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shin2



Joined: 21 Jul 2004
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 16, 2010 11:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Tu_triky wrote:
Any recommendations for any films dealing with the yakuza?

Not a real big fan of that genre. That said, here are four that I did like:

Onibi: Harada Yoshio gives a fine understated performance as a former hitman who wants to go straight after spending years in prison. However he needs work, and an offer to be a chauffeur for a gang boss sets in motion his inexorable return to a lifestyle he desperately wants to avoid. A contemplative movie that inevitably explodes in violence at the end.

Kizuna: Pretty hard to go wrong when you've got Yakusho Koji and Watanabe Ken as the two principal leads. Yakusho plays a former yakuza member who has gone straight and become a very successful businessman. However, one day a friend from his gangster days shows up . . . . There are a lot of plot twists and subplots in this one as Yakusho's character tries to stay one step ahead of Watanabe's dogged detective. Like Onibi, it's less action-oriented and more character study.

Gokudo no Onnatachi: Directed by Gosha Hideo and starring the indomitable Iwashita Shima, this movie is told from the point of view of yakuza wives culminating in one of the best slugfests involving women you'll ever see. Iwashita is a great actress and one of my all-time favorites, and she (as usual) dominates this film, along with a very sexy Katase Rina, who plays Iwashita's younger sister also involved in the yakuza lifestyle.

Minbo: A comedy by the late great Itami Juzo about a high class hotel beseiged by yakuza miscreants. Desperate to get rid of this pestilence, the managment hires an enthusiastic ballsy female lawyer ( Miyamoto Nobuko, Itami's wife and the star of all of his comedies) who has experience eliminating these pesky gangsters from other high class establishments. This is the movie that resulted in real-life yakuza attacking and wounding Itami for ridiculing them in the film.
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Tu_triky



Joined: 15 Jun 2004
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 16, 2010 11:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

shin2 wrote:

Not a real big fan of that genre. That said, here are four that I did like:

Onibi: Harada Yoshio gives a fine understated performance as a former hitman who wants to go straight after spending years in prison. However he needs work, and an offer to be a chauffeur for a gang boss sets in motion his inexorable return to a lifestyle he desperately wants to avoid. A contemplative movie that inevitably explodes in violence at the end.

Kizuna: Pretty hard to go wrong when you've got Yakusho Koji and Watanabe Ken as the two principal leads. Yakusho plays a former yakuza member who has gone straight and become a very successful businessman. However, one day a friend from his gangster days shows up . . . . There are a lot of plot twists and subplots in this one as Yakusho's character tries to stay one step ahead of Watanabe's dogged detective. Like Onibi, it's less action-oriented and more character study.

Gokudo no Onnatachi: Directed by Gosha Hideo and starring the indomitable Iwashita Shima, this movie is told from the point of view of yakuza wives culminating in one of the best slugfests involving women you'll ever see. Iwashita is a great actress and one of my all-time favorites, and she (as usual) dominates this film, along with a very sexy Katase Rina, who plays Iwashita's younger sister also involved in the yakuza lifestyle.

Minbo: A comedy by the late great Itami Juzo about a high class hotel beseiged by yakuza miscreants. Desperate to get rid of this pestilence, the managment hires an enthusiastic ballsy female lawyer ( Miyamoto Nobuko, Itami's wife and the star of all of his comedies) who has experience eliminating these pesky gangsters from other high class establishments. This is the movie that resulted in real-life yakuza attacking and wounding Itami for ridiculing them in the film.


Wow, thanks for the recommendations. I've never really watched any Japanese yakuza films so I wanted to try one out. I appreciate the detailed synopsis of each movie. Thank you very much.
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bmwracer



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PostPosted: Fri Jul 16, 2010 11:58 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

^ Looks like all but Gokudo no Onnatachi are available for download at asiandvdclub.org. Victory! Peace!
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Tu_triky



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PostPosted: Fri Jul 16, 2010 11:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

bmwracer wrote:
^ Looks like all but Gokudo no Onnatachi are available for download at asiandvdclub.org. Victory! Peace!


Thanks, man. I'll make a note of it.
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bmwracer



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PostPosted: Sat Jul 17, 2010 12:01 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Tu_triky wrote:
Thanks, man. I'll make a note of it.

Victory! Peace!

At the site, you can bookmark any torrent for downloading in the future when time permits. Smile
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Tu_triky



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PostPosted: Sat Jul 17, 2010 12:05 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

bmwracer wrote:

Victory! Peace!

