Nobuhiko Obayashi Selections
The Discarnates
- Screening Schedule
- Nov 22 (Fri.) 18:00 at Hiroshima City Cinematographic and Audio-visual Library
- Details
<Story>
Shin'ichi Ichikawa wrote a screenplay adaptation of Taichi Yamada's novel, Strangers, which won the 1st Yamamoto Shugoro Prize in 1988. Harada is a successful scenario writer who lives a lonely life in Tokyo after divorcing his wife. One day he visits Asakusa where he was born and raised. He meets his parents who should have died when he was twelve years old.
The fantasy story of this film, it can be said a fairy tale for adults, reminds us of feeling of connecting with people from the heart.<Staff>
Cast:Morio Kazama,Kumiko Akiyoshi,Tsurutarô Kataoka,Yûko Natori
Director:Nobuhiko Ôbayashi
Script:Shin’ichi Ichikawa
Producer:Shigemi Sugisaki,Kiyoshi Higuchi<Info>
Year of production: 1988
Running time: 108’
Country:Japan- Director
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Nobuhiko Obayashi
Born in Onomichi, Hiroshima Prefecture in 1938, Nobuhiko Obayashi started making films at the age of three,
with a kinetoscope he found in the family storage room. After moving to Tokyo, he screened
his independent film Émotion, shot on 16mm, at art galleries, halls and universities, and received glowing reviews.
The Person Who Is Eaten (Tabeta Hito, 1963) won the Jury Award at EXPRMNTL,
an international competition of avant-garde films held in Belgium. He then became involved in
the early days of TV commercials, and created over 3,000 commercials, often with foreign stars such as
Charles Bronson, Sophia Loren, Catherine Deneuve and many more. His first feature, House (1977),
won the Blue Ribbon Award along with Hitomi no Naka no Houmonsha (The Visitor in the Eye), released the same year.
Obayashi also made I Are You, You Am Me (1982), The Little Girl Who Conquered Time (1983) and Lonely Heart (1985)
which were shot in his hometown and adored by fans, who called them the Onomichi Trilogy. Obayashi won numerous awards
inside and outside of Japan: The Discarnates (1988) won the Mainichi Film Award for Best Director; Beijing Watermelon (1989)
won Best Director at the Yamaji Fumiko Movie Awards; Chizuko’s Younger Sister (1991) won the Saturn Award for Best Fantasy Film;
The Rocking Horseman (1992) won Best Film at the ACA Film Awards; Sada (1998) won the FIPRESCI Prize
at the Berlin International Film Festival; The Reason (2004) won Best Director at the Japan Movie Critics Award and
Honorable Mention at the Fujimoto Prize; Casting Blossoms to the Sky (2011) won the Grand Prix at the Tama Cinema Forum;
Hanagatami (2017) won Best Director at the Kinema Junpo Awards and top prize at Mainichi Film Awards, and more.
Recent works include Japanese pop idol group AKB48’s music video So long! The Movie (2013), a youth version of Casting Blossoms to the Sky,
and Seven Weeks (2014). Despite being diagnosed with lung cancer in 2016, Obayashi completed his War Trilogy,
which includes Casting Blossoms to the Sky (2011), Seven Weeks (2014) and Hanagatami (2017).