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CULTURAL EXCHANGE

- B. Chua Zsarlene

“Film is a fascinatin­g and powerful medium that journeys across borders and inspires all walks of life,” noted Hiroaki Uesugi, Director of the Japan Foundation Manila, which organizes the festival, in a statement.

“Celebratin­g the Philippine­Japan Friendship Month, and as part of the Japan Foundation Manila’s commitment to promote art and cultural exchange... we are pleased to showcase once again the best of contempora­ry and classic Japanese films. We hope Filipinos enjoy accessing and experienci­ng Japanese culture through films, and also expand understand­ing through several talks organized in collaborat­ion with the Japan Foundation’s theater, exhibition and dialogue projects,” he was quoted as saying.

Last year’s festival drew more than 26,000 viewers, according to the statement, making it “one of the largest internatio­nal film festivals in the Philippine­s.”

LGBTQ FILM

The festival will also screen an independen­t documentar­y film, Of Love and Law (2017) by Hikaru Toda, about a couple who operates Japan’s first openly gay law firm.

The film won the Best Film Award at the 30th Tokyo Internatio­nal Film Festival’s Independen­t Japanese Cinema category.

Ms. Toda will attend the film’s Philippine premiere on Aug. 4 at the Cultural Center of the Philippine­s ( CCP) during the Cinemalaya Independen­t Film Festival.

A special screening and panel discussion on LGBTQ minorities and the importance of inclusion will be held on Aug. 5 at the Cinematequ­e Centre Manila

Japanese classics such as Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai (1954) will be screened at the UP Film Institute — Cine Adarna leg of the festival in August. The screening coincides with The Spirit of Budo: The History of Japan’s Martial Arts exhibit at the National Museum which will run from July 21 to Sept. 26.

MANILA NOTES-TOKYO NOTES

Aside from films, the festival also organized a talk by Japanese playwright-director Oriza Hirata. The talk will introduce the Manila Notes project: the Philippine version of the award-winning play Tokyo Notes which premiered in 1994 and has since been translated into 15 different languages.

The Manila version will be Tanghalang Pilipino’s third play for its 32nd season which opens on Nov. 30.

The talk will be held along with a screening of When the Curtain Rises, a 2015 drama film by Katsuyuki Motohiro which is an adaptation of Mr. Hirata’s novel of the same name and tells the story of a high school drama club in a provincial town.

CHEERLEADE­RS AND MORE

Other films included in the festival lineup are: Let’s Go, JETS! From Small Town Girls to US Champions?! (2017), a comedy by Hayato Kawai which was based on the true story of Fukui Commercial High School cheerleadi­ng team’s victory at the USA Cheerdance Championsh­ip in 2009; and Rudolf the Black Cat (2016), an animated film by Kunihiko Yuyama and Motonori Sakakibara. The film follows the eponymous black cat as tries to survive as a street cat after being separated from his master.

Survival Family ( 2017) by Shinobu Yaguchi, meanwhile is a story of a family trying to survive in a world without electricit­y, while Honnouji Hotel (2017) by Masayuki Suzuki is about a girl who travels back in time and encounters Japanese general Nobunaga Oda before he is killed in the 1582 Honnouji Temple incident.

Memoirs of a Murderer (2017) by Yu Irie is the Japanese adaptation of Korea’s Confession of a Murderer (2012) by Byeong- Gil Jeong where a man writes a book about the murders he committed and announces it after the statute of limitation­s have expired.

In Tora- san of Goto ( 2016), director Masaru Oura shows the life of a family of udon noodle makers on the Goto archipelag­o in Nagasaki Prefecture. The documentar­y features 22 years of the family doing what they do best — creating udon. The film was awarded the Magnolia Award for Best Documentar­y in the 22nd Shanghai TV Festival.

Tori Girl ( 2017) by Tsutomu Hanabusa tells the story of university students who stake everything on a flight contest held once every year on Biwa Lake in Shiga Prefecture.

Rounding up the festival’s lineup are two manga adaptation­s: RELife (2017) by Takeshi Furusawa, about a 27-year-old who joins the titular social reintegrat­ion program and manages to once again live as a high school student for a year; and Daytime Shooting Star (2017) by Takehiko Shinjo, about a love triangle between a quirky country girl, her homeroom teacher, and an aloof classmate.

SCREENINGS

The EIGASAI Japanese Film Festival will run from July 4 to Aug. 26.

The films will be screened in Manila, Cebu, Davao, Bacolod, and Naga, specifical­ly at Greenbelt 1 Cinema 2, Makati City (July 4-8), Ateneo de Manila University, Quezon City (July 4-6), CCP Complex, Pasay City (Aug. 4 and 5 during Cinemalaya and Aug. 17), Cinematheq­ue Centre Manila, Ermita, Manila (Aug. 5), UP Film InstituteC­ine Adarna, UP Diliman, QC (Aug. 15-18), SM City Davao Cinema, Davao City (July 12-15), SM City Naga Cinema, Naga City (July 27-29), SM City Bacolod Cinema, Bacolod City (Aug. 9-12), and Ayala Center Cebu Cinema, Cebu City (Aug. 23-26).

Admission is free on a firstcome, first- served basis, except for the screenings at Greenbelt 1 where tickets cost P100 per screening and are available online at https://www.sureseats.com or at the cinema ticket booth starting June 27.

For the complete screening schedule, visit the official EIGASAI Facebook page. —

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