Himizu (film)
Himizu (ヒミズ) is 2011 Japanese drama film based on the manga series of the same name by Minoru Furuya[2] and directed by Sion Sono.[2][3] The word himizu is the Japanese name for a species of mole. The film competed in competition at the 68th Venice International Film Festival in September.[4] At the festival, Shōta Sometani and Fumi Nikaidō received the Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best New Young Actor and Actress for their work in the film.[5] Cast
ProductionDevelopmentThe director Sion Sono had already written the film's script when the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami struck Japan on 11 March 2011.[6] After this disaster, he decided to rewrite the script to adapt the film to this disaster.[6] CastingThe lead stars of the film were officially announced on 10 June 2011.[7] The lead actor for the film is Shōta Sometani, who plays the role of Sumida, a 15-year-old who suffers from the violence that his father inflicted onto him.[6] Actress Fumi Nikaidō his co-star, plays Chazawa, a rich girl who is Sumida's classmate.[7] Additional cast members of the film are Yōsuke Kubozuka, Yuriko Yoshitaka, Anne Suzuki and singer Takahiro Nishijima.[8] Actress Yoshitaka previously starred in the 2006 film Noriko's Dinner Table,[8] which was also directed by Sion Sono.[9] Nishijima is from the music group AAA,[8] and also previously starred in Sion Sono's 2009 award-winning film Love Exposure.[10] FilmingMost of the filming took place at a special set in Ibaraki Prefecture during May 2011.[7] ReceptionCritical receptionHimizu currently holds a 94% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[11] The film was a New York Times Critics' Pick, with Miriam Bale praising its sound design and noting Sono "uses sound, a low, grumbling noise like an earthquake, to convey [dystopian Japan]. He also gives the film a harrowing cacophony and a sense of trauma with sound effects, including subtle echoes."[12] Deborah Young of The Hollywood Reporter criticized the film as being "fraught with brutal violence and needless repetition that draws out its two-hour running time" and added that the film "is still not an easy film to like".[6] However, the reviewer praised the ending of the film, which she describes as "achingly real" and "extraordinarily intense and effective".[6] She also praised the film's young leads Shōta Sometani and Fumi Nikaidō, who she said "grow in stature as the film progresses".[6] Accolades
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