Mary and the Witch’s Flower Trailer 3 Hiromasa Yonebayashi‘s Mary and the Witch’s Flower / Meari to majo no hana (2017) movie trailer 3 stars Hana Sugisaki, Ryûnosuke Kamiki, Yûki Amami, Fumiyo Kohinata, and Hikari Mitsushima. Mary and the Witch’s Flower‘s plot synopsis: based on the book by Mary Stewart, “It is [...]
Continue reading: Mary And The Witch’S Flower (2017) Movie Trailer 3: Mary Becomes a Witch For One Night...
Continue reading: Mary And The Witch’S Flower (2017) Movie Trailer 3: Mary Becomes a Witch For One Night...
- 6/12/2017
- by Rollo Tomasi
- Film-Book
See the first poster from Hayao Miyazaki's "Ponyo" (a.k.a. "Gake no ue no Ponyo") helmed and written by Hayao Miyazaki. The animated family adventure first came out in Japan last year and will see limited areas on the 14th of August on U.S. soil. Japanese language cast includes Yuria Nara, Hiroki Doi, Jôji Tokoro, Tomoko Yamaguchi, Yuki Amami, Kazushige Nagashima, Akiko Yano and Shinichi Hatori. The English cast stars Cate Blanchett, Noah Lindsey Cyrus, Matt Damon, Tina Fey, Liam Neeson, Madison Davenport, Cloris Leachman, Frankie Jonas, Lily Tomlin and Betty White. ...
- 5/6/2009
- Upcoming-Movies.com
See the first poster from Hayao Miyazaki's "Ponyo" (a.k.a. "Gake no ue no Ponyo") helmed and written by Hayao Miyazaki. The animated family adventure first came out in Japan last year and will see limited areas on the 14th of August on U.S. soil. Japanese language cast includes Yuria Nara, Hiroki Doi, Jôji Tokoro, Tomoko Yamaguchi, Yuki Amami, Kazushige Nagashima, Akiko Yano and Shinichi Hatori. The English cast stars Cate Blanchett, Noah Lindsey Cyrus, Matt Damon, Tina Fey, Liam Neeson, Madison Davenport, Cloris Leachman, Frankie Jonas, Lily Tomlin and Betty White.
- 5/6/2009
- Upcoming-Movies.com
See the first poster from Hayao Miyazaki's "Ponyo" (a.k.a. "Gake no ue no Ponyo") helmed and written by Hayao Miyazaki. The animated family adventure first came out in Japan last year and will see limited areas on the 14th of August on U.S. soil. Japanese language cast includes Yuria Nara, Hiroki Doi, Jôji Tokoro, Tomoko Yamaguchi, Yuki Amami, Kazushige Nagashima, Akiko Yano and Shinichi Hatori. The English cast stars Cate Blanchett, Noah Lindsey Cyrus, Matt Damon, Tina Fey, Liam Neeson, Madison Davenport, Cloris Leachman, Frankie Jonas, Lily Tomlin and Betty White.
- 5/6/2009
- Upcoming-Movies.com
People fall in love with the wrong people all the time. But Miki Bonomiya, a character played by Yuki Amami in Masato Harada's "Inugami", sets a record for really bad choices. It would reveal too many surprises to explain the forbidden nature of her two romances. Let's just say they produce disturbing dreams, family ghosts, stark tragedies, mysterious fogs and angry forest gods in a remote mountain village on the island of Shikoku.
Drenched in Japanese mysticism and a plot that teeters on the ridiculous, "Inugami" is too marginal to enjoy much exposure outside its native country other than at film festivals. But evocative, moody art direction and graceful, sweeping camera movements do please the eye. It is playing in competition at the Berlin International Film Festival.
Working from the book by Masako Bando, writer-director Harada plops us down in an enchanted village, where generations of women in the Bonomiya family watch over an urn that contains the Inugami, which are wild dog gods. The appearance of a 25-year-old schoolteacher, Akira (Atsuro Watabe), not only stirs feelings in the heart of the spinster Miki but also riles the gods in the urn. Soon, nightmares plague the villagers, and deaths take place. With each tragedy, Miki grows younger, arousing village animosity and triggering vows of revenge against her accursed family.
