Vital documentary
"This experimental documentary is a must-see. A strangely crafted insight into an unknown world."
This special limited edition slipcover (designed by Yurie Hata) 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!
Welcome to Shari: a small town, located on the easternmost part of Japan’s northernmost island, Hokkaido, in the Shiretoko Peninsula where the Sea of Okhotsk meets Russian shores. Here, we meet hunters and bakers who love venison a few ways; expert flying squirrel enthusiasts and a collector known for his “Hall of Hidden Treasures”. At the heart of it all is the conspicuous absence of drift ice and fish in this crucial winter season. Meanwhile, the Red Thing, a yeti sanguine “like a throbbing blood clot” rampages through the scenery where folklore blossoms from man and nature converging – the latter now skipping a beat.
Nao Yoshigai (whose spectacular short films have charmed festival audiences across the world, including at Cannes’ Director’s Fortnight with Grand Bouquet) makes her feature debut with Shari, a remarkable experimental documentary bringing the viewers to one of Japan’s most secluded and magnificent areas. Like Yoshigai’s short works – which straddles the line between documentary, dance film, and fantasy – Shari is multifaceted: part introspective travelogue, part exploration of myth and legend, part climate change diary and artful in situ intervention. It offers a unique viewpoint into a place and people rarely captured on film and advocates for the future of Japan’s far-flung areas, uncertain in a warming world.
directed by: Nao Yoshigai
starring: various
2021 / 63 min / 1.78:1 / Japanese DTS-HD MA 2.0
Additional info:
Overall rating: 4.733333 / 5 from 15 reviews.
Review topics: ["feel","documentary","film","release"].
"This experimental documentary is a must-see. A strangely crafted insight into an unknown world."
"My partner used to live in this area, so very excited to check it out!"
"The rural areas of Japan feel almost mythical to me and I find just about any scrap of video or information on them fascinating, so this film was an easy sell to me. Wonderful footage of what seems like a dream to live in as well as laying out the ways it's changing in a natural, intelligent way without screaming bluntly as social media seems to be training people to function like."
"An incredibly intriguing and avant garde approach to the subject. Glad things like this make it's way around the world for everyone to experience."
"What did I expect? Nothing, really! And what is it anyway? A documentary about a small village in the mountains of Japan? A study of climate change and fishing? A mythology of a remote region? Somehow all of that, and yet not. I was very impressed by the film, but you have to be open to this style of storytelling."
"definitely a unique documentary. Haven’t seen something quite like it. Loves that this includes two short films as well."
"The documentary feels like a bit of a fever dream, but a good one. What makes this unique is a loose plot involving a red monster, and some stray animation in the film's world. If (like me) you love Kani releases, then this one is definitely worth a buy!"
"This documentary about a snowy Hokkaido village blends a stunning naturalistic aesthetic with a striking red and white visual motif, a “red thing” symbolizing both the villagers’ imagination and the filmmaker’s presence. Through intimate, charming portraits, Yoshigai captures the atmosphere in a way that feels sensual and warm. The result is a beautifully subjective ethnography, as comforting and rich as a glass of red wine on a winter night."
"Shari is a calm, visually striking documentary about life in a small town in northern Japan. It doesn’t tell you what to think—just lets you watch people go about their routines, surrounded by nature and quiet moments. It’s simple, slow, and surprisingly moving."
"In winter 2020, Japan's Shiretoko Peninsula sees unusually little snow and no drift ice. While Shari villagers carry on despite concerns, a red scarecrow-like creature appears in their rural setting."
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