The concept of the home invasion has been explored in a number of radically different films in Japanese cinema, from Takashi Miike’s “Visitor Q” to Koji Fukada’s “Harmonium”. Naoya Fujita adds another, radically different approach, by making the invader a public servant, in an effort that netted him the Best Picture Award from Skip City International D-Cinema Festival.
Stay screened at Skip City International D-Cinema Festival
A group of five people has occupied a traditional Japanese house, living there in a kind of commune where the only rule is that they accept everybody and that they all do their share in chores and contribute financially. However, the local town office wants them out of there, even though they have no particular reason to evict them, and has dispatched a number of public servants to ask them to leave, to no avail. The latest “agent” is Yajima, a young...
Stay screened at Skip City International D-Cinema Festival
A group of five people has occupied a traditional Japanese house, living there in a kind of commune where the only rule is that they accept everybody and that they all do their share in chores and contribute financially. However, the local town office wants them out of there, even though they have no particular reason to evict them, and has dispatched a number of public servants to ask them to leave, to no avail. The latest “agent” is Yajima, a young...
- 1/18/2021
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
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