Harada plays the supernatural tale amid lush forests of ancient cedar trees and a traditional house, where Miki makes exquisite paper using the old-fashioned method of mixing plants, water and glue. Junichi Fujisawa's camera seeks high places from which to spin above or swoop down on these ill-fated people.
The movie is quite a ride, but all that is likely to haunt the minds of moviegoers are the dark and glorious settings. Amami and Watabe's passion and couplings have erotic charge, and the actors make the incredible feel credible. But one must possess a deep love of Eastern mysticism to get anything else out of this fantasy-horror-thriller.
INUGAMI
An Asmik Ace Entertainment production
Producer: Masato Hara
Screenwriter-director: Masato Harada
Based on the book by: Masako Bando
Director of photography: Junichi Fujisawa
Production designer: Hisao Inagaki
Music: Takatsugu Muramatsu
Editor: Soichi Ueno
Color/stereo
Cast:
Miki Bonomiya: Yuki Amami
Akira Nutahara: Atsuro Watabe
Takanao Bonomiya: Kenichi Yajima
Momoyo Bonomiya: Kanako Fukaura
Seiji Doi: Eugene Harada
Rika Bonomiya: Myu Watase
Running time -- 105 minutes
No MPAA rating...
Drenched in Japanese mysticism and a plot that teeters on the ridiculous, "Inugami" is too marginal to enjoy much exposure outside its native country other than at film festivals. But evocative, moody art direction and graceful, sweeping camera movements do please the eye. It is playing in competition at the Berlin International Film Festival.
Working from the book by Masako Bando, writer-director Harada plops us down in an enchanted village, where generations of women in the Bonomiya family watch over an urn that contains the Inugami, which are wild dog gods. The appearance of a 25-year-old schoolteacher, Akira (Atsuro Watabe), not only stirs feelings in the heart of the spinster Miki but also riles the gods in the urn. Soon, nightmares plague the villagers, and deaths take place. With each tragedy, Miki grows younger, arousing village animosity and triggering vows of revenge against her accursed family.
Harada plays the supernatural tale amid lush forests of ancient cedar trees and a traditional house, where Miki makes exquisite paper using the old-fashioned method of mixing plants, water and glue. Junichi Fujisawa's camera seeks high places from which to spin above or swoop down on these ill-fated people.
The movie is quite a ride, but all that is likely to haunt the minds of moviegoers are the dark and glorious settings. Amami and Watabe's passion and couplings have erotic charge, and the actors make the incredible feel credible. But one must possess a deep love of Eastern mysticism to get anything else out of this fantasy-horror-thriller.
INUGAMI
An Asmik Ace Entertainment production
Producer: Masato Hara
Screenwriter-director: Masato Harada
Based on the book by: Masako Bando
Director of photography: Junichi Fujisawa
Production designer: Hisao Inagaki
Music: Takatsugu Muramatsu
Editor: Soichi Ueno
Color/stereo
Cast:
Miki Bonomiya: Yuki Amami
Akira Nutahara: Atsuro Watabe
Takanao Bonomiya: Kenichi Yajima
Momoyo Bonomiya: Kanako Fukaura
Seiji Doi: Eugene Harada
Rika Bonomiya: Myu Watase
Running time -- 105 minutes
No MPAA rating...
People fall in love with the wrong people all the time. But Miki Bonomiya, a character played by Yuki Amami in Masato Harada's "Inugami", sets a record for really bad choices. It would reveal too many surprises to explain the forbidden nature of her two romances. Let's just say they produce disturbing dreams, family ghosts, stark tragedies, mysterious fogs and angry forest gods in a remote mountain village on the island of Shikoku.
