibana

橘アヤコは見られたい Tachibana Ayako wa Miraretai

Release Date: October 18th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Amane Sato

Writer: Amane Sato (Script),

Starring: Aika Yamagishi, Kohei Higashiyama, Ena Koume, Yuria Yoshine,

Website

Synopsis: Popular YouTubers Ayako and Keisuke Tachibana seem perfect and take equal credit for their uploads, but in reality their success is down to Ayako. Their relationship is strained when Keisuke has an affair with a woman named Yuko. Then, one day, Keisuke is informed that she has died. From that day onward, strange phenomenon began to occur around the couple…

Tawawana Tokimeki

たわわなときめき Tawawana Tokimeki

Release Date: October 21st, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Takeshi Furusawa

Writer: Takeshi Furusawa (Script),

Starring: Nanami Matsumoto, Miu Akemi, Toko Namiki, Keita Yamashina, Ryo Chiura, Yota Kawase,

Website

Synopsis: Film director Karen is invited by her childhood friend and famous film director Sudo to make a film in Mexico. Karen is surprised at the sudden invitation and is delighted but the situation becomes confused with the emergence of another friend, Aya. The day when Karen leaves for Mexico is approaching…

Nemuru Mori no Michiko

眠れる森のミチコ Nemuru Mori no Michiko

Release Date: October 18th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Yujiro Koseki

Writer: Hiroko Fukuzawa (Script), 

Starring: Mikako Abe, Saya Tanihana, Ayumi Kimito, Yoshitaka Hosokawa, Masamitsu Kani, Manzo Shinra,

Website

Synopsis: Tomoki is a young man who has failed in job hunting. He heads to a forest with the intention of committing suicide but encounters men in the forestry industry and decides that being a lumberjack is okay. This is where he meets an attractive young woman named Michiko, another person who came from Tokyo and left a totally different life behind. This life catches up to her when a young woman comes in search of Michiko…

Rubbing Dragon Big Breasts Death Game   

揉めよドラゴン 爆乳死亡遊戯 Momeyo doragon bakunyū shibo yugi

Release Date: October 16th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Hirohisa Sasaki

Writer: Hirohisa Sasaki (Script),

Starring: Marina Yuzuki, Karina Nishida, Nina Nishimura, Hiroshi Noda, Shinya Orikawa, Yuya Ishikawa, Yumi Yoshiyuki,

Website 

Synopsis: Satomi, Kaori, and Chinami, are three sisters who are dumped by a man at the same time and they decide to seek revenge. In order to do that, they engage in a little naughty training with an old master who teaches them the technique of making full use of their bodies in battle.

Montblanc Woman

モンブランの女 Monburan no Onna

Release Date: October 22nd, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Hidekazu Takahara

Writer: Hideki Shishido, Hidekazu Takahara (Script), Ayano Ukami (Original Novel)

Starring: Saki Okuda, Kana Suzuna, Eri Kato, Takashi Naha, Shota Kotaki,

Website

Synopsis: Reiko has escaped her former life and now lives alone and works as a convenience store worker in a small town. Her days are dull which gives her the time to pay attention to customers such as one man who always buys a montblanc whenever she sees him. She has given him the nickname, “Montblanc-san”. When Reiko encounters him one day, he is being beaten up and she impulsively helps. This event triggers the two lonely people to start living together, but he has a secret as well…

Gentle man <international version>

やさしい男 〈インターナショナル・バージョン〉 Yasashī otoko intānashonaru bājon

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Daisuke Yamanouchi

Writer: Daisuke Yamanouchi (Script), Ayano Ukami (Original Novel)

Starring: Ririka Hoshikawa, Kurumi Tamaki, Toko Namiki, Hiroki Ando, Takuya Sakurai,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: A man working for a real estate agency goes to a stigmatised property (a building where someone died) with a customer and gets possessed by the spirit of a woman who had an accident there.

Hana to Numa

花と沼 Hana to Numa

Release Date: October 17th, 2020

Duration: N/A

Director: Hideo Jojo

Writer: Hideo Jojo (Script), 

Starring: Nana Nanaumi, Ayumi Kimito, Shijimi, Sosuke Yamamoto, Shishi Kubo,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: Ichika is an office lady who works for an electric appliance maker. She has a fetish for “disgusting” things that people dislike. Her company’s boss, Numata, is called “Kimohara” because everything he does is unpleasant, and he is shunned by all employees. Of course, Ichika is secretly excited by Numata’s feeling and decides to wiretap Numata’s favourite fountain pen.

Etsuraku Kosaten: Onna no ura ni deau toki

悦楽交差点 Etsuraku Kosaten

Release Date: August 21st, 2016

Duration: 70 mins.

Director: Hideo Jojo

Writer: Hideo Jojo (Script), 

Starring: Iori Kogawa, Ren Fukusaki, Moe Sakura, Takahito Asagi, Yasunori Tanaka,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: When a traffic surveyor lusts after a thin pretty woman with long hair, he begins to stalk despite having no idea if she is married or or has a husband. Well, she does have a hubby who is cheating on her. He has the photographs to prove it and drops them off into the mailbox of her home one day. A bizarre love takes root.

Licking Woman

舐める女 Nameru Onna

Release Date: August 21st, 2016

Duration: 70 mins.

Director: Hideo Jojo

Writer: Hideo Jojo (Script), 

Starring: Nana Nanami, Maki Aoyama, Megumi Tomizawa, Jun Sawamura, Takahito Asagi,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: Kaoru is married to Teruhiko and what excites her is odours. When a plumber gets sweaty while fixing her toilet, she gets super excited…

Hakobune no Onna-tachi

方舟の女たち Hakobune no Onna-tachi

Release Date: July 08th, 2017

Duration: 75 mins.

Director: Hideo Jojo

Writer: Hideo Jojo (Script), 

Starring: Airi Kijima, Makoto Takeuchi, Riko Matsui, Moe Sakura, Shijimi, Kaoru Yamashina,

Website IMDB

Synopsis: Three women who were involved in a molester case at the same time on a crowded train. Kimiko, a timid librarian, and Ryoko, a police officer chasing a molestation addict. Asami, an arrogant bank clerk. Their destiny begins to get entangled with each other. This work is a comical and warm depiction of the loneliness and sorrow of women living in modern times.

Koi no Buta   Koi no Buta Film Poster

恋の豚 Koi no Buta

Running Time: N/A

Release Date: August 25th, 2018

Director: Hideo Jojo

Writer: Hideo Jojo, Ai Suzuki (Screenplay),

Starring: Tomok0 Namiki, Yuri Hana, Umi Mitoma, Fumio Moriya, Kakumaru Yoshida, Sosuke Yamamoto, Keichan,

Website    IMDB

Synopsis: A large lady who likes food finds love with a skinny guy. 

