Torso トルソ Director: Yutaka Yamazaki (2009)

Torso   Torso Film Poster

トルソ Toruso

Release Date: July 10th, 2010

Duration: 104 mins.

Director: Yutaka Yamazaki

Writer: Yutaka Yamazaki, Yuki Sato (Script),

Starring: Makiko Watanabe, Sakura Ando, Sola Aoi, Arata Iura, Renji Ishibashi, Miyako Yamaguchi,

IMDB

Torso tells a tale of a woman whose life is troubled by men. The film’s hook is understanding how she mediates this trouble through her cohabitation with an inflatable male mannequin torso. The reason why she would choose an inanimate object over a flesh-and-blood person is gradually revealed when her younger half-sister moves into her apartment over the course of a hot Tokyo summer. This disturbance leads to an unearthing of traumas that create a pathology explaining why a woman would avoid men. 

We follow Hiroko Katagiri (Makiko Watanabe), a 34-year-old office lady working for a fashion house. Katagiri is not one for dates, for mixers, for being picked up in bars because she is not one for meeting men. She is quite content with leading solitary life, her only companion being the limbless torso which she treats in some ways like a boyfriend, albeit an undemanding one. Living solo she cooks what she wants, drinks wine whenever she likes, and can relax in freedom. The question of how she ended up like this is brought to the fore with the arrival of her more flighty half-sister Mina (Sakura Ando) who comes seeking shelter after fleeing her abusive boyfriend, Hiroko’s ex.

Like water and oil, the two aren’t that good at mixing as Mina, a budding fashion video director is the younger, prettier, and more popular of the two, with both men and their mother, and she flaunts it. As Mina unsettles Hiroko’s routines the older sister faces up to traumas that have shaped her life such as how she lost her boyfriend to Mina and a dark family past and so, as odd as the hook of living with a torso is, that becomes secondary to understanding Hiroko and her problem with men.

Continue reading “Torso トルソ Director: Yutaka Yamazaki (2009)”

MUSICAL “Ludwig Beethoven The Piano”, Red Shoes, Tadaima Tsunakan, DOOR (Digitally Restored), Paper City Japanese Film Trailers

Happy Weekend

The Getaway

This is the second part of the two-part trailer post. The first part is here.

This week I have been recovering and watching a wide variety of films and listening to podcasts. The Evaporated is recommended listening as it presents stories of people who disappear without a trace in Japan.

In terms of films, I watched The Getaway (1972), The Devils (1971), Manhunter (1981), Thief (1985), In the Line of Duty 3 (1988) and In the Line of Duty 4 (1989), Fuzz (1972), Straight Time (1974), Dragons Forever (1988), and The Last Detail (1973).

What else was released this weekend?

Continue reading “MUSICAL “Ludwig Beethoven The Piano”, Red Shoes, Tadaima Tsunakan, DOOR (Digitally Restored), Paper City Japanese Film Trailers”

Alone Again in Fukushima, Call Me Chihiro, Yudo, Sayonara Girls, Ultraman Decker Finale: Journey to Beyond, Ichiban aitai hito (The One I Long to See), Hinomaru Terayama Shuuji 40-nen-me no Chouhatsu Japanese Film Trailers

Happy Weekend

The Last Detail Image

This trailer post comes on time and split into two with a Netflix release and a documentary mixed in with dramas, tokusatsu and more getting a theatrical run.

What are the first batch of films released this weekend?

Continue reading “Alone Again in Fukushima, Call Me Chihiro, Yudo, Sayonara Girls, Ultraman Decker Finale: Journey to Beyond, Ichiban aitai hito (The One I Long to See), Hinomaru Terayama Shuuji 40-nen-me no Chouhatsu Japanese Film Trailers”

“Ikiru” Okawa Shogakko Tsunami Saiban o Tatakatta Hito-tachi, Gekijouban Senkyu Nandesu, TOCKA Tasuka-,  Blue Giant, Sasaki to Miyano: Sotsugyo-hen, Hirano and Kagiura Japanese Film Trailers 

Happy Weekend

Remembering-06_SDIM1939-Ai Mikami and GuamaUchida R

This is the second part of the two-part trailer post. You can find the first part here. Last week I reviewed Asyl: Park and Love Hotel (2008) .

I’ve been watching a lot of Hong Kong films and Western ones while between festival work. Titles include:

Outlaw Brothers (1990), The Iceman Cometh (1989), Beauty Investigator (1992), Five Easy Pieces (1970), Eastern Condors (1987), Thief (1981), Manhunter (1986), The Last Detail (1973), The Devils (1971), and the In the Line of Duty series.

What else was released last weekend?

