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Kaori Shoji
Kaori Shoji writes about movies and movie-makers for the Film Page, plus takes a turn at the Bilingual Column. Biggest mistake of her career: taking the very dignified Nagisa Oshima to McDonald's for an iced coffee.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Oct 12, 2007
'After the Wedding'
"After the Wedding" is about the quiet brutality of love and the manipulative motives that lie behind the act of giving.
LIFE / Language / BILINGUAL
Oct 9, 2007
Smoldering J-love lacks yesteryear's gumption
The question, "What has happened to love these days?" is every bit as serious as the question why diets never work in this country. I'm very distressed to have to report that Japanese love, like Japanese politics and the not-so-quite-lovely outlook of the economy, is unwell. It suffers from low blood...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Oct 5, 2007
'The Good Shepherd'
Never date a spy, much less marry one. That's one of the important lessons (maybe the foremost) to be reaped from "The Good Shepherd," Robert De Niro's second film in the director's chair after his debut "A Bronx Tale" in 1993.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Sep 28, 2007
Filming a Champs Elysee moment
At first glance Olivier Dahan doesn't come off as a filmmaker who would choose to make a biopic about Edith Piaf. He carved out a successful career in music videos, and is an avid aficionado of French hip-hop. Piaf's music and what he listens to don't quite gel. But perhaps this explains the particular...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Sep 28, 2007
'La vie en rose'
Even if you've never listened to a single song by Edith Piaf, it's impossible to be unmoved by this biopic — in all probability the film will have you rushing to buy a CD as soon as the lights come on.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Sep 21, 2007
'Candy'
Drugs, addiction, manic obsession — it's an oft-told tale but "Candy" is a particularly clear-eyed view on the allure and subsequent destructive power of drugs; in this case heroin.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Sep 14, 2007
'Miss Potter'
During her youth she was mostly known as "Miss Potter," an unmarried spinster from a wealthy London family who had a knack for drawing rabbits and other small animals with astonishing lifelike precision. Success came to her in middle age, and Miss Beatrix Potter went on to become one of the world's best-loved...
LIFE / Language / BILINGUAL
Sep 11, 2007
Boot-camp bukatsu no place for the fainthearted
Coming out of the Japanese education system, one is thankful for one thing: No more bukatsu (after-school activities)! No more running 50 laps around the school grounds until your lungs are almost bursting out from your throat, no more kowtowing to the senpai (seniors) or having to spend most of one's...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Sep 7, 2007
'The Cats of Mirikitani'
"He seemed all alone, and I had never seen such an elderly man out on the streets. There was something about him that compelled me to talk . . ." That was how New York documentary filmmaker Linda Hattendorf describes her meeting with Jimmy Tsutomu Mirikitani, one snowy day in New York in January 2001....
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Aug 31, 2007
'Because I Said So'
As a longtime fan of Diane Keaton, it's always disheartening to see her in roles that seem inadequate for the Oscar-winning, lean and brainy hipster icon of the 1970s ("Annie Hall," "Manhattan" and "Interiors," to name just a few). But her most recent foray into mainstream rom-com is just plain painful....
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Aug 24, 2007
'Salvador'
Now that the bio-pic genre has become as familiar as a worn beach towel, it seems to have spawned a sub-genre — as yet still in the embryonic stages — which can perhaps be described as the "bio-pic of death."
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Aug 17, 2007
'Rosso Come Il Cielo'
In many ways Mirco was a typical 10-year-old boy; skittish, puppyish and with a very short attention span. One second he'd be playing with a spinning top, and a nanosecond later he'd be running down the street in pursuit of the next fun thing. Mirco was the only child of adoring parents living in the...
LIFE / Language / BILINGUAL
Aug 14, 2007
Manga frenzy proves that we're all kids at heart
That whole deal about growing up and behaving like an adult? Scrap it, you don't have to — at least not in the Japan of recent years. Adult responsibilities, adult worries, adult concerns — while we all know such things exist, it's become possible to dodge them well into your 30s and 40s,...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Aug 10, 2007
'One Day in Europe'
"One Day in Europe" is a comedy of cultural and linguistic misunderstanding that toys with the idea of a unified Europe, where everyone shares the same singular, unifying identity. Unlike many Americans, who proudly admit to being "American," Europeans — single currency and the EU notwithstanding...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Aug 9, 2007
A sex trip that aims to ease our anxieties
The Japan Times gets up close and personal with director John Cameron Mitchell and actress Sook-Yin Lee about the sexiest film of 2007
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Aug 9, 2007
The uncensored right to pursue intimacy
A tribute to Manhattan individuality as much as an affirmation of American-style life and personal freedom, "Shortbus" is a movie you want to hold close. It will most certainly pull you to its chest and deposit a loud kiss faster than you can define the term "orgasm." From the opening sequence, which...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Jul 27, 2007
'The Flock'
Richard Gere stars as a creased, rumpled, work-obsessed monitor of sexual offenders in "The Flock" (released in Japan as "Kieta Tenshi)," a vehicle in which he seems to derive absolute pleasure from shattering his own, Desirable Male No. 1 stereotype.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Jul 20, 2007
'Mala Noche'
Gus Van Sant's first movie feels like an unrequited first love; jagged around the edges, tingling with expectation and inevitably, gorgeously, unsatisfying. Titled "Mala Noche (Bad Night)" and based on the autobiographical novel by Oregon's cult novelist Walt Curtis, the film is so unabashedly poignant...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Jul 13, 2007
Nervous Branagh and his operatic dream
As one of Britain's most iconic actor/directors, Kenneth Branagh has a special relationship with theater. Throughout his career he has often worked to merge the stage with celluloid, delivering such memorable films as "Much Ado About Nothing," which he directed, wrote and starred in.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Jul 13, 2007
'The Magic Flute'
"The Magic Flute" is one of the most familiar and best-loved operas in the world, but barring Mozart and opera enthusiasts, how many can claim to have sat through the whole thing and er, understood it all?

Longform

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