Japanese Films at the Raindance Film Festival 2020

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The 2020 edition of the Raindance Film Festival takes place online from October 20th to November 07th with the UK being able to enjoy all of the entire programme while people in other parts of the world can enjoy certain content. All of the films are available for free but the organisers are asking for a donation (click here to find out more). There are a couple of Japanese films. Here they are…

Click on the title links to be taken to more information:

TwicebornSekai kara kibō ga kietanara Film Poster

夜明けを信じて。  Sekai kara kibou ga kietanara.

Release Date: October 16th, 2020

Duration: 135 mins.

Director: Hiroshi Akabane

Writer: Sayaka Ookawa (Screenplay)Ryuhou Ookawa (Novel)

Starring: Hiroaki Tanaka, Yoshiko Sengen, Nao Hasegawa, Yoshimi Ashikawa, Tamotsu Ishibashi

Website    IMDB

Synopsis: Satoru Ichijo receives a message from the spiritual world and realises his mission is to lead humankind to happiness. He becomes a successful businessman while secretly publishing spiritual messages, but the devil’s temptation shakes his mind.

The Past is Always New, The Future is Always Nostalgic: Photographer Daido Moriyama   The Past is Always New The Future is Always Nostalgic Photographer Daido Moriyama Film Poster

過去はいつも新しく、未来はつねに懐かしい 写真家 森山大道 「Kako wa itsumo atarashiku, mirai wa tsuneni natsukashī shashin-ka moriyama taidō

Release Date: April 30th, 2021

Duration: 108 mins.

Director: Gen Iwama

Writer: N/A

Starring: Daido Moriyama, Satoru Machiguchi, Yutaka Kamibayashi,

Website    IMDB

This one is a nice scoop.

Synopsis: A documentary about award-winning and world-renowned photographer Daido Moriyama, winner of the Hasselblad International Photo Award, which is said to be the Nobel Prize in the photography world in 2019. He is in his 80s and first got his start in the 1960s with his blurry, high-contrast, shoot-from-the-hip style and uncanny ability to find arresting compositions and subjects on Tokyo’s bustling streets. He still works today and the documentary tracks his work and glances back at past photos since it was recorded after the 50th anniversary edition of his ground-breaking book, Japan: A Photo Theater which was published in 1968. 

Here’s past coverage of the festival:

Raindance Film Festival 2013

Raindance Film Festival 2014

Raindance Film Festival 2015

Raindance Film Festival 2017

Raindance Film Festival 2018

Raindance Film Festival 2019


Wife of a Spy, Mio’s Cookbook, Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – The Movie: Mugen Train, Ainu Mosir, Beautiful Escape, Oni Garu!!, WAVE!! Surfing Yappe!!   Chapter 2, Twiceborn, Gekijouban hontou ni atta kowai hanashi 2020 norowareta-ka Japanese Film Trailers

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Happy weekend, everyone!

I hope you are all doing fine!

This week I posted about the Japanese films at the Raindance Film Festival and the OP Pictures + Fest going on throughout this month.

I will be recording the Halloween episode of the Heroic Purgatory podcast about the film Audition (1999) and watching some Japanese films from the 80s. Since it’s the season of scares, I’d like to highlight some of my older horror films reviews.

Carved – The Slit-Mouthed Woman

Tamami: The Baby’s Curse

Pulse

BAMY

Don’t Look Up

What is released this weekend?

Wife of a Spy Film Poster

Wife of a Spy   

スパイの妻Supai no tsuma

Release Date: October 16th, 2020

Duration: 115 mins.

Director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa

Writer: Ryusuke Hamaguchi, Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Tadashi Nohara (Script),

Wife of a Spy Film Poster 2

Starring: Yu Aoi, Masahiro Higashide, Hyunri, Issey Takahashi, Yuri Tsunematsu, Takashi Sasano, Chuck Johnson, Ryota Bando, Minosuke   

Website IMDB

This is the theatrical cut of the NHK drama of the same name which aired on June 06th, 2020. Directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa and scripted by Ryusuke Hamaguchi (Happy Hour) and Tadashi Nohara, the film is a period piece that reunites the central couple of Romance Doll Yu Aoi (Hana and Alice) and Issey Takahashi (Shin Godzilla). This is the second time that Yu Aoi has worked with Kurosawa, following Penance and it is the second time for Masahiro Higashide following Creepy

To differentiate it from the television version, the movie version will have a new screen size and colour tone.

Kurosawa won the Silver Lion – Award for Best Director at the Venice International Film Festival for this film.

 

Synopsis: Japan in the 1940s is very dangerous if you have an opinion that dissents from the wartime rhetoric of the government. As the nation gears up for the Pacific War, a businessman from Kobe named Yusaku (Issey Takahashi) risks everything when he tries to tell the world of a barbaric act he witnessed while on a business trip to Manchuria. For this choice in exercising his right to speak out, he is accused of being a traitor. His wife Satoko (Yu Aoi) swears to stand by her beloved husband whatever the cost. This is her story. The story of Satoko as the wife of a spy. 

Mio’s Cookbook Film Poster

Mio’s Cookbook   

みをつくし料理帖 Mio-Tsukushi Ryouri-Chou

Release Date: October 16th, 2020

Duration: 131 mins.

Director: Haruki Kadokawa

Writer: Itaru Era, Kana Matsui, Haruki Kadokawa (Script), Kaoru Takada (Original Novel)

Starring: Honoka Matsumoto, Nao, Mayumi Wakamura, Atsuko Asano, Takashi Fujii, Yosuke Kubozuka, Yuta Koseki, Shido Nakamura, Misa Eto,

Website IMDB

A movie continuation of a TV drama.

Synopsis: Mio (Honoka Matsumoto) and her best friend Noe (Nao) are two best friends from Osaka who were separated as children by a flood that also took Mio’s parents. Mio moved to Edo and found work in a soba restaurant where her culinary skills won great praise. Meanwhile, Noe became an oiran (high-ranking courtesan). For her latest challenge, Mio is asked to make one of her dishes for a client in the Yoshiwara pleasure district.

Demon Slayer Kimetsu no Yaiba - The Movie Mugen Train Film Poster

Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – The Movie: Mugen Train     

劇場版「鬼滅の刃」無限列車編 Gekijouban Kimetsu no Yaiba: Mugen Ressha-hen

Release Date: October 16th, 2020

Duration: 117 mins.

