Ozu first wrote “There Was a Father”, along Tadao Ikeda and Takao Yanai, in early 1937, soon after the release of “The Only Son” in September 1936 and just before he was drafted for the first time. After he returned to Japan, he revised it thoroughly, and the result was a triumph, with the movie winning the Second Prize in Kinema Junpo and having considerable success in the box office. The surviving print, a version cut by General MacArthur's sensors for postwar rerelease, was also the one Criterion released on DVD in 2010, but this year, Venice is screening a restored version that is 5 minutes longer.
“There Was a Father” is screening in Venice International Film Festival
Shuhei Horikawa is a math teacher in middle school, who lives with his 10-year-old son, Ryohei, following his wife's death, with the boy studying in the same school. One day, while taking his class for an excursion,...
“There Was a Father” is screening in Venice International Film Festival
Shuhei Horikawa is a math teacher in middle school, who lives with his 10-year-old son, Ryohei, following his wife's death, with the boy studying in the same school. One day, while taking his class for an excursion,...
- 9/6/2023
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
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In another boost to its growing Japanese content slate, Netflix has greenlit a live-action movie adaptation of the classic Japanese manga City Hunter. Japanese leading man Ryohei Suzuki (Tokyo Mer, Segodon) has signed on to star in the iconic role of Ryo Saeba, with filmmaker Yuichi Sato (Kisaragi, Strawberry Nights and The End of the Tiny World) onboard to direct.
Created by manga artist Tsukasa Hojo, City Hunter was a staple of Japanese pop culture throughout the 1980s, selling over 50 million copies around the world. The franchise spawned a popular anime series and numerous feature-length adaptations, including movies made in Hong Kong (one starring Jackie Chan), France and mainland China, but this will be there first time the property is adapted as a live-action film in its native Japan.
Netflix describes the project as “a modern-day updated version of the manga, set in the bustling streets of Shinjuku.
In another boost to its growing Japanese content slate, Netflix has greenlit a live-action movie adaptation of the classic Japanese manga City Hunter. Japanese leading man Ryohei Suzuki (Tokyo Mer, Segodon) has signed on to star in the iconic role of Ryo Saeba, with filmmaker Yuichi Sato (Kisaragi, Strawberry Nights and The End of the Tiny World) onboard to direct.
Created by manga artist Tsukasa Hojo, City Hunter was a staple of Japanese pop culture throughout the 1980s, selling over 50 million copies around the world. The franchise spawned a popular anime series and numerous feature-length adaptations, including movies made in Hong Kong (one starring Jackie Chan), France and mainland China, but this will be there first time the property is adapted as a live-action film in its native Japan.
Netflix describes the project as “a modern-day updated version of the manga, set in the bustling streets of Shinjuku.
- 12/14/2022
- by Patrick Brzeski
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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