Posted by kevin at 7:36am EDT on Sunday, July 20, 2008
Filed under: Comedy, Future releases, New trailers
9 months after director Ryuichi Honda‘s next movie, GS Wonderland was first announced, we finally get the first teaser. It’s low-quality and tiny, but at least it’s something. You can check out all 36 glorious seconds of Chiaki Kuriyama standing around looking cool at the film’s brand-spanking-new official website. Set in a 3-year “Group Sounds” boom starting in 1968 and inspired by the Britpop explosion, Kuriyama stars as an organ-player named Miku who’s forced to cross-dress as a man to be part of fictitious Group Sounds band, “The Tightsmen”. The film is now slated for November release, so a lot of new stuff is bound to crop up in the next few months. All the more reason to subscribe to our RSS feed.
Posted by kevin at 7:48am EDT on Saturday, July 19, 2008
Filed under: Comedy, Future releases, Cast updates, New trailers
Forget everything I’ve written about this year; all I really care about is Shinobu Yaguchi‘s Happy Flight. Okay, maybe that’s an overstatement—but it is the movie I’m most excited about in 2008, hands down. Most people know of Yaguchi for his two teen idol zeroes to heroes blockbusters, Waterboys and Swing Girls, but before that he had quite a run on tough luck comedies. Throughout the 90s he released movies like Down the Drain, My Secret Cache, and Adrenaline Drive in which people would get caught up in the worst possible situations that just snowballed from there as if they were on a mission to prove out Murphy’s law. Sure he clings to formulas for dear life, but it doesn’t really matter because his scripts are always funny and his actors always seem to hit the right comedic marks.
Posted by kevin at 3:51pm EDT on Friday, July 18, 2008
Filed under: Comedy, Drama, Future releases, New trailers
Comedian Hiroshi Tamura’s autobiographical novel, The Homeless Student (Homeless Chugakusei), has sold over 2 million copies in Japan since it was released last year. As Tokyograph reported back in December, there was a bidding war for the film rights, with Toho winning out in the end. In recent months that popularity has also yielded a manga adaptation and a Fuji TV drama. Gee guys, overexpose much?
The movie stars WaT’s Teppei Koike as a 14-year-old who finds himself homeless for a summer when his family falls apart. He ends up living in a nearby park where he only has rain water to bathe and gets so hungry he tries to eat grass and cardboard. Akihiro Nishino and Chizuru Ikewaki also star. Check out the brand new full trailer below.
Posted by kevin at 11:19pm EDT on Thursday, July 17, 2008
Filed under: Comedy
Café Isobe (Junkissa Isobe) was released on July 5th and since it didn’t crack the top 10 at the box office it hasn’t been generating much news lately. Even so, it’s generally getting a really solid fan reaction on sites with rating systems like MovieWalker compared to other comedies that have been released in recent months.
Director Keisuke Yoshida spent the bulk of his career as a lighting technician for Shinya Tsukamoto (his movies have lighting?) before making a minor splash with his 2006 film, “Raw Summer” about a salaryman who stalks a teenage schoolgirl (Sola Aoi). Café Isobe isn’t quite so seedy, however. It’s about an irresponsible, flighty single father named Yujiro (Hiroyuki Miyasako) and his easily-annoyed daughter Sakiko (Riisa Naka). When Yujiro’s father dies suddenly he uses his inheritance to buy his own café in a feeble attempt to impress chicks. Unfortunately the cafe’s furnishings are so tacky that it only seems to attract elderly clientele and weirdos. Yujiro doesn’t seem to mind though, because part-tme waitress Motoko (Kumiko Aso) has him completely entranced, much to the chagrin of Sakiko—who isn’t particularly good at hiding her angst.