Continue reading ““Ikiru” Okawa Shogakko Tsunami Saiban o Tatakatta Hito-tachi, Gekijouban Senkyu Nandesu, TOCKA Tasuka-,  Blue Giant, Sasaki to Miyano: Sotsugyo-hen, Hirano and Kagiura Japanese Film Trailers “

Me no Mienai Shiratori-san, Art wo mi ni iku, Shylock’s Children, New Directions in Japanese Cinema, Utsubuse no mama Odoritai, Ra Mahi, Debriz, Saboten to Kaitei Japanese Film Trailers

Happy Weekend

Five Easy Pieces Jack Nicholson

Well, this is a delayed trailer post. It features a bunch of shorts and a documentary and a continuation of a TV series. Tomorrow’s post features lots of anime, two of which are a continuation of a TV series.

What are the first bunch of films to get released last weekend?

Continue reading “Me no Mienai Shiratori-san, Art wo mi ni iku, Shylock’s Children, New Directions in Japanese Cinema, Utsubuse no mama Odoritai, Ra Mahi, Debriz, Saboten to Kaitei Japanese Film Trailers”

Asyl: Park and Love Hotel (2008) Director: Izuru Kumasaka

Asyl: Park and Love Hotel    Asyl Park and Love Hotel Film Poster

パーク アンド ラブホテル Pa-ku ando Rabu Hoteru

Release Date: April 26th, 2008

Duration: 111 mins.

Director: Izuru Kumasaka

Writer: Izuru Kumasaka (Script),

Starring: Lily, Chiharu, Sachi Jinno, Hikari Kajiwara, Kanji Tsuda, Ken Mitsuishi,

IMDB

The lives of four women meet at Asyl Park and Love Hotel, the titular establishment in the heart of Tokyo. Eschewing the erotic potential that the title suggests, this film leans more in favour of showing the loneliness on the characters, particularly the absence of men.

Continue reading “Asyl: Park and Love Hotel (2008) Director: Izuru Kumasaka”

Are you ready for a mindset that will never sell?, Te no Hira no Pazuru, Hatachi no Musuko, Watashitachi wa Doko Kara Kita no ka Nanimono na no ka Soshite Anata wa Japanese Film Trailers

Happy Weekend

Ishi ga Aru R

This is the second of a two-part trailer post – the first part is here – and it comes less than a week before the Berlin International Film Festival 2023 launches. You can see the line-up of Japanese films in my annual preview of the festival.

The most exciting news for me this week was that the synopses that I have been working on for Osaka Asian Film Festival 2023 have gone online. It was great to watch all of the films and I hope people find the information and trailers and film images useful! I’ve still got plenty of work to do.

In terms of films I have watched, this week was all about Hong Kong with…

Princess Madam, Mission of Justice, Dreaming the Reality, Dreadnaught, Killer Angels, Devil Hunters, and The Iceman Cometh.

What other films are released this weekend?

Continue reading “Are you ready for a mindset that will never sell?, Te no Hira no Pazuru, Hatachi no Musuko, Watashitachi wa Doko Kara Kita no ka Nanimono na no ka Soshite Anata wa Japanese Film Trailers”

#Manhole, Egoist, Sin Clock, Ginpeicho Cinema Blues, Sleepless, Beikoku Ongaku, Revice Forward: Kamen Rider Live & Evil & Demons Japanese Film Trailers

Happy Weekend

LL Image

You know the drill! This is the first of a two=part trailer post so come back tomorrow for more trailers!

What are the first batch released this week?

Continue reading “#Manhole, Egoist, Sin Clock, Ginpeicho Cinema Blues, Sleepless, Beikoku Ongaku, Revice Forward: Kamen Rider Live & Evil & Demons Japanese Film Trailers”

Nipponretto Ikimono Chodensetsu Gekijouban Darwin ga Kita!, Nukero, Mebiusu!!, God Bless You, Tea Friends, Two on the Edge, Minna Ikite Iru: Futatsu me no Tanjoubi Japanese Film Trailers

Happy Weekend

Shall We Dance

This is the second of a two-part trailer post – the first part is here.

In big news, the organisers of the Osaka Asian Film Festival 2023 have announced the majority of its programme. Check out Variety to read more. I’ve watched a lot of films for the festival and I’m writing about them. Without going into detail, there’s a good selection but what stands out for me are a few of the Hong Kong films and some of the Japanese indies. I’m looking forward to sharing more about them as the festival approaches and gets underway.

In terms of what I have been watching outside of OAFF 2023 films, I have burned through some noir films, a BBC mockumentary from the 90s, and lots of Hong Kong 80s action flicks:

Kiss Me DeadlyIron Angels 2GhostwatchShe Shoots Straight, and They Came to Rob Hong Kong.

What other films were released this weekend?

Continue reading “Nipponretto Ikimono Chodensetsu Gekijouban Darwin ga Kita!, Nukero, Mebiusu!!, God Bless You, Tea Friends, Two on the Edge, Minna Ikite Iru: Futatsu me no Tanjoubi Japanese Film Trailers”