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Montreal World Film Festival's blog
Th festival runs August 27th till September 7th, 2009
Japanese Classics And Contemporary Titles At Montreal
This year, to honor the 100th birthday of Madame Kawakita, the Festival is presenting three films of iconic Japanese masters, including Akira Kurosawa (IKIRU, 1952), Nagisa Oshima (GISHIKI, 1971) and Shohei Imamura (VENGEANCE IS MINE, 1979). By collaborating with international film festivals around the world, the Film Institute is fulfilling its mission of bringing timeless Japanese classics to the attention of new generations of film goers. But the focus on Japanese cinema is not only on films of the past. The Festival is presenting a host of new Japanese films in its various program sections. In the prestigious World Competition, two Japanese films are included in the roster. NOBODY TO WATCH OVER ME, which has its World Premiere today, is a crackerjack police thriller that has a contemporary slant of the intrusion of the internet on the investigation of the murder of two young girls by an adolescent boy. OKURIBITO (Departures) is a moody story of a former cellist who becomes a nokanshi, someone who prepares dead bodies for the next world.
The Montreal World Film Festival bows to the East to present some world cinema classics and a diverse crop of new Japanese talents to the world stage. Sandy Mandelberger, Montreal FF Dailies Editor |
About Montreal World Film Festival Sandy Mandelberger
Online Dailies Coverage of the 31st Montreal World Film Festival View my profile Send me a message User imagesUser contributionsUser linkstags for Japanese Classics And Contemporary Titles At Montreal |

















Sandy Mandelberger
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