Sion Sono (園 子温 Sono Shion, born 1961) is a controversial filmmaker and poet. He was born in Toyokawa, Aichi, Japan and is best known for his movies and avant-garde poetry performances.
After receiving a fellowship with the PIA, Sono made his first feature-length 16 mm film in 1990, Bicycle Sighs (Jitensha Toiki), which he co-wrote, directed, and starred himself. A coming-of-age tale about two underachievers in the perfectionist Japan, Bicycle Sighs settled Sono as a director with great box office success in Japan, and for nearly two years was played over 30 film festivals around Europe and Asia. In 1992, Sono’s second feature film The Room (Heya), also written by himself, a bizarre tale about a serial killer looking for a room in a bleak, doomed Tokyo district, participated at the Tokyo Sundance Film Festival and won the Special Jury Prize. The Room also toured on 49 festivals worldwide, including the Berlin Film Festival and… read more
I first saw Strange Circus but was totally blown away by its story (incest)...then I came to discover Love Exposure and finished watching it in one go (4 hours long!)...Cold Fish and Guilty of Romance were mind-boggling! Himizu was yet another piece of great work...now look forward to seeing Land of Hope and see how he tackles the nuclear crisis.
Yes I did but didn't like them as much as the "hate trilogy" and his subsequent works...i felt he has reached the "pinnacle" or the mature stage rather, of his career with the "hate triology". Everything just fell into place and he hasn't let up since...be sure to share and himizu are excellent as well!
I STILL haven't seen Be Sure To Share... I have yet to find it with subs, and my Japanese is such a low level that I would miss way too much watching it raw.
I actually liked Himizu more than Land Of Hope, but yeah, I felt Himizu was a step down from the trilogy too... although, it might have to do with the fact that it's based on source material instead of being Sono's own creation. And, thanks! I was really surprised I got to meet him. It was at Tokyo Filmex. He premiered his long lost film "Bad Film".
Sure I agree with your point on Himizu; the first half was quite intense and comapct but the second half seemed to lose its focus a bit. Guess what! I went to see "Bad Film" today and was totally blown away by it...he made this back in 1995 with 150 hours of footage and cut them down to 2.5 hours. "Bad film" truly reprepsents the spirit of independent(with no funding yet so full of life) filmmaking in my view.
Oh yeah, the "Bad Film" premiere is where I met Sono. It's definitely a movie that will stick in your head, whether you like it or not. haha. You can also find the Q&A form the premiere online, although I'm not sure if there are English subs yet or any subs at all. I'm the only person who asked a question in English.
The Land Of Hope (new film) http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/cold-fish-guilty-of-romance-director-sion-sono-making-japanese-earthquake-tsunami-pic-the-land-of-hope