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Fireworks, Should We See It from the Side or the Bottom?

Uchiage hanabi, shita kara Miruka? Yoko kara Miruka?

Japan

1993

49 Min
Color
Japanese
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
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DIR Shunji Iwai

SCR Shunji Iwai

CAST Yuta Yamazaki, Megumi Okina, Takayuki Sorita, Randy Havens, Kenji Kohashi, Kento Sakuragi, Kuniko Asagi, Kanako Fukaura, Mitsuko Ishii, Ken Mitsuishi, Tomorowo Taguchi

MUSIC Remedios

Synopsis

On the day when a fireworks display is planned, Norimichi, Yusuke, and their friends at school in a Japanese seaside town cannot agree whether or not fireworks are “flat” or “round” when they explode in the sky. With her parents divorcing, the young teenager Nazuna has more serious matters on her mind. Although unknown to the others, Nazuna’s mother intends to take her away after the summer break. When Norimichi and Yusuke race 50 meters in the swimming pool, Nazuna secretly decides that the winner will accompany her when she runs away from home. Meanwhile the gang from school decides that the best way to figure out the shape of fireworks is to view them from the side, and they set out for a lighthouse above the beach from which the fireworks display will be fired. —IMDb

Director

Original

Shunji Iwai

The standard bearer of the 1990s new wave of Japanese film, Shunji Iwai cranked out some of that country’s hippest, hottest, and most popular movies. A self-styled eizo sakka, or visual artist, Iwai is a filmmaker equally at home directing commercials, TV dramas, rock videos, and feature length pictures. Though older critics have blasted his films for lacking depth and for borrowing from 1970s experimental auteur Shuji Terayama, Iwai understands that for an audience weaned on MTV, the image is the movie. Slick and oozing with style, his films consistently have an uncanny resonance with 1990s Japanese pop culture, making him one of the most important directors of his generation.

Born on January 24th, 1963, in the northern city of Sendai, Iwai started his filmmaking career in 1988 directing music videos and television dramas. Though he was already garnering considerable buzz by 1993 for his acclaimed one-hour late-night TV dramas Fried Dragon Fish and Uchiage Hanabi: Shita kara… read more

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