At the site, you can bookmark any torrent for downloading in the future when time permits. Smile


Sweet. They should have that for every torrent site.
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lucario1



Joined: 21 Jul 2010
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 21, 2010 11:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

hey, is there a torrent for sumo hot pot/ chanko? i cant seem to find one
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bmwracer



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 22, 2010 12:11 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

lucario1 wrote:
hey, is there a torrent for sumo hot pot/ chanko? i cant seem to find one

Is that a movie? Head Scratch
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lucario1



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 22, 2010 10:26 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

bmwracer wrote:

Is that a movie? Head Scratch

yes, it is a movie
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bmwracer



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PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 12:59 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

lucario1 wrote:
yes, it is a movie

Ah, okay... Haven't seen it available for download.
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bmwracer



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 29, 2010 9:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

DVD Beaver review of The First Films of Akira Kurosawa: http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film3/dvd_reviews51/first_films_of_akira_kurosawa.htm


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hitomi #1



Joined: 14 Feb 2009
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 02, 2010 5:58 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Wool 100%
A pair of elderly junk collectors find their lives turned upside down when their latest procurement brings them into contact with an obsessive young knitter in the hallucinogenic feature debut of prominent short filmmaker Mai Tominaga. Ume (Kyoko Kishida) and Kame (Kazuko Yoshiyuki) troll the streets in search of cast-off treasures, and upon finding multiple balls of red wool the sisters eagerly add them to their collection. Though their latest acquisition seems to be one worth celebrating, their happiness over the find is soon offset by the arrival of a disturbed young woman (Ayu Kitaura) determined to knit the perfect red sweater.

Just viewed this oddball flick, let's just say it's even stranger than the synopsis says. hehe Quite a bit slow, not all that much dialogue, very interesting though if you're into low key arty films, if you're not, stay a country mile away from it. Nut

Also just watched Monday, a Sabu film. Too many classic scenes in this movie to pick out a fave one, Victory! Peace! after 10 views just keeps getting better every time. He's not the most prolific of directors, but he makes up for it in the quality of them, seen 5 of his films, need to find more. Mr Green
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gaijinmark



Joined: 13 Apr 2007
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 02, 2010 7:32 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Re: Sabu, did you know he directed a drama? It's called Troubleman:http://www.jdorama.com/drama_1528.htm. Confusing as hell at first, 6 random people thrown together, but thru flashbacks and other methods he eventually shows how they're all connected. I really liked it!! Applaud
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hitomi #1



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PostPosted: Mon Aug 02, 2010 8:07 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

gaijinmark wrote:
Re: Sabu, did you know he directed a drama? It's called Troubleman:http://www.jdorama.com/drama_1528.htm. Confusing as hell at first, 6 random people thrown together, but thru flashbacks and other methods he eventually shows how they're all connected. I really liked it!! Applaud

Thanks, Applaud am going to download what I can. It's from this year, wonder if that's why DA and LJ only have the first 8 episodes, can start on it, hopefully the rest will be out shortly. Fingers crossed
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hitomi #1



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PostPosted: Tue Aug 03, 2010 6:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Just watched The Funeral for the first time, was going to watch Marusa no Onna for about the 10th time, should have. Beaten The Funeral was okay, most reviews gave it a big thums up, I was a bit disappointed, Puppy Dog Eyes thought it would be a bit funnier or have more black humor, worth a watch but don't think I'll be watching that many more times though. Shake Head On a good note, Ryu Chishu was in it, what a long career he had. Victory! Peace!
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niknik



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PostPosted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 4:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Kenichi Matsuyama to star in "Usagi Drop"


The live-action movie adaptation of Yumi Unita's manga series "Usagi Drop" now has a cast. Kenichi Matsuyama (25) will play the lead role, supported by child actress Mana Ashida (6). SABU will direct.

The movie, first announced in June, tells the story of a young and awkward bachelor (Matsuyama) who begins raising a girl (Ashida) after he learns that she is the illegitimate child of his grandfather. This will be Matsuyama's first time playing a father figure.

Ashida, who debuted as an actress last year, has recently gained attention for her roles in the drama series "Mother" and the movie "Kokuhaku."

Other cast members include Karina (26) and Chizuru Ikewaki (28). Filming has already begun and is scheduled to finish during the middle of this month. Summer 2011 is being targeted for theatrical release.






Source: http://www.tokyograph.com/news/id-6437
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strawberryfzz



Joined: 26 May 2009
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 5:14 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Mmm Matsuken as a stand-in spapa. Nice. Naughty Bonus points for casting Ashida Mana. I will look forward to this!

