Every now and then I'll see a movie and I can't write about it, because I'll feel like I'll ruin it, but I also want to write about it, because these are the films truly worth seeing. Japanese films are a tiny bit hard to come by, especially in cinemas in Europe, but if you can I recommend it very highly. It's a heavy piece, but it is also a truly moving and beautiful picture that's not such made sad and heavy for the sake of drawing tears out of the audience. I hate nothing more than cheap tricks used to play with the viewer's emotions. This actually has a deeper meaning and perhaps this becomes much clearer to me having met the wonderful director Masakazu Suigita, but I like that for once a movie was made not just to make the audience weep, but because the topic had both a personal meaning to the author and that the author believed that his film could have social impact and help people understand feelings and grief perhaps a bit better. It feels like a rare thing to see a movie that wants to serve a social cause…
So to put my words in bit more context I should point out that the film is about two children who loose their parents in an Earthquake and about what happens in their lives after that. After having witnessed one Earthquake close by at a younger age and then another one bit further in 2011 Suigita decided to make a film both because of his own feelings and because he wanted to give something to the society to help them in long term. The outcome is stunning, emotional, powerful and utterly worth watching.
It's JAFF week here again so this movie screened here in the Japanese Animation Film Festival, despite not being an animation
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