Drenched in Japanese mysticism and a plot that teeters on the ridiculous, "Inugami" is too marginal to enjoy much exposure outside its native country other than at film festivals. But evocative, moody art direction and graceful, sweeping camera movements do please the eye. It is playing in competition at the Berlin International Film Festival.
Working from the book by Masako Bando, writer-director Harada plops us down in an enchanted village, where generations of women in the Bonomiya family watch over an urn that contains the Inugami, which are wild dog gods. The appearance of a 25-year-old schoolteacher, Akira (Atsuro Watabe), not only stirs feelings in the heart of the spinster Miki but also riles the gods in the urn. Soon, nightmares plague the villagers, and deaths take place. With each tragedy, Miki grows younger, arousing village animosity and triggering vows of revenge against her accursed family.
Harada plays the supernatural tale amid lush forests of ancient cedar trees and a traditional house, where Miki makes exquisite paper using the old-fashioned method of mixing plants, water and glue. Junichi Fujisawa's camera seeks high places from which to spin above or swoop down on these ill-fated people.
The movie is quite a ride, but all that is likely to haunt the minds of moviegoers are the dark and glorious settings. Amami and Watabe's passion and couplings have erotic charge, and the actors make the incredible feel credible. But one must possess a deep love of Eastern mysticism to get anything else out of this fantasy-horror-thriller.
INUGAMI
An Asmik Ace Entertainment production
Producer: Masato Hara
Screenwriter-director: Masato Harada
Based on the book by: Masako Bando
Director of photography: Junichi Fujisawa
Production designer: Hisao Inagaki
Music: Takatsugu Muramatsu
Editor: Soichi Ueno
Color/stereo
Cast:
Miki Bonomiya: Yuki Amami
Akira Nutahara: Atsuro Watabe
Takanao Bonomiya: Kenichi Yajima
Momoyo Bonomiya: Kanako Fukaura
Seiji Doi: Eugene Harada
Rika Bonomiya: Myu Watase
Running time -- 105 minutes
No MPAA rating...
Drenched in Japanese mysticism and a plot that teeters on the ridiculous, "Inugami" is too marginal to enjoy much exposure outside its native country other than at film festivals. But evocative, moody art direction and graceful, sweeping camera movements do please the eye. It is playing in competition at the Berlin International Film Festival.
Working from the book by Masako Bando, writer-director Harada plops us down in an enchanted village, where generations of women in the Bonomiya family watch over an urn that contains the Inugami, which are wild dog gods. The appearance of a 25-year-old schoolteacher, Akira (Atsuro Watabe), not only stirs feelings in the heart of the spinster Miki but also riles the gods in the urn. Soon, nightmares plague the villagers, and deaths take place. With each tragedy, Miki grows younger, arousing village animosity and triggering vows of revenge against her accursed family.
Harada plays the supernatural tale amid lush forests of ancient cedar trees and a traditional house, where Miki makes exquisite paper using the old-fashioned method of mixing plants, water and glue. Junichi Fujisawa's camera seeks high places from which to spin above or swoop down on these ill-fated people.
The movie is quite a ride, but all that is likely to haunt the minds of moviegoers are the dark and glorious settings. Amami and Watabe's passion and couplings have erotic charge, and the actors make the incredible feel credible. But one must possess a deep love of Eastern mysticism to get anything else out of this fantasy-horror-thriller.
INUGAMI
An Asmik Ace Entertainment production
Producer: Masato Hara
Screenwriter-director: Masato Harada
Based on the book by: Masako Bando
Director of photography: Junichi Fujisawa
Production designer: Hisao Inagaki
Music: Takatsugu Muramatsu
Editor: Soichi Ueno
Color/stereo
Cast:
Miki Bonomiya: Yuki Amami
Akira Nutahara: Atsuro Watabe
Takanao Bonomiya: Kenichi Yajima
Momoyo Bonomiya: Kanako Fukaura
Seiji Doi: Eugene Harada
Rika Bonomiya: Myu Watase
Running time -- 105 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 2/14/2001
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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