SPEC : Birth (Ep 4)
Getting around Tokyo for the first time be like... 😂
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演劇ぶっく DEC. 2006 vol.124
演劇ぶっく社
表紙=塚本晋也×加瀬亮
特集「特報! 大人計画フェスティバル」/ロングインタビュー:野田秀樹
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Hole in the Sky (2001) Director: Kazuyoshi Kumakiri
Hole in the Sky (2001) Director: Kazuyoshi Kumakiri
Hole in the Sky
空の穴 「Sora no Ana」
Release Date: September 29th, 2001
Duration: 127 mins.
Director: Kazuyoshi Kumakiri
Writer: Kazuyoshi Kumakiri, Akihiko Akizuki (Script),
Starring: Susumu Terajima, Rinko Kikuchi, Bunmei Tobayama, Ryo Kase, Shunsuke Sawada, Akemi Kobayashi, Megumi Asaoka,
Website IMDB
That long face. That thin mouth. That implacable stare. Once seen, never forgotten. Susumu…
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it's time for kase ryo and kamiki ryunosuke to reunite
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Nishijima's (he plays Akechi Mitsuhide) newest historical film got him trapped in the middle of a love triangle between Oda Nobunaga (Ryo Kase)--who's psychosexually obsessed with him--and Murashige (Endo Kenichi aka the kemuri ojisan from dorokei)--whom one critic described their relationship as tender and intimate
they're making A-list actor sengoku old man yaoi fanfic movies now!?
i'd say "i'll add it to my watchlist" but i simply cannot stand seeing handsome men with that tragic half-bald samurai hairdo. 😔 sounds like an interesting vision from mr kitano, though.
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Nobody Knows (Hirokazu Koreeda, 2004)
Cast: Yuya Yagira, Ayu Kitaura, Hiei Kimura, Mamoko Shimizu, Hanae Kan, You, Kazuyoshi Kushida, Yukiko Okamoto, Sei Hiraizumi, Ryo Kase, Takako Tate, Yuichi Kimura, Ken'ichi Endo, Susumu Terajima. Screenplay: Hirokazu Koreeda. Cinematography: Yutaka Yamazaki. Production design: Toshihiro Isomi, Keiko Mitsumatsu. Film editing: Hirokazu Koreeda. Music: Gontiti.
Like his Shoplifters (2018), Hirokazu Koreeda's film is about a family in crisis. Not a dysfunctional family in the usual sense -- the families in both films function fairly well until the crisis -- but families that function despite not exactly being families. The one in Nobody Knows consists entirely of four children, ages 5 to 12. When the film starts there is a fifth member, their mother, but she's still a child herself, so hedonistic and irresponsible that she abandons them, leaving the oldest, Akira, in charge of his four siblings -- or rather quarter-siblings, since each of them has a different father. How Akira and the others managed to develop enough maturity and self-control to survive on their own in a Tokyo apartment is one of the unsolved mysteries of the film, but we somehow never question it as we live through the better part of a year with them. That's partly because Koreeda maintains a child's-eye view throughout the film, treating their efforts to stay together at all costs as an essential. We may sometimes think they'd be better off if the authorities learned about their situation, that they then might get the schooling and nutrition they deserve to become functioning adults. But when a friend suggests that they go to social services or the police, Akira rejects it out of hand: They would be separated, he says. It happened once before and it was a big mess. Togetherness is all. Eventually, the worst happens, but even then they take it in stride, and as the film ends the remaining children stay together somehow. Nobody Knows is a tearjerker and a heartbreaker, but it's also a tribute to the will to survive, made powerful by the remarkable performances of the very young actors, especially Yuya Yagira as Akira, who was 14 when he won the best actor award at Cannes -- the youngest person ever to do so.
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Yall have zero shame on the poll‼️🤨/j
(ako din gagi pero #InosenteAko ✊)
ANYWAYYYY HRU RYO 💪 Stay hydrated, eat well and sleep well <3 hug for u 🫂 and take care !! You too anons <33!!
— hug anon
bat nyo kase gusto kainin oten ni scara hah lasang Gatorade yun siguro.
AND I AM FINE RAHH🔥🔥🔥 just burnt out in writing haha
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