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ACA Film Project Presents New Films From Japan – 5 Films From Top Japanese Filmmaking Talents

February 10-16. YAMABUKI’s Juichiro Yamasaki will attend during the Opening weekend for Q&As

Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan (ACA) announces the sixth ACA Cinema Project series – New Films from Japan – organized as part of its Japan Film Overseas Expansion Enhancement Project in collaboration with the IFC Center and with Visual Industry Promotion Organization (VIPO) entrusted with the operation of the project. This edition of the program will present four films that have made an impact, received critical acclaim, and won awards at film festivals around the world over the course of the past year.

Screening at the IFC Center (323 Sixth Ave – at West 3rd St,) on February 10-16, the lineup will include 's , 's Small, Slow but Steady, 's , 's , and 's .

New Films from Japan series is the latest presentation of the ACA Cinema Project, representing the buzzworthy films of contemporary Japanese screen entertainment and highlighting the work of award-winning and celebrated filmmakers from Japan to film fans, industry insiders, dealmakers, and press in the United States. With these film series, ACA works to promote Japanese cinema internationally. Additional films, panels, events, and attending filmmakers and special guests will be announced soon.

Katsura Toda, Senior specialist for the arts at Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs – Government of Japan, and the organizer of ACA Cinema Project said, “These films are among the outstanding works that Japan has produced last year, with each sharing a true artistic achievement in filmmaking. All four films demonstrate a nuanced approach to storytelling, beautifully shot, with wonderful performances across the board. We could not be more excited to give them this platform at the IFC Center in New York City.”

Kei Ishikawa's A Man debuted at the Venice Film Festival. Adapted from the Keiichiro Hirano novel, the film looks at Japan's “lost generation” via a troubled lawyer plunged into a web of mystery when he is asked to follow the trail of a deceased man who lived under a false identity. Shô Miyake's Small, Slow but Steady, shot entirely on 16mm film, continues to receive rave reviews at over 13 international film festivals around the world, including Berlin. The film follows the emotional journey of a hearing-impaired young woman who is a talented boxer with natural instincts and abilities, who struggles to win when the aging boxing club president who was her biggest supporter can no longer be there for her in the same way. Nao Kubota's Thousand and One Nights won the FIPRESCI Award at the Busan International Film Festival. The film connects two women caught in an uncertain place between grieving and acceptance due to the mysterious disappearances of their husbands in a small coastal island town.

Yuji Nakae's The Zen Diary screened in the Culinary Cinema section of the San Sebastian International Film Festival and at the Hawaii International Film Festival. The film has attracted attention for the many delicious Zen dishes featured in the film in addition to its story about an author and cook living a solitary existence living off the land in the mountains, who finds he must face his own mortality while preparing food and writing his next manuscript. Juichiro Yamasaki's Yamabuki was the first Japanese film ever to be selected for the ACID section of the Cannes International Film Festival. The film intersects multiple characters whose loneliness and frustrations with where their lives have taken them have bubbled to the surface. They include a former equestrian athlete working off crushing debt while trying to start a new family with a young mother, and a high school girl whose publicly staged protests inspiring community action put her at odds with her father, a widowed policeman.

Ticket prices are as follows:
Adults: $17
Seniors and children: $14
IFC members: $12
Students: $13 (must show valid student ID at the box office)
ACA cinema project postcard coupon gives you a $4 discount as well.
For more information or to purchase tickets, go to: https://www.ifccenter.com/series/aca-japan-2023.