Director: Haruo Sotozaki

Writer: N/A (Script), Koyoharu Gotouge (Original Creator)

Starring: Natsuki Hanae (Tanjiro Kamado), Akari Kito (Nezuko Kamado), Hiro Shimono (Zenitsu Agatsuma), Yoshitsugu Matsuoka (Inosuke Hashibira), Satoshi Hino (Kyojuro Rengoku), Daisuke Hirkawa (Enmu),

Animation Production: ufotable

Website ANN MAL

This is a direct continuation of the TV anime and it looks good. The video below contains mutiple PVs and the trailer. I enjoyed the TV anime, which is on Crunchyroll, and am looking forward to the film.

Synopsis: Some time in the Taisho period, Tanjirou Kamado and his sister Nezuko lost their family in a demon attack. Even worse, Nezuko was turned into a demon. Through various twists of fate, the two become key members in the Demon Slayer Corps and with their friends, Zenitsu and Inosuke, they accompany Kyoujurou Rengoku, the Flame Hashira, to investigate a mysterious series of disappearances occurring inside a train. Little do they know that Enmu, one of the Twelve Kizuki, is also on board and has prepared a trap for them.

Ainu Mosir Film Poster

Ainu Mosir   

アイヌモシリ Ainu Mosir

Release Date: October 17th, 2020

Duration: 131 mins.

Director: Takeshi Fukunaga

Writer: Takeshi Fukunaga (Script), Kaoru Takada (Original Novel)

Starring: Kanto Shimokura, Debo Akibe, Emi Shimokura, Toko Miura, Lily Franky, Masao Nishida,

Website IMDB

This is a coming-of-age tale is set in an Ainu village in Northern Japan. According to an article on Deadline, this film received a special jury mention at the 2020 Tribeca Film Festival and was picked up for US distribution and will appear Netflix on November 17 before it gets a theatrical release in select cities throughout the month.

Synopsis: Kanto (Kanto Shimokura) is a 14-year-old boy who lives in an Ainu village where the main source of income lies in preserving and performing their ancient traditions for visiting tourists. The local teenagers are rebelling against participating in cultural rituals, but, for the sensitive Kanto, they become important following the loss of his father. Kanto is taken under the wing of a family friend, Debo (Debo Akibe), who introduces him to their culture’s traditions, something which offers the boy a way to strengthen his sense of self. It comes at an important point as the village debates its future and Kanto has to decide for himself what his very own future will be.

Beautiful Escape Film Poster

Beautiful Escape   

ファンファーレが鳴り響く Fanfare ga narihibiku

Release Date: October 17th, 2020

Duration: 89 mins.

Director: Kazuki Morita

Writer: Kazuki Morita (Script), 

Starring: Sho Kasamatsu, Kirara Inori, Asuka Kurosawa, Yota Kawase, Shima Ohnishi, Houka Kinoshita,

Website   JFDB

Synopsis: Akihiko Kobe suffers from bullying at his high school due to his stutter. Angry but unable to express it, something makes him snap: accidentally seeing his classmate Mitsuri Nanao, a brilliant and intelligent girl, killing a cat. Mitsuri wants to draw the blood of other things and reveals to Akihiko her desire for murder and proposes that they kill his bullies. The two begin to kill and hit the road in a youth splatter road movie

Oni Garu!!  Oni Garu!! Film Poster

鬼ガール!! Oni Ga-ru!!

Release Date: October 17th, 2020

Duration: 120 mins.

Director: Genki Takigawa

Writer: Yu Sakudo, Genki Takigawa, Ko Nakamura (Script), Ko Nakamura (Original Novel)

Starring: Manami Igashira, Mizuki Itagaki, Kaisei Kamimura, Hiyori Sakurada, Mizuki Yoshida, Shunta Sono,

Website IMDB

A youth movie featuring a high school girl who has a complex about being a “demon”, set in the unexplored region of Kawachinagano, Osaka, where the legend of demons still remains.

Synopsis: Momoka is a demon girl who dreams of being an ordinary high school student so she can enjoy life in love. As her high school life begins, she hides her horns, that appear when she gets excited, and demon strength but it won’t be easy. 

 

WAVE!! Surfing Yappe!!   Chapter 2      WAVE Surfing Yappe Chapter 2 Film Poster

WAVE!!~サーフィンやっぺ!!~ 第二章 WAVE!! Sa-fi-n Yappe!! Dai ni shou

Release Date: October 16th, 2020

Duration: 92 mins.

Director: Takaharu Ozaki

Writer: Kazuyuki Fudeyasu (Script), MAGES (Original Creator)

Starring: Jin Ogasawara (Sho Akitsuki), Tomoaki Maeno (Masaki Hinaoka), Yoshiki Nakajima (Nalu Tanaka), Takuya Sato (Kosuke Iwana), Yusuke Shirai (Yuta Matsukaze), Nobuhiko Okamoto (Rindo Fuke),

Animation Production: Asahi Production

Website ANN MAL

Synopsis: Masaki and Sho are two students in Oorai, Ibaraki prefecture. Sho introduces Masaki to surfing and through the sport, he begins to make friends but he will also drift apart from them as he grows up. What remains constant is his love of surfing. In the latest instalment in this series of films, we get to know Masaki’s childhood friend Nalu Tanaka, a boy with Hawaiian blood, as well as the famous hot-blooded surfer Kosuke Iwana… 

 

Sekai kara kibō ga kietanara Film Poster

Twiceborn

夜明けを信じて。  「Sekai kara kibou ga kietanara.」

Release Date: October 16th, 2020

Duration: 135 mins.

Director: Hiroshi Akabane

Writer: Sayaka Ookawa (Screenplay), Ryuhou Ookawa (Novel)

Starring: Hiroaki Tanaka, Yoshiko Sengen, Nao Hasegawa, Yoshimi Ashikawa, Tamotsu Ishibashi

Website    IMDB

Synopsis: Satoru Ichijo receives a message from the spiritual world and realises his mission is to lead humankind to happiness. He becomes a successful businessman while secretly publishing spiritual messages, but the devil’s temptation shakes his mind.

 

Gekijouban hontou ni atta kowai hanashi 2020 norowareta-ka Film Poster

Gekijouban hontou ni atta kowai hanashi 2020 norowareta-ka   

劇場版ほんとうにあった怖い話2020 呪われた家 Gekijouban hontou ni atta kowai hanashi 2020 norowareta-ka

Release Date: October 17th, 2020

Duration: 66 mins.

Director: Hiromitsu Amano

Writer: Hiromitsu Amano (Script), Ko Nakamura (Original Novel)

Starring: Kumi Wadata, Hiroe Iketa, Kumiko Shimohigashi, Koki Matsuda, Ayumi Shiraki, Nomaru Abe, Hideyuki Tochigi, Takuya Fujimaru,

Website IMDB

The latest instalment in the popular omnibus horror series that visualises episodes carefully selected from the psychic and horror experiences submitted by people on the internet.

