Kore-eda has an extraordinary grasp on his characters, modest people who clearly mean a great deal to him. They will to you, as well.
Still Walking (2009)
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Reviews Counted:36
Fresh:36
Rotten:0
Average Rating:8.3/10
Consensus: Hirokazu Kore-eda's film may seem modest at first, but this family drama casts a delicate, entrancing spell.
Synopsis: Ryota is the 40-year-old son of the Yokoyama family. He has recently married a widow with a ten-year-old son from her previous marriage, who are joining him on a rare visit home. Only his elderly... Ryota is the 40-year-old son of the Yokoyama family. He has recently married a widow with a ten-year-old son from her previous marriage, who are joining him on a rare visit home. Only his elderly parents now live in the house, which once doubled as a flourishing medical clinic. The annex, a medical examining room still boasting a wall of pharmaceuticals, remains unchanged, though the patriarchal doctor has retired. Despite the unchanged outward appearances, everything has slightly aged. The family has gathered to remember Junpei, the eldest son, who died in a terrible accident fifteen years earlier. Ryota, an art restorer, has never lived up to his brilliant brother, who was supposed to take over the family clinic, and he remains uncomfortable with his father. He arrives home, determined to hide the fact that he is currently unemployed. His older sister, Chinami, has already arrived with her family and is cheerfully entertaining the extended family. Toshiko, their deceptively mild-mannered mother, emits a string of sarcastic remarks as she bustles around the kitchen preparing the family’s favorite foods. The scenes of the respective couples and family members alternately reminiscing and bickering around the food-laden table, will bring a family memory to everyone’s mind. Based on Kore-eda’s original screenplay, under his polished direction, all the characters come sharply to life, exchanging dialogue that both delights and tugs at your heart. As the film unfolds, brimming with compelling realism, it reveals the modest joys and gentle sorrows that accompany the realization that life must inevitably move on. The Yokoyama’s are a typical dysfunctional family, bonded by love as well as resentments and secrets. With a subtle balance of gentle humor and wistful sorrow, Kore-eda portrays just how annoying, and exactly how precious, family can be. --© IFC Films [More]
Starring: Hiroshi Abe, Yui Natsukawa, Kazuya Takahashi, Shohei Tanaka
Starring: Hiroshi Abe, Yui Natsukawa, Kazuya Takahashi, Shohei Tanaka, Kirin Kiki, Yoshio Harada
Director: Hirokazu Kore-eda
Director: Hirokazu Kore-eda
Screenwriter: Hirokazu Kore-eda
Producer: Taguchi Hijiri, Yoshihiro Kato
Studio: IFC Films
Reviews for Still Walking
Hirokazu Kore-Eda’s latest effort, further entrenches my belief he should be considered one of Japan’s living treasures.
The Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-eda has a deceptively simple touch with the quiet, stirring film Still Walking.
Hirokazu Koreeda has written and directed a family drama that tells a powerful story that can not be told through words alone.
An appealing bittersweet drama about a Japanese family get-together that explores sibling rivalry, the need to be loved and appreciated, and the mysteries of death.
Hirokazu Kore-Eda’s home drama Still Walking is a master class in doing much with little.
There's also a touch of Bergman-style family angst here, and in the tale of the drowned golden boy and the surviving son, even a little bit of Ordinary People.
Sensitively demonstrates how nothing much happening to this idiosyncratic family is the universal story of every family.
To submit to the quiet tensions of the modern-day Yokoyama clan, an extended family haunted by the memory of a departed son, is to experience moviemaking of a rare emotional subtlety.
The fluid, unobtrusive camera work handles with equal ease moments of intense intimacy, the look in a child’s eyes or the silent expression of a couple about to go to sleep while also making the best of glorious open-air landscapes.
Its modest surface belies the depths of a lovely seriocomedy that concisely lays bare all kinds of uncomfortable dynamics in seemingly casual, low-key fashion.
A subtly nuanced family drama that resonates long after its hushed ending.
Its sincere consideration of its characters' longing for acceptance and approval rings true.
A gentle, Chekhovian-style drama of family conflict in Japan's leading harbor city of Yokohama.
A family drama that gets the family dynamic exactly right, a film that understands the ways in which unspoken resentments tend to accumulate and unresolved conflicts later harden into regrets.
Latest News for Still Walking
August 27, 2009:
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August 15, 2009:
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