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Nippon Connection in Frankfurt, Germany: The Summer Festival of Japanese Cinema

brings Japanese cinema and culture to Frankfurt! For six days, from June 6 to 11, 2023 you can discover Japan with all senses. Instead of streaming on the sofa, the summer festival of Japanese cinema offers one-time big screen cinema experiences, intriguing talks with guests from Japan, a wide range of culinary specialties as well as many workshops and concerts. The two main venues of the 23rd Nippon Connection Film Festival are at Künstler*innenhaus Mousonturm and Produktionshaus NAXOS. Further venues will include the Cinema at the DFF – Deutsches Filminstitut & Filmmuseum, Eldorado Arthouse Kino, Mal Seh'n Kino, Internationales Theater Frankfurt and NaxosAtelier. The complete program with more than 100 Japanese short and feature-length films and about 50 supporting program events will be published mid-May 2023.

Toko Miura

For the first time, the festival will present the Nippon Rising Star Award, celebrating an up-and-coming talent of the Japanese film world. The awardee is singer and actress Toko Miura, who has also become well known internationally for her main role in the Academy Award-winning drama “Drive My Car” (2021) by Ryusuke Hamaguchi.

This year's thematic focus “Cityscapes and Countryside”, supported by the Kulturfonds Frankfurt RheinMain, explores life in the Japanese cities and the countryside. Until today, Japan is often said to be a country of contrasts, with centuries-old traditions meeting technological innovations, and megacities next to rural regions where time seems to stand still. About 20 selected feature and documentary films as well as lectures and discussions will create a differentiated picture of seemingly opposite worlds, without sentimentalizing country life or glorifying the big city.

In Germany and even Europe, only few Japanese films can be seen regularly in cinemas or on streaming platforms. The Nippon Connection Film Festival offers a unique chance to all festival visitors to discover fascinating new Japanese cinema – from shorts and documentaries to anime and large feature film productions. The majority of the films will celebrate their premiere at the festival with the filmmakers being present. After three years of the pandemic, the festival will be back to screening its program exclusively on the big screen and not as video-on-demand. “First and foremost, we want to create the Nippon Connection Film Festival as a magical place to experience cinema together and to talk with filmmakers and artists”, says festival director Marion Klomfass. Hotel partners offer special conditions for a stay during the festival: NipponConnection.com/hotels

The program and tickets are expected to be available on the festival homepage NipponConnection.com from mid-May 2023.

About the author

Rouven Linnarz

Ever since I watched Takeshi Kitano's "Hana-Bi" for the first time (and many times after that) I have been a cinephile. While much can be said about the technical aspects of film, coming from a small town in Germany, I cherish the notion of art showing its audience something which one does normally avoid, neglect or is unable to see for many different reasons. Often the stories told in films have helped me understand, discover and connect to something new which is a concept I would like to convey in the way I talk and write about films. Thus, I try to include some info on the background of each film as well as a short analysis (without spoilers, of course), an approach which should reflect the context of a work of art no matter what genre, director or cast. In the end, I hope to pass on my joy of watching film and talking about it.

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