Posted by kevin at 2:49am EDT on Friday, June 6, 2008
Filed under: Events
The schedule for Subway Cinema‘s 2008 New York Asian Film Festival (NYAFF) will include 43 movies to be screened at two venues in New York City from June 20th to July 6th, with 27 of them originating from Japan. Of particular note is the world premiere of Ryo Iwamatsu’s much-anticipated Then Summer Came, starring Joe Odagiri, Yoshio Harada, and Kumiko Aso. I’m personally excited to see Arch Angels getting some love, since it was one of the funner movies of 2006 and deserves to finally get some attention. Delcea Mihaela Gabriela will be a household name soon, mark it down. I also predict Chanbara Beauty, aka Onechanbara will change lives and eventually bring about world peace. Okay, enough blabbering! Check out the schedule and trailer for the event below. I patiently, lovingly highlighted the Japanese movies and added Subway Cinema links where available.
Posted by kevin at 8:23pm EDT on Thursday, June 5, 2008
Filed under: Drama, Sci-Fi, Future releases
Takashi Miike‘s new film, God’s Puzzle (Kamisama no Puzzle) opens in Japan this Saturday and I’m still having trouble wrapping my head around what it’s actually about. That puts me in good company, however, because apparently Miike didn’t understand the plot himself when he first read it. The script, based on a novel by Shinji Kimoto, is rife with physics jargon and theoretical science. Knowing how important it is for a director to understand the material he’s trying to interpret, Miike came up with a clever solution - split the original lead role into twins. The thinking behind this decision was that Motokazu (Hayato Ichihara), the new main character that was not in the original novel could explain principles of physics in simple terms that an audience could easily understand. Hopefully that method of simplification combined with a whole lot of CGI-created visual representations will help bridge the gap between entertainment and a 2+ hour science lesson.
Posted by kevin at 9:44pm EDT on Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Filed under: Comedy, Drama, Future releases, New trailers
Shingo Matsubara’s The Taste of Fish (Tsukiji Uogashi Sandaime) comes out this Saturday after already having premiered at Cannes back on May 15th, and with a sequel already in the works it looks like it will become a franchise of yearly films if it’s even moderately successful. It all seems a bit odd to me, mostly because I can’t picture Takao Osawa ever being known as “that fish dude” in the way Kiyoshi Atsumi became synonymous with Torajiro in the Tora-san series, but I guess time will tell.
The story is based on a 21-part manga series originally published in Big Comic. Osawa plays Shuntaro Akagi, a successful businessman who works in the human resources department of a general trading company. His life is going well both financially and personally, and marriage to his girlfriend Asuka (Rena Tanaka) may be on the horizon. One day Shuntaro’s superiors put him in charge of a large-scale corporate restructuring, and the list of people being axed includes an old boss who taught him the ropes. Shuntaro is extremely conflicted, but his attention is diverted when he has to help out at “Dragon Fish”, the fish trading company normally run by Asuka’s now-ailing father. Shuntaro is initially overwhelmed by both the characters he meets at Tsukiji Fish Market and the traditions that have been passed down through the generations of people that work there, but over time his sense of taste becomes more of an asset than his business savvy ever was and he starts to enjoy the quirkiness of his new job much more than the cutthroat nature of his old one.
Posted by kevin at 4:01am EDT on Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Filed under: Drama, Future releases, New trailers
I realize tearjerkers have been popular lately in Japan, but making another adaptation of Grave of the Fireflies (Hotaru no Haka) may just be the tipping point. For those who haven’t seen the 1988 Studio Ghibli anime by Isao Takahata, believe me when I tell you that it’s one of the most depressingly sad movies I’ve ever seen in my life. And it’s not that it’s not an amazing film - it is. It’s just that after seeing the original I’m not sure I’d put myself through that again. The fact that a theatrical version has been made just 2+ years after NTV broadcast a live-action adaptation of its own makes me wonder if Japanese moviegoers are just gluttons for emotional punishment.
The story, based on a semi-autobiographical novel written by Akiyuki Nosaka, is about a teenage boy named Seita (Reo Yoshitake) and his 5-year-old sister Setsuko (Rina Hatakeyama). They get separated from their mother (Seiko Matsuda) during an air raid and later find out that she’s been mortally wounded. With their father off fighting in the war as a naval officer Seita and Setsuko are taken in by a distant aunt (Keiko Matsuzaka) and her family. She’s kind at first, but when rationing causes food to become scarce her attitude toward them grows cold. Unable to bear her anymore, the two kids go out on their own and fend for themselves while living in a nearby cave. Setsuko gets increasingly ill due to malnutrition and Seita is forced to steal food from a farm and rob empty houses during air raids.
Posted by kevin at 2:13pm EDT on Monday, June 2, 2008
Filed under: Action, Comedy, Horror, Future releases, New trailers
Even though The Machine Girl will be released on DVD here in the US tomorrow, it won’t be released in Japan until August 2nd. So in preparation for that date Spotted Productions has posted a new trailer on YouTube. It seems a little less stylized than the original and the new music has a 70s vibe. Here it is, followed by the old one after the break: