Small Boat

Small Boat

Release date : January 1, 1992
Runtime : 16m
Countries of origin :
Original Language : Japanese /
Director : Hideto Ishii /
Writers :
Production companies :
January 1, 1992 16m Japanese More
5
User Score

Overview

The photographs of two elderly people used in this work were taken during a train journey in the first half of Ishii's previous work, "Wind crossing" He uses it as a photograph. There is no doubt that these two are particularly memorable for Ishii, but how should we as an audience perceive these acts? Then something occurred to me. In my work "Guiding Star", there is a part where I walk through an underground passage at night during a trip in Hokuriku. That place was Kanazawa. Lately I've been visiting Kanazawa every year for the Maki Asakawa live video screening, but most of the time I travel from Kansai to Kanazawa, or vice versa, by express bus. Then, the bus always passes through that underground passage. Ah, it was here. With that thought in mind, I play with the memories of that trip for a while, no longer happy or sad, but dry and dry. It might be something similar. However, in my case, unlike Ishii's narration in the story, I feel like "it somehow continued to live." M.Yamazaki
More »

Top Billed Cast

More

Images

View All Images

Recommendations

More
Paragraph 78: Film One
Thriller Action Science Fiction
I Love Us
Crime Drama Romance
Mask the Kekkou: Reborn
Action Adventure Fantasy Science Fiction
Murder Mubarak
Comedy Crime Thriller
  • title:Small Boat
  • status:Released
  • Release date: 1992
  • Runtime:16m
  • Genres:
  • Countries of origin:
  • Original Language: Japanese ·
  • Director: Hideto Ishii /
  • Writers:
  • Production companies:
  • Overview:The photographs of two elderly people used in this work were taken during a train journey in the first half of Ishii's previous work, "Wind crossing" He uses it as a photograph. There is no doubt that these two are particularly memorable for Ishii, but how should we as an audience perceive these acts? Then something occurred to me. In my work "Guiding Star", there is a part where I walk through an underground passage at night during a trip in Hokuriku. That place was Kanazawa. Lately I've been visiting Kanazawa every year for the Maki Asakawa live video screening, but most of the time I travel from Kansai to Kanazawa, or vice versa, by express bus. Then, the bus always passes through that underground passage. Ah, it was here. With that thought in mind, I play with the memories of that trip for a while, no longer happy or sad, but dry and dry. It might be something similar. However, in my case, unlike Ishii's narration in the story, I feel like "it somehow continued to live." M.Yamazaki
Search history
delete
Popular search