Synopsis: Mitsuru Takahashi, who works in the editorial department of the magazine “** Secret Story”, is given an article about a house by the editor-in-chief. The house is located in an area where there used to be a custom called “Tamayobai” that brings back the souls of the deceased to this world, and according to the article, this custom was performed at the house a year ago. At the same time, Shio Ogawa, a woman with keen intuition goes to her grandmother’s house after hearing she slipped off a ladder and died. She travels to the house and finds an old-fashioned and somewhat insidious atmosphere. While wondering what her grandmother was trying to do, she realises that she cannot find her uncle, Yoji, who was living with her grandmother…

Japanese Films at Tokyo FILMeX 2020 (October 30th to November 05th)

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Tokyo FILMeX 2020 runs from October 30th to November 05th. It’s the placeTokyo Filmex Poster to see arthouse films but, due to Covid-19, organisers have decided to shorten the duration of the fest and have it run alongside the Tokyo International Film Festival, although it’s still a physical event. This move positions the festival in a way to make it akin to Director’s Fortnight at Cannes. You can read a statement here which explains more.

Anyway, the festival has quite a few titles from Japan or set in Japan that are worth checking out.

Click on a title to be taken to the festival page:

OPENING FILM

Love Mooning

愛のまなざしを Ai no manazashi o

Release Date: 2021

Duration: 102 mins.

Director: Kunitoshi Manda

Writer: Kunitoshi Manda, Tamami Manda (Script), Ko Nakamura (Original Novel)

Starring: Toru Nakamura, Takumi Saitoh, Kiki Sugino, Yuri Nakamura, Urara Matsubayashi, Bengal, Yusuke Manda,

This is the first film in a while for Kunitoshi Manda, director of the fine Eiko Koike x Etsushi Toyokawa drama The Kiss (2007).

Click to view slideshow.

Synopsis: Takashi (Toru Nakamura) is a psychiatrist who runs a mental health clinic. Despite his wife Kaoru (Yuri Nakamura) being dead for six years, he is unable to move on and spends his days in deep sadness and self-medicating to control his mind. One day, Ayako Mizuno (Kiki Sugino) is admitted to his clinic as a patient. Their relationship goes beyond what is expected for a doctor and patient but Takashi cannot forget his wife which makes Ayako jealous…

Competition Films

A Balance      A Balance Film Poster

由宇子の天秤 Yuuko no Tenbin

Release Date: November 06th, 2020

Duration: 137 mins.

Director: Yujiro Harumoto

Writer: Yujiro Harumoto (Script), Chisako Wakatake (Original Novel)

Starring: Kumi Takiuchi, Yumi Kawai, Masahiro Umeda, Yuuya Matsuura, Misa Wada, Ryo Ikeda, Hiroki Kono, Yota Kawase, Ken Mitsuishi,

Yujiro Harumoto made waves with his feature debut Going the Distance. He has a great cast of actors for his latest, a social drama as seen through the eyes of a documentarian played by an actreess who is really coming into her own in recent years, Kumi Takiuchi (Greatful Dead, Kamata Prelude, It Feels So Good). 

Synopsis: Yuko returns to her hometown as a documentary filmmaker determined to examine an instance of school violence that resulted in suicides three years ago while she was teaching classes at her father’s cram school. Yuko discovers a hidden truth that makes her become deeply involved in the lives of the families of the stuents and also causes a shock that upends her own life. 

Any Crybabies Around?    Any Crybabies Around Film Poster

泣く子はいねぇが Nakuko wa ineega

Release Date: November 20th, 2020

Duration: 95 mins.

Director: Takuma Sato

Writer: Takuma Sato (Script), 

Starring: Taiga Nakano, Riho Yoshioka, Kanichiro, Takashi Yamanaka, Yoki Miko, Toshiro Yanagiba, Kimiko Yo

Website IMDB

Takuma Sato has four films to his name so far, all original stories, with two released last year (link to a trailer post), and he has worked with Taiga Nakano (Au revoir l’ete, Harmonium, Japanese Girls Never Die). For this film, he draws upon the Namahage festival that takes place in Akita Prefecture and uses this ancient tradition to tell a story depicting young adults in contemporary society.

Synopsis: Tasuku (Taiga Nakano) isn’t the best husband around, as proven by the fact that it is New Year’s Eve and he is out drinking with his friends while his wife Kotone is pregnant and about to give birth. Deciding to turn over a new leaf, he declares he will go home. But not before a last sip of sake. This sends him over the edge and he tears off his clothes and tears out into the street. This being Oga, it is the time of Namahage – an ancient tradition where men wear costumes and go door-to-door to scare kids. A naked Tasuku crashes this event and it is caught on television. This shameful moment causes a national uproar that causes Kotone to divorce him and Tasuku to flee to Tokyo.

Two years later, Tasuku returns after he discovers that Kotone is now working in a red-light district and raising their daughter alone but the situation is more difficult than he anticipates…

The Blue Danube

きまじめ楽隊のぼんやり戦争 Kimajime gakutai no bon’yari sensou

Release Date: March, 2021

Duration: 105 mins.

Director: Akira Ikeda

Writer: Akira Ikeda (Script),

Starring: Ko Maehara, Hiroki Konno, Hiroki Nakajima, Naoya Shimizu, Manami Hashimoto, Hairi Katagiri,

Website IMDB

This is the fourth feature film from Akira Ikeda whose work, Anatomy of a Paper Clip (2013) was a highly acclaimed award-winner of the jury nominated HIVOS Tiger Award at the 2014 Rotterdam International Film Festival and the Dragons and Tigers Award for Young Cinema at the 2013 edition of the Vancouver IFF. It appears this was produced under the auspices of NDJC.

Click to view slideshow.

Synopsis: In a fictional town where war with the neighboring town across the river is ingrained into everyday life, people know that every day, 9 am to 5 pm, is the time for war. Rouki, a soldier in the town, becomes fascinated by music heard from across the water. Meanwhile, rumours of new weapons and troops coming to the town spread, and the citizen’s lives change.

Okinawa Santos

オキナワ サントス Okinawa Santosu

Release Date: 2020

Duration: 90 mins.

Director: Yoju Matsubayashi

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

Okinawa Santos Film Image

Synopsis: This is the latest documentary from Yoju Matsubayashi, director of the award-winning The Horses of Fukushima (2013). He looks at the story of how and why, during World War II, many Japanese people immigrants in Santos, Brazil, were forced to move to another place, and draws attention to the fact that 60% of the migrants were from Okinawa. The film is based on testimonies from interviewees and aims to reveal the hidden historical relationship between Okinawa and Brazil.

