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Tokyo Film Festival re-exposed shortlisted films "Goodbye" tells the story of nuclear pollution

2015-09-17 09:37:00

(Text/erika) At the upcoming 28th Tokyo International Film Festival, which will be held from October 22 to 31, it has been announced that three Japanese films have been selected in the main competition section, namely "foujita", "Goodbye" and "Cruelty".

This year's Tokyo Film Festival has added three new units: "Panorama", "Japan Now", and "Japanese Film Classic", and you can feel the efforts of the organizing committee to create new ideas. However, the inclusion of three Japanese films in the main competition unit is enough to surprise, after all, this is the second time in 2004 that there is such a grand scene in 11 years.

Tokyo Film Festival re-exposed shortlisted films "Goodbye" tells the story of nuclear pollution

Stills from "foujita"

Directed by Yasuhira Oguri, who has filmed River of Mud and Thorn of Death, foujita tells the life story of the famous Japanese painter Osamu Fujita. Fujita's role has a strong literary atmosphere of Oda Chiejō starring, and his wife Jundai is played by Miki Nakatani.

Tokyo Film Festival re-exposed shortlisted films "Goodbye" tells the story of nuclear pollution

The movie "Goodbye" tells the story of the Japanese "abandoning the country" after nuclear pollution

Directed by Koji Fukada, director of "Shuoko by the River," "Goodbye" tells the story of the explosion of a nuclear power plant, the pollution of most of Japan's territory, and the government's announcement of the "abandonment of the country", in this context, the bond between human refugees and robots.

Tokyo Film Festival re-exposed shortlisted films "Goodbye" tells the story of nuclear pollution

Yuko Takeuchi and Ai Hashimoto starred in "Cruelty"

Adapted from ono's horror novel by Yoshihiro Nakamura, "Cruelty" is adapted from ono's horror novel, directed by Yoshihiro Nakamura, and two beautiful actresses, Yuko Takeuchi and Ai Hashimoto, to perform a bizarre story that takes place in a rental house.

Yoshihiko Yadabe, one of the organizers of the Tokyo Film Festival, believes that these three films represent three different genres of "giant, box office maker, and young hope" and can show the diversity and vitality of Japanese films to the world in an all-round way.

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