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    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Posted By: FNB47
    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)
    1344.4 MB | 1:58:38 | Japanese with English s/t | XviD, 1300 Kb/s | 640x400

    From the award-winning director Kore-eda Hirokazu (Maborosi) comes a remarkably touching film exploring the profound human need to discover meaning in everyday life. Many films have offered insight into the unexplainable realm of the after life. In Hirokazu's thought-provoking vision, the newly deceased find themselves in a way station somewhere between Heaven and Earth. With the help of dedicated caseworkers, each soul is given three days to choose one cherished memory from their life that they will relive for eternity. As the film reveals, recognizing happiness and finding a life's worth of meaning in a single event is no simple task. If Heaven is only a single memory from your life, as Hirokazu suggests, which memory would you choose? New Yorker

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    After people die, they spend a week with counselors, also dead, who help them pick one memory, the only memory they can take to eternity. They describe the memory to the staff who work with a crew to film it and screen it at week's end; eternity follows. 22 dead arrive that week, assigned to three counselors and a trainee. One old man cannot find a memory, so he watches videotape of his life. Others pick their memory quickly, and the film crew gets right to work. The trainee, 18-year-old Shiori, helps a teenage girl choose a memory other than Disneyland. The youthful staff have a secret and feelings, too, which play out, especially Shiori's affection for her mentor, (http://imdb.com/title/tt0165078/plotsummary)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Every Monday morning, a team of advisors welcome in a facility a group of people that has just died with the mission of helping each one of them to select their best memory that will last for the eternity in the first three days. On Thursday, filmmakers begin to recreate the selected memory, and in the end of the week they screen it in a movie theater and he or she moves to Heaven. (http://imdb.com/title/tt0165078/plotsummary)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    This unpretentious, endearing film is a modest triumph. Based on interviews with more than 500 people about the one memory they would choose to take with them to heaven, Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-Eda has modeled a unique blend of documentary and fiction that addresses the vagaries of memory but also what it means to make films. After Life transpires in a sort of way station where the dead must select one memory to be re-created on film and taken on with them forever, relinquishing everything else. Over the span of a week, a dedicated group of caseworkers tease out self-deceptions as well as real epiphanies from 22 different lives. An old woman remembers reuniting with her husband on a crowded bridge after World War II; a man recollects the breeze felt on a tram ride the day before summer vacation; a successful man faces his own treachery. Remembering becomes a courageous act in the casual exposition of this lovely film. (–Fionn Meade - Editorial Reviews - Amazon.com)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Hirokazu Koreeda-Wandâfuru raifu ('After Life') (1998)

    Newly dead people assemble in a kind of limbo (it looks like an old school) and are asked to choose, after a polite interview, a single memory of happiness. A celestial film crew then makes a movie of that moment, and the shade is allowed to live with the memory for all eternity. In this sombre, delicate Japanese fantasy, written and directed by Kore-eda Hirokazu (a former documentary-maker), the light is gray and even, the emotions tranquil, the politeness exquisite. Hirokazu has no interest in orgiasts or roller-coaster riders: the cherished moment, it turns out, may be nothing more than a passing mood of pleasure-a breeze felt at a window-or a pleasure given rather than one received. The picture raises a marvellous, fanciful question: Are all movies simply the favorite dreams of the dead? With Naito Taketoshi as a fastidious elderly man whose life was too uneventful to yield an easy choice. (-David Denby - The New Yorker)