Special Screenings

 

Minamata Mandala

水俣曼荼羅 Minamata Mandara

Release Date: 2021

Duration: 371 mins.

Director: Kazuo Hara

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

Website IMDB

Kazuo Hara (The Emperor’s Naked Army Marches On) follows up his last documentary, Reiwa Uprising (2019) with this look at the people affected by Minamata disease. The origins of this story were turned into a film starring Johnny Depp that was released at Berlinale earlier this year.

Synopsis: In 1932, life for the people of Minamata, Kumamoto Prefecture, would change when a chemical company named Chisso began producing acetaldehyde and dumping methyl mercury in Minamata Bay. By 1956, cases of severe mercury poisoning were occurring amongst people since the locals would eat the sealife in the bay. The prefectural government and Chisso corporation did little to help the community who continue to be affected by the pollution in the bay and the people left with neurological problems stemming from Minamata Disease. Documentarian Kazuo Hara shows the lingering pain by following some of the people affected including an old man in his 90s who has battled in court for more than 20 years, a medical school professor striving to identify the cause of the disease, and a fisherman providing disease samples for medical examinations.

 

The Works and Days (of Tayoko Shiojiri in the Shiotani Basin) The Works and Days (of Tayoko Shiojiri in the Shiotani Basin) Film Poster

Release Date: February 27th, 2020

Duration: 480 mins.

Director: C.W. Winter, Anders Edström

Writer: C.W. Winter, Diary entries by Tayoko Shiojiri (Script), 

Starring: Tayoko Shiojiri, Hiroharu Shikata, Ryo Kase, Mai Edström, Kaoru Iwahana

Website IMDB

This one was at Berlinale earlier this year where it was the winner of the Award for Best Film in the Encounters Competition.

Synopsis: Shot over a 14 month period in a village populated by 47 people in the mountains of Kyoto Prefecture, it is a depiction of the lives of farmers over five seasons. The film features many locals but also some professional actors like Ryo Kase.

One Night  ひとよ Dir: Kazuya Shiraishi (2019)

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One Night    One Night Film Poster

ひとよ  Hitoyo

Release Date: November 08th, 2019

Duration: 123 mins.

Director: Kazuya Shiraishi

Writer: Izumi Takahashi (Screenplay), Yuko Kuwabara (Original Stage Play)

Starring: Takeru Satoh, Ryohei Suzuki, Mayu Matsuoka, Yuko Tanaka, Kuranosuke Sasaki, Mariko Tsutsumi, Hanae Kan, Megumi,

Website IMDB

Director Kazuya Shiraishi chronicles the darker aspects of Japan with true-crime stories featuring outlaws like The Devil’s Path (2013) and Twisted Justice (2016) mixed with depictions of damaged everyday people on the outermost fringes of society like Dawn of the Felines (2017) and Birds Without Names (2018). For One Night, his first family drama, he adapts a stage play by Yuko Kuwabara but leans too far into crime territory late in the proceedings for an unsatisfactory ending.

The film opens on a stormy night at the Inamoto Taxi company which is located in some nondescript town. Koharu Inamoto (Yuko Tanaka) runs over her abusive husband in a taxi in an act to free herself and her three children from his merciless violence. After confessing what happened to her kids, all of whom bear the bruises of a beating, Koharu tells them, “Nobody will ever beat you again. You can live however you want.” Just before departing into the rain and darkness to give herself up to the police, she promises she will meet them again in the future.

Cut to 15 years later and we see that Koharu’s selfless act that was supposed to set her family free to pursue their dreams has trapped them in a vicious circle of shame and self-loathing that has made their lives nightmarish. Koharu discovers this bitter disappointment as she keeps her promise and returns to her children and the family business. Her presence forces everyone to confront the scars from their traumatic background, how the kids have inherited the sins of the mother by living in shame, and how this has all warped their personalities in various ways. These differences lead to multiple angles of conflict between characters we sympathise with due to their shared history and that provides ample drama which is excellently delivered by the cast.

Displaying various degrees of emotional damage and toxic masculinity are Koharu’s boys. Eldest son Daiki is a nebbish-looking guy who is struggling badly with a failing marriage and meeting masculine norms. The slicker younger son Yuji is a cynical journalist for a sleazy tabloid who senses he can turn his tragic past into a brighter future through writing about it, even if this betrays his family. Screen heartthrob Takeru Satoh plays the more showy character of Yuji with provoking sneers and condescension fit for his character. More conventional but really harrowing is the plight faced by Daiki. Ryohei Suzuki is very sympathetic playing the bespectacled guy unable to process what happened to them. He is all huddled and quiet with a downcast gaze and stutter due to a lack of confidence and a lot of shame. His constant avoidance of conflict leads to a shock later in the story as he he slips into violence in a way that reminds audiences that children learn from their parents.

More welcoming is Koharu’s daughter Sonoko played by Mayu Matsuoka, a much-needed ray of sunshine whose bright personality and hard-knock smile lights up the dark narrative. Having been forced to give up her ambitions to be a hairstylist, she works at a snack bar where she belts out karaoke tunes with glee and has a cynical view of men that she is unafraid to show. This motivates her to push back against her brother’s wayward feelings towards their mother.

Veteran actress Yuko Tanaka plays Koharu as a woman with mighty resolve and a humane nature who is resigned to enduring whatever hardship she faces for the good of her children. Naturally the audience will be with her and there is the expectation that she will right whatever wrongs that are going on, from saving Daiki’s marriage to coming to peace with with Yuji. Except it doesn’t quite work out so simply and seeing the family members navigate their sense of betrayal and try to overcome their traumas provides gripping material that the performances keep us invested in. Throw in an examination of how society ostracises those connected to crime, other characters around them struggling with issues like senile parents and wayward children and there is enough material here for a fine family drama that depicts the problems faced by modern families.

While the pieces are all there, the story loses its thread in the final third as if the writer Izumi Takahashi lacked an interest in realistically evolving the story and bringing the characters to a natural catharsis. Instead, a subplot involving Michio Doushita (Kuranosuke Sasaki) as a taxi driver whose criminal past catches up with him drives the action. While his plight makes an interesting parallel to Koharu’s, his story hijacks the film and takes away any agency from the mother and it leads to a contrived ending which foists an unbelievable connection between himself and the children, whom we never really see interact with him, just for the sake of a resolution.

One Night really starts off as a deep, dark, and very difficult performance-driven drama as we watch an excruciating reunion ripe for theatrics but everything is kept in check as the cast deliver some very fine and realistic portrayals showing the ways domestic violence can affect people. With a better ending, the emotional of sticking it out rewards would have been greater.