I watched Memories of Matsuko again today. It is one of my all-time favorite movies and not only out of Japanese movies. It's funny, sad, has great music, is visually stunning, and has such an emotional punch to it. If anyone hasn't seen it yet, I HIGHLY recommend it. Nakatani Miki is so wonderfully talented.

I also can't wait to see Nakashima Tetsuya's newest film, Kokuhaku (Confessions) with Matsu Takako, Kimura Yoshino and Okada Masaki. I've heard good things about it. I want to see it so bad!
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niknik



Joined: 05 Jan 2010
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 9:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

strawberryfzz wrote:
Mmm Matsuken as a stand-in spapa. Nice. Naughty Bonus points for casting Ashida Mana. I will look forward to this!

I watched Memories of Matsuko again today. It is one of my all-time favorite movies and not only out of Japanese movies. It's funny, sad, has great music, is visually stunning, and has such an emotional punch to it. If anyone hasn't seen it yet, I HIGHLY recommend it. Nakatani Miki is so wonderfully talented.


^Memories of Matsuko is an excellent movie. Nakatani was brilliant in that.

I guess they can nickname this movie Usagi Drop "Father", eh? Beaten
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shin2



Joined: 21 Jul 2004
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 06, 2010 12:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

The following is an article about Terajima Shinobu. It's a very telling interview because among other things it points out a lot of what is disappointing about much (but not all) of Japanese cinema and the actresses involved in it. Personally, I think some of the observations--the juvenile aspect of movies, the difference between being a tarento and being talented, and the emphasis on youth and the marketing of young actresses where their popularity, success, and visibility has little to do with their ability but how many products they can sell--are even more rampant in dorama.

Both the writer and Terajima are quite candid which is a refreshing change from the pabulum that is often seen in interviews.


Shinobu Terajima talks about cinema, sex scenes and why she hates doing commercials
By James Hadfield

TOKYO �\
It could have been the opportunity of a lifetime for a Japanese actress, they said. Arthur Golden�fs novel �gMemoirs of a Geisha�h had already spent a couple of years on the New York Times bestseller list, and the excitement that greeted news of its big-screen adaptation was surpassed only by the relief that, contrary to initial rumors, the film wouldn�ft be starring Madonna. No: the movie�fs producers wanted something more, quote-unquote, authentic.

So it was a little disappointing when the cast turned out to be headed by Chinese actresses Zhang Ziyi and Gong Li, and the Malaysian Michelle Yeoh. �gWe talked about it at length and we said, �eWhat about this [or that] Japanese actress, would she work?�f�h director Rob Marshall told The Los Angeles Times at the time. �gAnd I said: �eYes, but you know what? She�fs not as good.�f And everybody agreed.�h

Of course, this was before the outside world had realized what a dull, stunningly inert piece of cinema the film was going to be. But the question still nagged: where were the great Japanese actresses? While the film industries in other Asian countries were busy nurturing bona fide stars, Japan�fs brightest lights seemed to be better known for appearing in shampoo commercials.

In the grand pecking order of the Japanese entertainment industry, acting ability is ranked somewhere between hairstyle and shoe size in terms of importance. This is a world that values tarento over talent; almost without exception, the most popular stars are ambidextrous entertainers�\actors cum models cum pop singers cum game show panelists. And, yes, there�fs also the small question of advertising.

�gMost of the lead roles go to young women in their 20s who�fve appeared in lots of commercials, so the performances are immature,�h says Shinobu Terajima, sitting down to talk after a photo shoot at a studio in Hiroo. �gThe quality of Japanese cinema lags way behind other countries.�h

At 37, Terajima is widely regarded as one of the best actresses of her generation�\at least, that is, if we limit the term to people who can actually act. She has picked up some of the country�fs top awards for her film and stage work, including a Japan Academy Prize�\the local equivalent of an Oscar�\in 2003. In February this year, she took home the Silver Bear for Best Actress at the Berlin International Film Festival for her commanding performance in �gCaterpillar,�h which is released here on Aug 14.

In other words, she�fs earned the right to mouth off a little.

�gMost Japanese movies at the moment are like manga, where the audience isn�ft challenged to think or encouraged to ponder the themes and storylines. The movies are easy to read and the storylines totally predictable, so the audience never matures,�h she continues. �gMy husband�fs daughter is 10 and she watches a lot of movies, but when she sees Japanese films she just finds them stupid. Even a 10-year-old can see how juvenile they are.�h

Terajima waited until she was 28 before finally deciding she wanted to be an actress. It took a clutch of accolades, including the aforementioned Japan Academy Prize and a Blue Ribbon Award�\voted for by Japanese film critics�\to convince her.

