I can’t say enough how
"I can’t say enough how much I love these Kani releases."
This special limited edition slipcover is limited to 1,000 units and is only available on our website and at select indie retailers. Absolutely no major retailers will be stocking them.
Named after Yasujiro Ozu’s custom-made, tatami-level, crab-like tripod, Kani is a new home video label dedicated to leveling the gaze and furthering the understanding of Asian cinema in North America. Focused on genre-defying films, Kani aims to expand the canon, bolster up-and-coming filmmakers and reintroduce repertory classics in context. Vinegar Syndrome’s sister company, OCN Distribution, is thrilled to be representing this diverse and unique home video line!
Before Desert of Namibia, Yoko Yamanaka premiered Amiko, described as a “distant cousin of Louis Malle’s Zazie dans le métro” by way of the uniquely DIY spirit of the self-produced film (jishu eiga) tradition.
The young Amiko is obsessed with her classmate Aomi, a cool soccer player and Radiohead fan, with whom she goes on a short, but memorable stroll through the park. There begins a fixation that carries over the entire school year: a period during which she dares not speak to the boy, though she obsesses over him with every waking thought. So when he run away to the big city to pursue his own life, Amiko becomes determined to find him, and tell him how she really feels, on a journey that will take her from her banal home town of Nagano to the bustling, anonymous streets of Tokyo.
Amiko is a gleefully irreverent, crystalline sour-sweet confection of extreme emotions, forged in the fiery pits of adolescence. Having dropped out of college herself to pursue this first feature, Yamanaka subverts the image of the schoolgirl into a strong counter-cultural figure, revealing what should become a cult character: a young punk in seifuku, resisting apathy, mass culture and a boy’s indifference one fistful of conviction at a time. Shot with available means and a bathtub-full of mouth-puckering passion, this Pia Film Festival-awarded and Berlinale-selected film established Yamanaka as one to watch.
directed by: Yoko Yamanaka
starring: various
2017 / 66 min / 1.78:1 / Japanese DTS-HD MA 5.1
Additional info:
Overall rating: 4.6842103 / 5 from 19 reviews.
Review topics: ["packaging","film","coming of age film","movie","gem","kani","release"].
"I can’t say enough how much I love these Kani releases."
"Excellent performances in this gem of an indie from Japan"
"Kani is so good at releasing movies that are just so angsty and dramatic and speak to me. I can’t explain the specific way this tickles my brain and keeps me engaged, but it’s worth the watch!"
"Pretty amazing that director Yoko Yamanaka was 19 when she shot this flick. Quite short at a bit over 60 mins but I had a blast. The 2 Q&As are pretty interesting extras. All in all a great purchase."
"Great Japanese movie"
"As I stated in the title, this is a good coming of age movie. A quirky teenager falls in love with a classmate and then goes looking for hom when he disappears with another girl. As other reviewers have pointed out, it is reminiscent of Zazie dans la Metro and is a fun look at the mind of a teenager. Overall it was an entertaining and enjoyable watch. It also has elements of female empowerment, especially at the end."
"Incredible coming of age movie with a weird sense of humor"
"A great coming of age film from a female director. Kani always with the unusual picks!"
"I love coming of age films and this one was a lot of fun! Recommend Beautiful packaging as well."
"Although this film has been shown at many festivals around the world, it completely passed me by. It's a wonderful, sensitive film that is a mixture of road movie and coming-of-age story. Great actors, many locations filmed without permission, and sooooooo Japanese, reminiscent of the early films of Shunji Iwai!"
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