The technicals are all impressive enough and help transcend the film’s stage origins by taking advantage of the taxi company to get out of the single location so it never feels boring and there is a sense of place and time so that this feels rooted in reality.

My review for One Night first appeared on VCinema on September 01st.

Living in Your Sky, True Mothers, Your Eyes Tell, An Ant Strikes Back, Videophobia, Travel Nostalgia, Sorezore, Tamayura, JUST ANOTHER, Aoi, Instant Camera, Geki × Cine `Nise Yoshitsune Meikai Uta’ Japanese Film Trailers

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Dreams Into Drawing

Happy weekend, everyone!!!

I hope you are all well.

This post is truncated due to time constraints. As has been the case for at least the past four years, I’m working as press officer/writer for the Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival and so I am caught up doing SNS as well as covering other things (one more day to go and everything is online and free to view).

This week I posted a preview of the Japanese films at Tokyo FILMeX and my review for the Kazuya Shiraishi film One Night. I’ve watched Italian horror giallo movies like Terror at the Opera and Deep Red (both by Dario Argento), Black Sabbath and Black Sunday (both by Mario Bava).

What is released this weekend? About 19 films, so I’ve split this post into two with the second part tomorrow. Some of these films are screening as part of Busan, others I have seen as part of Nippon Connection and the Osaka Asian Film Festival.

Living in Your Sky        Living in Your Sky Film Poster

空に住む Sora ni Sumu

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 118 mins.

Director: Shinji Aoyama

Writer: Shinji Aoyama, Chihiro Ikeda (Script), Masato Odake (Original Novel)

Starring: Mikako Tabe, Yukino Kishii, Rie Mimura, Takanori Iwata, Shingo Tsurumi, Nao Ohmori, Masatoshi Nagase, Shingo Tsurumi, Yo Takahashi, Akira Emoto, Hisafumi Iwashita,

Website IMDB

Shinji Aoyama made the film Eureka which is regarded by many as a brilliant title. I have the Artificial Eye DVD release but have yet to unwrap it. Anyway, this new film looks a lot lighter than Eureka with some Exile Tribe members in the cast.

 

Synopsis: Following the death of her parents, Naomi Kobayakawa (Mikako Tabe) moves into a high-rise apartment building in the city at the behest of her uncle and his wife. She tries to continue with her life, working at a small publishing company and meeting people who care for her, but she lives her life with a sense of loss and loneliness. Then she meets a popular actor who lives in the same apartment building and they develop a romantic relationship which may help her settle down again.

True Mothers Film Poster

True Mothers   

朝が来る Asa ga kuru

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 139 mins.

Director: Naomi Kawase

Writer: Naomi Kawase, Izumi Takahashi (Script), Mizuki Tsujimura (Original Novel)

Starring: Arata Iura, Hiromi Nagasaku, Miyoko Asada, Taketo Tanaka, Ren Komai, Go Riju, Hiroko Nakajima, Reo Sato,

Website IMDB

True Mothers is the latest movie by Naomi Kawase (Sweet Bean (2015), Radiance (2017)) and is based on a novel by Mizuki Tsujimura. It was turned into an eight-episode series based on broadcast in 2016 and has now been given a feature film treatment so fine that it was going to be screened at Cannes 2020 but the fest was cancelled due to Covid-19. This was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival and San Sebastian Film Festival.

Synopsis: Kiyokazu Kurihara and his wife Satoko had given up trying for a baby after years of struggle but were talked into a special adoption by a company. Since then, they have spent six happy years with their son, Asato, but when a young woman named Hikari appears and claims to be the one who gave birth to him, she shakes the family to its core. Satoko decides to confront Hikari…

 

Your Eyes Tell Film Poster

Your Eyes Tell   

きみの瞳(め)が問いかけている Kimi no Me ga Toikakete Iru

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 123 mins.

Director: Takahiro Miki

Writer: Yuichi Toyone (Script), Chisako Wakatake (Original Novel)

Starring: Yuriko Yoshitaka, Ryusei Yokohama, Kyosuke Yabe, Kanna Moriya, Akane Sakanoue, Yoshinori Okada, Jun Fubuki,

Website IMDB

Takahiro Miki is known for doing all those glossy movie adaptation of manga (We Were There, Blue Spring Ride etc.). For this project, he adapts the Korean movie Always, which was the opening film of the 16th Busan International Film Festival. He gets good actress Yuriko Yoshitaka (Noriko’s Dinner Table) in a lead role and BTS to do the movie’s song “Your Eyes Tell”.

Synopsis: Akari (Yuriko Yoshitaka) lost her eyesight and family in a car accident. Despite this, she tries to live her life as cheerfully as she can. Her brightness warms the life of Rui (Ryusei Yokohama), a loner who used to be a kickboxer. They soon develop feelings for each other and it looks like love is on the horizon but an incident from his past connects him to her and when Rui discovers it (he could just watch the trailer), he decides to take part in an underground fight to pay for Akari’s eye surgery.

An Ant Strikes Back Film Poster

An Ant Strikes Back 

アリ地獄天国 ArJigoku Tengoku

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: 98 mins.

Director: Tokachi Tsuchiya

Writer: N/A

Starring: N/A

Website IMDB

This one played at the Yamagata International Documentary Festival where you can read an interview with the director BUT it contains some spoilers…

Here’s my review from its time at Nippon Connection where director Tokachi Tsuchiya received the Nippon Online Award.

Synopsis: Yu Nishimura (real name: Yasuhiro Nomura) worked as an employee for a moving company called Arisan Mark no Hikkoshisha. He joined in 2011 and was a full-timer and was one of the best in the sales department, unfortunately, he had an accident caused by fatigue from overwork and he faced a number of years of workplace harassment from his bosses including having his salary reduced, unfair dismissal, persecution and being forced to working at the shredder when he was rehired. He joined a union who helped him with a legal challenge to get redress for everything he suffered. This documentary documents his battle for justice and the director has his own personal connection to the case, the final result of which was reported on the Mainichi website. Full details on this website.

Videophobia Film Poster

Videophobia   

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: 88 mins.

Director: Daisuke Miyazaki

Writer: Daisuke Miyazaki, Naoto Akiyama (Script),

Starring: Tomona Hirota, Shugo Oshinari, Sumire Ashina, Masahiro Umeda, Sahel Rosa,

OAFF IMDB

This is the latest film from Daisuke Miyazaki, director of Yamato (California) (2016) and Tourism (2018). VIDEOPHOBIA is Miyazaki’s darkest work yet as I detailed in my review, as it shows the shadowy side of technology as revealed through online pornography which he went into more with his interview.