Most people might have set their standards a little lower, but then most people didn�ft grow up in a family like Terajima�fs. Her father and brother, better known by the appellations Onoe Kikugoro VII and Onoe Kikunosuke V, are part of the prestigious Otowaya kabuki actor guild. Her mother, herself the daughter of a big-shot Toei movie producer, rose to fame in the �f60s as Junko Fuji, star of a string of yakuza films like the �gRed Peony Gambler�h and �gThe Orphan Gambler�h series.

Terajima describes her younger self as being �gfull of complexes.�h �gBefore, I hadn�ft recognized whether I could do it or not, really,�h she says. �gBut when I got a prize, I got confidence.�h

After spending most of her 20s doing stage work, Terajima�fs big break came in the form of two films in 2003: �gAkame 48 Waterfalls,�h a surreal shaggy dog story in which she played the mistress of a tattoo artist, and �gVibrator,�h a road movie about a bulimic journalist who hitches across the country with a truck driver. Both featured the kinds of female leads seldom encountered in modern Japanese cinema: complex, fickle, impossible to peg.

It�fs a type�\insofar as you can call it that�\at which Terajima excels. She delivered another richly nuanced performance as a manic-depressive in 2006�fs �gIt�fs Only Talk,�h which reunited her with �gVibrator�h director Ryuichi Hiroki. And she was probably the only good thing about �gAi no Rukeichi�h (2007), the overripe adaptation of Junichi Watanabe�fs novel about a doomed affair between a middle-aged writer and a sexually repressed housewife.

With �gCaterpillar,�h she�fs done some of her best work to date. Terajima plays Shigeko, a woman living in a rural village in the closing years of World War II, whose army lieutenant husband (Shima Onishi) comes home as a scarred, mute cripple without arms or legs. This stump of a human being is proclaimed a �gwar god�h by the authorities, and Shigeko is expected to see to his every need. Worn down by his constant demands for food and sex, and still smarting from memories of the abuse he inflicted on her in the past, she takes revenge by dressing him in full military regalia and parading him around the village, a symbol of both the tragedy and absurdity of Japan�fs war effort.

The film is the work of Koji Wakamatsu, a political firebrand and former �gpinku eiga�h director whose previous movie, �gUnited Red Army,�h was a three-hour epic about far-left revolutionaries in the �f60s and �f70s. In its unswerving grimness, �gCaterpillar�h is at odds with the current trend of Japanese cinema to romanticize the war, fudging the issue of Japan�fs imperialist ambitions and painting the conflict in the dewy-eyed language of doomed youth.

Terajima had a minor role in one such movie, Junya Sato�fs 2005 blockbuster �gYamato,�h though she�fs clear about where her own allegiances lie.

�gI completely agree with Wakamatsu on this,�h she says. �gTrying to turn it into something beautiful�\�fJapan was defeated, but you can be heroic in defeat as well as victory, can�ft you? Those soldiers were true heroes, dying for their country�c�f�\is just wrong. The Japanese killed hundreds of thousands of people�\we weren�ft just defeated, we did terrible things, and what happened to the country was a result of that.�h

�gCaterpillar�fs�h release has been timed with a fine eye for controversy. The film had its first public screening in Okinawa on June 19, a couple of days shy of the anniversary of the island�fs fall to U.S. forces. It will be shown in Hiroshima on Friday and Nagasaki on Aug 9, before going on wider release on Aug 14 (the following day would have been better, of course, but convention dictates that it start its general release on a Saturday).

�gIt�fs definitely going to be controversial,�h Terajima says. �gI think a lot of nationalists are going to attack it.�h

Speaking at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan earlier this year, Wakamatsu joked that he had cast Terajima because she looked good in monpe, the traditional pants favored by field workers. However, his directorial style also suited the actress well. Each scene in �gCaterpillar�h was filmed in a single take, meaning that it took only 12 days to shoot the entire movie.

�gThere were no rehearsals�\we were just told to perform it however we saw fit,�h Terajima says. �gThe cameraman was moving around, so we were told not to worry about where the camera was, just to perform like it was a play. I�fm a stage actor, so I was happy to hear that.