A Man

A Man (EAST COAST PREMIERE)
Director: Kei Ishikawa
Country: Japan; Running Time: 121 minutes
Adapted from the Keiichiro Hirano novel, A Man comments on the collective existential crisis of Japan's “lost generation” via the journey of a troubled lawyer plunged into a web of mystery when he is asked to follow the trail of a deceased man who lived under a false identity. As he gets closer to the shocking truth, he increasingly finds himself haunted by his own unsteady place in the world. Festivals/awards: Orizzonti Competition at the 79th Venice Film Festival, Naguib Mahfouz Award for Best Screenplay 44th Cairo International Film Festival

Small, Slow but Steady
Director: Shô Miyake  
Country: Japan; Running Time: 99 minutes 
A hearing-impaired woman with dreams of becoming a professional boxer discovers her fight isn't just in the ring with the next opponent, but also includes the struggle simply to focus and train properly due to the threatened closure of her boxing club compounded by the illness of its aging president, who has been her biggest supporter. Despite a lack of support and understanding from her family and her own struggles with feelings of self-worth, she must push herself to the limit if she is to succeed. The film stars Yukino Kishii and Tomokazu Miura. Festivals/awards: the 72nd Berlin International Film Festival, the 27th Busan International Film Festival, the 66th London Film Festival, the 56th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival

Thousand and One Nights

Thousand and One Nights (US PREMIERE)
Director: Nao Kubota
Country: Japan; Running Time: 126 minutes
A gently paced character-study of two women brought together by their shared experience of husbands who have gone missing, Thousand and One Nights is set in a beautiful port town on a remote northern island. Thirty years have passed since Tomiko's husband suddenly disappeared. She still doesn't know why he disappeared or if he is still alive. She fends off the overtures from Haruo, a local fisherman, as she keeps waiting for his return, holding on to the small memories of her beloved. Then she meets Nami, a younger woman, whose husband also disappeared, two years ago. The women connect over their shared loss, as Nami searches for the reason why her husband “disappeared” in order to come to terms with her situation and move on. Then, Tomiko happens to see Yoji, Nami's missing husband, on the street. The film stars Yuko Tanaka and Machiko Ono. Festivals/awards: the FIPRESCI Award at the 27th Busan International Film Festival

Yamabuki (US PREMIERE)
Director: Juichiro Yamasaki
Country: Japan/France; Running Time: 97 minutes
Languages: Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese
A story of finding a place to root yourself when life's obstacles have disheartened you. Multiple characters have stories that intersect including a former equestrian athlete forced to give up on his dream works at a quarry site to work off crushing debt while trying to find happiness with a woman and her infant daughter who are estranged from the girl's father. Meanwhile, Yambuki, a high school girl stages silent protests at a major intersection that begin to grow into community action to the dismay of her father, a widowed policeman. Everyone's frustration and loneliness that have been lying just under the surface, increasing reveal themselves and are given a voice, which in turn begins to connect people in unexpected ways. The film stars Kang Yoon-soo and Kilala Inori. Festivals/awards: the ACID section of the Cannes International Film Festival

The Zen Diary

The Zen Diary (EAST COAST PREMIERE)
Director: Yuji Nakae
Country: Japan; Running Time: 111 minutes
Adapted from Tsutomu Mizukami's book, The Zen Diary follows Tsutomu, a man who lives alone in the mountains, writing essays, cooking food with vegetables he grows and mushrooms he picks in the hills. His routine is happily disturbed when Machiko, his editor/love interest, occasionally visits to pester him for his next manuscript. She loves to eat, and he loves to cook for her. Tsutomu seems content with his daily life. However, a close brush with death will now force him to decide on what he values most in life and what he must choose going forward. The film stars Kenji Sawada and Takako Matsu. Festivals/awards: the Culinary Cinema section of the San Sebastian International Film Festival and the Hawaii International Film Festival

About the author

Adriana Rosati

On paper I am an Italian living in London, in reality I was born and bread in a popcorn bucket. I've loved cinema since I was a little child and I’ve always had a passion and interest for Asian (especially Japanese) pop culture, food and traditions, but on the cinema side, my big, first love is Hong Kong Cinema. Then - by a sort of osmosis - I have expanded my love and appreciation to the cinematography of other Asian countries. I like action, heroic bloodshed, wu-xia, Shaw Bros (even if it’s not my specialty), Anime, and also more auteur-ish movies. Anything that is good, really, but I am allergic to rom-com (unless it’s a HK rom-com, possibly featuring Andy Lau in his 20s)"

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