Synopsis: Ai (Tomona Hirota) is a perpetually exhausted young woman living in Osaka. Having bottomed out after an attempt at living in Tokyo, her life seems to be dominated by her nocturnal habits of smoking, browsing the net and venturing to pornographic websites. She is online but disconnected from reality. Her daily is wrecked when she meets a guy, goes back to his apartment, sleeps with him and finds a sex tape of her midnight tryst on the internet the very next day. This plunges the girl into a pool of paranoia and, with every action she takes to rectify the situation and remove the video, she is dragged deeper into a feeling of terror. Events become uncontrollable, technology more intrusive and Ai loses control of her image which exists online.

Travel Nostalgia Film Poster

Travel Nostalgia   

旅愁 Ryoshu

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: 90 mins.

Director: Qinyao Wu

Writer: Qinyao Wu (Script), 

Starring: He Zhu, Yibo Wang, Weizi Wu,

Website IMDB

Qinyao Wu hails from China’s Sichuan Province. She travelled to Japan in 2015 and enrolled in a graduate school of Rikkyo University and studied filmmaking under Professor Kunitoshi Manda. This is her thesis film and it played at the Skip City D-Cinema Festival last year, which is where I got this info. 

Synopsis: A young man named Lee runs a vacation rental house in Tokyo which caters to Chinese. He meets Wang, a painter who happens to be having an exhibition in the neighbourhood and Lee takes an interest in him, going as far as to suggest to Wang that he paint something at the rental house while living there as a caretaker. They start living together in the house, but one day, Wang’s ex-girlfriend comes to visit.

 

Sorezore Tamayura Film Poster

Sorezore, Tamayura   

それぞれ、たまゆら Sorezore, Tamayura

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: 60 mins.

Director: Hideo Tsuchida

Writer: Hideo Tsuchida (Script), Hideo Tsuchida (Original Story)

Starring: Yasuhiro Kanegai, Hiroyuki Toritani, Yusuke Itagaki, Noriko Nakagoshi, Akane Tatsukawa,

Website

Synopsis: Set in a provincial city, a phenomenon of unknown cause that causes people to suddenly fall asleep occurs. Those who are left awake in this unexplained situation are just confused. Broadcasting on TV stops and the internet is not updated. It seems that the same phenomenon has occurred all over the world. And the remaining people will also fall asleep in turn.

JUST ANOTHER Film Poster

JUST ANOTHER   

旅愁 Ryoshu

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: 90 mins.

Director: Noriko Oishi

Writer: N/A

Starring: The Genbaku Onanizu – Taylow, Eddie, Johnny, Shinobu,

Website 

Synopsis: A documentary that follows the punk band “The Genbaku Onanizu”, which will celebrate its 38th anniversary in 2020. The band was formed in 1982 in Nagoya, which is where they are still based. They have regular jobs and haven’t made a profession of being musicians but they get their limelight now in this, their dirst documentary. 


Two short films created by Takayuki Suzue, a director who started making films while in a university independent film club. The theme of his films is “the sad memories of high school boys”. They play at Ikebukuro Cinema Rosa as a series, “Boys Platonic Director Takayuki Suzue Special Feature”.

Boys Platonic Blue Film Poster

Aoi   

青い Aoi

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: 15 mins.

Director: Takayuki Suzue

Writer: Takayuki Suzue (Script), 

Starring: Takuto Marumoto, Michitaka Kazami, Tumiko Teradansu,

Website

Synopsis: Hayato dreams of being a photographer. Ren has a talent for photography. Asuka enjoys a casual everyday life. They all belong to the same photography club and have reached the final fall of their high school life. Ren and Asuka are already preparing for their entrance exams on specific university courses, but Hayato sways between dreams and reality and continues to study while wondering which way to go. One day, Hayato receives a confession from Ren, and the three teen’s daily lives change as a result.

 

Instant Camera    

インスタントカメラ Insutanto Kamera

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: 15 mins.

Director: Takayuki Suzue

Writer: Takayuki Suzue (Script), Hideo Tsuchida (Original Novel)

Starring: Akira Iizuka, Tatsukawa, Koya Ichinose,

Website

Synopsis: Asahi, a college student who lives an ordinary life, finds a disposable camera in his backpack pocket one day. He remembers seeing the camera somewhere, but cannot place it exactly or why he has it. The next day, Asahi goes out with the camera, which still has some film left, and when he is taking a picture of the city, he sees something strange… 


Geki × Shine `Nise Yoshitsune Meikai Uta' Film Poster

Geki × Cine `Nise Yoshitsune Meikai Uta’ 

ゲキ×シネ「偽義経冥界歌」 Geki × Shine `Nise Yoshitsune Meikai Uta’

Release Date: October 24th, 2020

Duration: 178 mins.

Director: N/A

Writer: N/A

Starring: Toma Ikuta, Ryo, Yuma Nakayama, Sakura Fujiwara, Macoto Awane, Takaya Yamauchi, Yuki Saotome, Hiroki Miyake

Website

Synopsis: In an era when the country was divided into two by the forces of Genji and Taira, the legendary military commander Minamoto no Yoshitsune (Toma Ikuta) has hidden himself in the northern part of the country after evading death and a series of mysteries and rumours abound that play out in this theatre story.

Part 2 tomorrow

GOZE, We Are Oh! & Yeah!!, Dancing in Her Dreams, Little Subculture Wars – Villevan! Counterattack, Saitan kyori wa mawarikudokute Ame to Soda Nizu, Just By My Side, Happy-Go-Lucky Days Japanese Film Trailers

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Happy weekend, everyone!

I hope you are all doing fine!

The Kotatsu Festival is underway and there will be two free film streaming sessions later today. My review for Yuya Ishii’s All the Things We Never Said went lives yesterday on V-Cinema. This is the follow-up post to yesterday‘s which details what was released in cinemas in Japan this weekend.

GOZE    GOZE Film Poster

瞽女 GOZE GOZE

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 109 mins.

Director: Masaharu Takizawa

Writer: Isao Shiina, Sunao Sakagami, Masaharu Takizawa (Script),

Starring: Non Kawakita, Miyu Yoshimoto, Hiroko Nakajima, Makoto Togashi, Seeina Suzuki, Junko Miyashita,

Website

 

Synopsis: Blind female travelling entertainers who played the shamisen and sang stories were known as Goze. This film depicts half of the life of the late Haru Kobayashi, the last Goze, someone who was deemed an intangible cultural property holder of the country. Haru lost her eyesight at the age of three months and her father died when she reached the age of two. She became a Goze at the age of seven due to her blindness. During this time, her mother, Tome, pushed Haru hard so that she would excel in the art. However, what seemed like cruelty was really the depth of affection for a mother preparing her child for a tough life. Haru embarks on her first tour with her master at the age of eight and it is a struggle to survive but survive she does and she flourishes.