�gLots of directors these days are obsessed about making a �epicture�f: they�fre really particular about framing, having you act this way, deliver your lines that way. I hate it: when it�fs done like that, there�fs hardly any room to breathe as an actor.�h

I mention a 2006 Japan Times interview with Vibrator and �gIt�fs Only Talk�h director Hiroki, in which he implied that he hadn�ft had to give her much direction either. �gHe is a liar,�h she says, switching into English. �gHe is not like that, not like Wakamatsu-san.�h She searches briefly for the word. �gSadistic. He is really sadistic. But I love him.�h

Having honed her art on the stage, Terajima took a while to adjust to the more subtle style of acting required for cinema�\or, at least, the verité form favored by Hiroki at the time. �gThat�fs why Hiroki-san attacked me a lot,�h she says. �gBecause I�fd grown up like that: [I thought that] being an actress means expressing in front of an audience, performing. But he said, �eNo, don�ft perform. Exist.�h

She describes a seemingly trivial scene in �gVibrator,�h in which her character warms herself with a can of coffee. �gHe said to me, �eWhy do you perform drinking? Just drink.�f�c That was the first film, the first director to say true things�\�eYou are not on the stage, you have to change for the screen.�f I was so shocked, but I changed. The next time, without Hiroki-san, I could do it: I could exist as that person. So Hiroki-san is very important.�h

If Terajima isn�ft more widely celebrated in Japan, that�fs partly because of a certain distracting characteristic of her oeuvre. It�fs both interesting and, perhaps, unfortunate that her notable performances have tended to be the most sexually explicit, from �gAkame 48 Waterfalls�h to �gAi no Rukeichi�h to �gCaterpillar.�h In Hollywood, an actress�fs willingness to disrobe is often treated with a muted respect, implying a total commitment to their art�\think of Kate Winslet, Nicole Kidman or Naomi Watts. Their Japanese counterparts, however, risk getting tagged as �geroi,�h and can end up seeming rather prudish in comparison.

�gIn Japan, famous actresses have a lot of commercials,�h Terajima says. �gAnd then their agency has to think about it�\if she appears naked, it�fs not a good image [to sell] cosmetics. That�fs why many, many actresses can�ft do it. Many actresses envy me, because I don�ft have any commercials. If I take a commercial, I cannot do anything.�h I�fm not sure how her appearance alongside her brother in a Prime Curry ad last year factors into this, but you get the idea.

Though blasé about the issue of nudity, she�fs also frustrated by the extent to which the local media focuses on it. �gIn Berlin, people were talking about �eCaterpillar�f as an artistic film,�h she says. �gThey didn�ft say anything about my nakedness or the sex scenes. But when I came back here�c it�fs really, always the same question with Japanese journalists: �eWhy is it OK that every time you�fre doing sex films?�f No, it�fs not a sex film. Please read the script.�h

�gOf course Japanese people saw [nude scenes with] Kate Winslet and Nicole Kidman�\why didn�ft they say anything?�h she continues, describing a gossip magazine that featured photos of her alongside Oscar nominee Rinko Kikuchi, who disrobed for a pivotal scene in �gBabel.�h �g�eDear Actress: Be naked if you want to become famous abroad.�f That was the title.�h She scowls.

Terajima had a famous dustup with her mother over her decision to take the part of Aya in �gAkame 48 Waterfalls.�h �gAs an actress, she�fd have to say yes, but as a mother it�fs really difficult. We were fighting every day: �eI want to commit suicide if you do it.�f �eI�fll commit suicide if you say no.�f�h It�fs hard to tell if she�fs being overdramatic here. �gThen I got a lot of prizes, and finally she noticed, �eAh, Shinobu has a good eye for choosing scripts.�f�h

A good script, though, is hard to find. �gI don�ft know when I�fm going to come across another one as good as �eCaterpillar,�f�h she says. �gMaybe not for another ten years�c It�fs not like I�fm constantly stumbling across them.�h

In the meantime, she�fs got a TV series to contend with�\playing Ryoma Sakamoto�fs sister in the Sunday evening NHK drama �gRyomaden�h�\and an upcoming appearance in �gCat on a Hot Tin Roof�h at the New National Theatre Tokyo. She�fll be playing Maggie, the role immortalized by Elizabeth Taylor in the 1958 movie adaptation. Tennessee Williams is apparently easier to get to grips with than Shakespeare, but still�c �gIt�fs a lot of lines,�h she says. �gI don�ft want to imagine that.�h

For more information about �gCaterpillar,�h see www.wakamatsukoji.org.

This story originally appeared in Metropolis magazine (www.metropolis.co.jp)
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EstherM



Joined: 08 May 2007
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 06, 2010 3:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

^thanks for sharing shin2.
She's somewhat right about the immature performances, watched teeny terminal illness movie Boku no Hatsukoi wo Kimi ni Sasagu with Inoue Mao and immature describes this pointless movie.

@niknik thanks for sharing info on Usagi Drop, it's the little girl from Mother - I like the manga but I think MatsuKen is a little too young, in the manga his character is 30 or over 30 - anyway looking forward. Mr Green
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