Inhalte(1)

Japanese drama written and directed by Hirokazu Koreeda. The film follows Shinoda Ryota (Hiroshi Abe), a former writer now working for a private detective agency and struggling to move on with his life. When his wife Kyoko (Yoko Maki) leaves him and his father passes away, Shinoda develops a serious gambling addiction and is forbidden from seeing his son Shingo (Taiyo Yoshizawa) until he catches up on missed child support payments. However, with his life spiralling out of control, Shinoda is given an unexpected second chance to reconnect with his family when a typhoon forces him to stay over at his mother's house with his ex-wife and son. (Arrow Academy)

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Kritiken (3)

DaViD´82 

alle Kritiken

Englisch It’s good to know that dysfunctional families and caring grandmothers with freezers overflowing with cheap long-ago expired food are the same in Japan as well as in the middle of nowhere. Koreeda again approached in a traditional civilian way and with a theme that eleven out of ten directors would not have been able to do without emotional blackmail or at least some cliché. But this doesn’t apply to him. It is a pity that the silence before the storm is far too long (however not boring), given that the "storm" itself is too short. ()

kaylin 

alle Kritiken

Englisch Dysfunctional families are everywhere, and I was pleasantly surprised by how the Japanese managed to approach the topic quite calmly, without any unnecessary extravagance, but still making the film interesting and engaging throughout its duration. Not every film can say that. As well as the fact that this isn't emotional blackmail. ()

angel74 

alle Kritiken

Englisch "I've never understood why men can't live in the present. Either they're chasing after what they've long lost, or they're dreaming of things they can't reach." +++ "It's hard to find happiness if you don't forgive yourself. You have to give something up." +++ "You miss him in vain, for he no longer lives. That won't bring him back. You have to be able to get along well with people while they are still alive." +++ The wisdom of the caring mother Yoshiko, which she gained through her age and hard life, could be carved in stone. The little family drama After the Storm struck a melancholic chord of epiphany in me so true and painful that I will be contemplating its reverberations for some time to come. The words of the beautiful song at the end of the film contributed to this. +++ "What fate have I dreamt of so far? Now I bid farewell to the dreamer. I look up, the sky is just mist. Where do you think he's going and where am I going?" (85%) ()