 

We Are Oh! & Yeah!!    We Are Oh! & Yeah!! Film Poster

オレたち応援屋!! Oretachi Oenya!!

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 90 mins.

Director: Satoshi Takemoto

Writer: Koji Tokuo (Script),

Starring: Ryosuke Hashimoto, Shota Totsuka, Fumito Kawai, Koichi Gozaki, Ryoichi Tsukada, Fujiko Kojima,

Website

A youth comedy in which five members of the popular idol group “ABC-Z” star in a movie for the first time. This seems to be based on a stageplay, “ABC座2016 株式会社応援屋!!~OH&YEAH!!~”

 

Synopsis: The film imagines the ABC-Z boys as “cheerleaders”, whose livelihood is to support people. Just as they enter an existential crisis about their purpose, a request arrives from a teacher at Raijin High School on the remote Raijin Island. They are asked to help the students of the school, which had been closed down, to help revive the island’s traditional event, the Raijin Festival. To revive the festival, they must deal with a curse and convince the reluctant students to help.

Dancing in Her Dreams    Dancing in Her Dreams Film Poster

彼女は夢で踊る Kanojo wa yume de odoru

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 95 mins.

Director: Hideyuki Tokigawa

Writer: Hideyuki Tokigawa (Script),

Starring: Masaya Kato, Takafumi Inukai, Izumi Okamura, Yuji Yokoyama, Atsuhiro Inukai,

Website

This stars Izumi Okamura from Shady and Aroused by Gymnopedies

Synopsis: When a well-established strip theatre in Hiroshima is about to close down, a journalist interviews the manager, Kinoshita, who reminisces about his extravagant past and a particular stripper who drew him into the world of burlesque. As Kinoshita remembers a forgotten love, emotions of regret and passion surface and he is taken back to the past and a secret he shared with a stripper.
 

Little Subculture Wars – Villevan! Counterattack    Little Subculture Wars- Villevan Counterattack Film Poster

リトル・サブカル・ウォーズ ヴィレヴァン!の逆襲 Ritoru sabukaru uo-zu vuirevuan! no gyakushuu

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 102 mins.

Director: Yosuke Goto

Writer: Kiyotaka Inagaki (Script), 

Starring: Amane Okayama, Aoi Morikawa, Moga Mogami, Chikara Honda, Hinata Kashiwagi (Private Ebisu Junior High School), Masato Hagiwara, Mina Oba, Yumi Adachi,

Website

This is a continuation of a TV show set in a real book store.

Synopsis:  Keizo Sugishita is a college student who calls himself “empty” but he finds excitement working a part-time job at Village Vanguard, a book store that contains all sorts of niche content and characters who visit and work there. One year after starting his part-time job, Sugishita realises that something is definitely missing in his daily life, nay, the world – Japanese subculture. His battle ro reclaim subculture begins here!

 

Saitan kyori wa mawarikudokute Ame to Soda Nizu

最短距離は回りくどくて、 雨とソーダ水 Saitan kyori wa mawarikudokute, ame to sōda mizu

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 102 mins.

Director: Daisuke Yamanouchi

Writer: Daisuke Yamanouchi (Script), 

Starring: Riku Mukai, CIMA, Ami Kasai,Takashi Kunogi, Muo Hattori, Taishi Takeemoto, Kouheei Watanabe, Masamitsu Kani,

Website

A sequel to the boy’s love movie Roundabout, the Shortest Distance Is Round (IMDB), produced by OP PICTURES (see the festival they recently held).

Synopsis: Yuuto and Aoyama were together as a couple after overcoming many obstacles, but the day after they confirmed their love, Aoyama disappeared. Yuuto is then visited by a man who knows everything about Aoyama and old rivals in love who are being chased by criminals appear. 

 

Just By My Side    Tada hata ni iru dake de Film Poster

ただ傍にいるだけで Tada hata ni iru dake de

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 159 mins.

Director: Tokitaka Ueda

Writer: Happo Neko (Script), Happo Neko (Original Novel)

Starring: Song Min-Kyung, Hiroshi Ono, Tomoko Nonaka, Yuji Okayama,

Website

A Japanese-Korean co-production produced by the Kansai-based film production company “Studio Theater Cafe Nyan”. It was made with Japanese and Korean staff and cast members.

Synopsis: Mamoru (Hiroshi Ono) dreamed of becoming a movie director and so he started shooting independent films by teaming up with a producer named Akiko but something unexpected happened and he was forced to stop shooting. He gave up his dream and now spends his days working at a watch shop downtown. Then, as if this wasn’t enough heartache, one day, he finds out that he is suffering from a disease. Mamoru, who was at a loss, visits Korea, where he once studied abroad, and meets Jay Park, who aims to become an actor and finds some inspiration again.

Happy-Go-Lucky Days    Happy-Go-Lucky Days Film Poster

どうにかなる日々 Dounika Naru Hibi

Release Date: October 23rd, 2020

Duration: 54 mins.

Director: Takuya Sato

Writer: Takuya Sato, Yasunori Ide, Yoriko Tomita (Script), Takako Shimura (Original Creator)

Starring: Ai Fairouz (Sayoko), Ibuki Kido (Shin-chan), Kana Hanazawa (Ecchan), Kaori Ishihara (Mika-chan), Mikako Komatsu (Aya-san), Seiichiro Yamashita (Yagasaki-kun), Takahiro Sakurai (Sawa-sensei), Mutsumi Tamura (Yoriko San),

Animation Production: LIDEN FILMS Kyoto Studio

Website ANN MAL

Synopsis from My Anime List and Anime News Network: Love is love. Someday, the pain of being in love will be an endearing memory. No matter who the feelings are towards, no matter what form it takes, all love and lifestyles have the same value. An omnibus anime that tells the stories of various people feeling love:

Kana Hanazawa plays Ecchan, and Mikako Komatsu plays Aya-san in the “Ecchan to Ayasa” segment about the feelings of two women who once met at a wedding of a former sweetheart. Takahiro Sakurai voices Sawa-sensei, and Seiichirō Yamashita voices Yagasaki-kun in the “Sawa-sensei to Yagasaki-kun” segment, which focuses on a teacher in a boys’ school who is put on the spot by a student’s sudden confession. Ibuki Kido plays Shin-chan in both the “Shin-chan to Sayoko” and “Mika-chan and Shin-chan” segments, while Kaori Ishihara plays Mika-chan, and Ai Fairouz plays Sayoko. These last two segments both follow two childhood friends and their growing sense of distance as they reach adolescence.

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