Now Showing
Mao’s Last Dancer
Bruce Beresford’s (Tender Mercies, Driving Miss Daisy) adaptation of the autobiography of Chinese ballet star Li Cunxin is kind of an Asian Billy Elliot, and just as heartwarming. Li was plucked at the age of 11 from his home and family in Shandong Province and taken to Beijing to be trained in classical ballet. Years later, while on a three-month cultural exchange program with the...

Aug 26, 2010 | No Comments | 182 views
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Starting Soon
Cop Out

Jersey auteur Kevin Smith’s latest and most juvenile film is this flaccid buddy-cop opera starring Tracy Morgan and Bruce Willis (zilch chemistry) that thinks it’s way funnier than it is. In this homage to a genre that no one ever really liked, two disgraced cops slog through a forest of bodily function jokes to retrieve [...]


Sep 2, 2010 | No Comments | 22 views
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Eiga
Caterpillar
Koji Wakamatsu’s films from the 1960s were plotless orgies of sex and violence (and sexual violence). They shocked, mystified and scandalized the entire country, never more so than when Affairs within Walls (1965) became one of the first Japanese films to be accepted at the prestigious Berlin Film Festival. In fact, Wakamatsu’s entire oeuvre reflects his radical leftist politics, delivering implicit attacks on all...

Aug 19, 2010 | No Comments | 257 views
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Cinematic Underground
September 2, 2010
Shibuya’s Cinema Vera (1-5 Maruyamacho, Shibuya-ku; www.cinemavera.com) is opening its vaults to show a collection of masterpieces from the history of cinema, September 4-October 1. The lineup includes works that will be familiar to any student who has sat through film 101 class, namely Citizen Kane (1941; pictured) and Battleship Potemkin (1925), as well as lighter fare like the Marx Brothers in Duck Soup (1933). Shin-Bungeiza...

Sep 2, 2010 | No Comments | 13 views
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Movie News

JAPAN TODAY

Smap singer Tsuyoshi Kusanagi, 36, and actress Yukie Nakama (Gokusen, Trick), 30, will star in a TBS miniseries set in the 1960s called 99-year Love: Japanese-Americans. The drama tells the story of a Japanese family that immigrated to the United States 99 years before the story is set. Kusanagi will play a second-generation Japanese-American—and, with the help of prosthetics, that same character’s father—while Nakama appears as his wife. Seattle Mariners superstar Ichiro Suzuki will make an appearance in archival footage showing him at bat. According to producers, they decided to add a clip of Ichiro “because he is an example of a man that transcends racial stereotypes, to contrast the content of the show.” The series will air in five 2-hour segments starting November 3. “I really hope this show strikes a chord with not only Japanese viewers, but Americans as well,” Kusanagi said. Nakama, meanwhile, says she found great value in the project. “I feel like I’ve really accomplished something landing this part. The story deals with heavy issues, so I feel I must work hard to do justice to the subject matter.”

By: Chris Betros | Sep 2, 2010 | No Comments | 11 views

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