Hirao district of Nishi Yoshino village in Nara. This documentary film describes some 6 families living in the rich and wild, natural environment.
Filming The Weald started right after the completion of Suzaku, Kawase’s first feature film, in the same location. Suzaku depicted the human touch of the people living in the small village along with the bitter environment of nature and various problems arising from depopulation. While filming it, Kawase felt something in mind, something she cannot represent through fiction films. “I have to film the documentary of the people in this place… I want to.” —kawasenaomi.com
Naomi Kawase was born in 1969, at a time when Japanese cinema was thriving with vigorous underground filmmaking, the initial streak in Kawase’s own young career. While studying photography at the Osaka School of Visual Arts, she started to make films as part of a workshop: “I focus on that which interests me” (1988), a personal symphony of the city, “The concretization of these things flying around me” (1989), a silent study of the homeless, "Presently (1989), a poetic piece visualising the 4 elements (water, air, fire and earth). After graduating in 1989, she taught for 4 years.
In 1992, she made Embracing, a medium length 16mm feature in which she sets up to find her biological father (Naomi was brought up by her grandparents after her parents’ marriage broke up). In 1993, she cast her documentary eye on a striking boy-meets-girl fiction in White Moon. She dedicated her following film Katatsumori (94) to her grandmother. This film and the next one… read more