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Synopsis

As the film opens, ordinary middle-class high school girl Kazuko Yoshiyama is accidentally exposed to a strange lavender-scented steam in her school science lab. She discovers soon after she now possesses the ability to teleport (terepoto) and time-leap (taimu-riipu). These powers manifest cinematically in the film as jump-cuts, as Kazuko makes herself and other objects disappear in one space only to reappear in another. While Kazuko’s first response to the lavender potion is to faint (the school doctor declares her “anemic”), she eventually learns to master this new temporal relativity. She is aided by a boy from the future, Fukamachi. “You’re just nervous,” he says while teaching her how to time-jump. “Relax.” Fukamachi later tells Kazuko of a future where everyone has such time-jumping powers. The boy eventually must return to this future, despite longing for the simplicity of the high schooler’s temporally simple life. He warns the girl not to follow in his path, telling her “don’t be a vagabond of time.” He convinces Kazuko to erase her memory and return to being the “normal” girl she used to be, giving up the boy from the future as her love interest and returning to his more down-to-earth rival, Goro, the son of a soy-sauce maker. —Midnight Eye

Director

Original

Nobuhiko Obayashi

Nobuhiko Obayashi (大林 宣彦 Ōbayashi Nobuhiko?, born 9 January 1938) is a Japanese director, screenwriter and editor of films and television advertisements who is well known for his surreal visual style. He began his career as a pioneering figure in Japanese experimental film during the 1960s before transitioning to directing more mainstream works such as television and feature films. Though he remains mostly unknown outside of Japan he has made a prolific number of films in his 50 years of working with the medium.

Obayashi was born on the 9th of January 1938 in the city of Onomichi, Japan. He was the eldest son of a father who was one in a long paternal line of medical doctors. As his father was called to the battlefront during World War II, he was raised in his early infancy by his maternal grandparents. Through his childhood and adolescence Obayashi followed many artistic pursuits including drawing, writing, playing the piano, and a growing interest in animation and film. read more

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Paolo Simeone

14Apr12

Beh, Obayashi è in un certo senso come Tsui per me, sebbene ci siano due cinematografie di distanza tra di loro e adottino sempre registri assolutamente diversi per arrivare a toccare le mie corde. Dopo House o questo, mi ritrovo come dopo aver visto Zu o Green Snake. Saturo. Non toccateli, perché mordo.

Picture of Echydo

Echydo

11Jul11

OMG I had no idea this film existed. I'm only familiar with the anime film and I didn't know it was derived from this one.

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