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The Great Passage(bc sunday)
Opening on 02-10-2016
HK
133 minutes
Japanese(Chinese, English Subtitle)
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Synopsis
Cult arthouse director Yuya Ishii (Sawako Decides) racked up top honors at the Japan Academy Awards (best picture, best director, best actor for Ryuhei Matsuda, best script plus technical prizes) with this captivating existential drama/comedy featuring a charmingly nerdy editor, Majime Mitsuya (Ryuhei Matsuda), who spends decades writing and compiling definitions for a "living language" dictionary while courting his landlady's granddaughter. Set in the mid-1990s, The Great Passage starts as the responsibility for putting together the massive dictionary project is passed on from long-time editor Kouhei Araki (Kaoru Kobayashi) to Majime Mitsuya, a much younger man with a degree in linguistics and an obsessive love for words. An oddball ode on the surface, the film is in fact a deeply humanist tribute to the power of language to connect people, a poignant study of life's slow but steady progression, and ultimately, about finding a reason to live. Director
Yuya Ishii Cast |
Ryuhei Matsuda, Aoi Miyazaki, Joe Odagiri |
* = Special first show concession tickets available for senior citizens

The Great Passage(bc sunday)
Opening on 02-10-2016
HK
133 minutes
Japanese(Chinese, English Subtitle)
Synopsis
Cult arthouse director Yuya Ishii (Sawako Decides) racked up top honors at the Japan Academy Awards (best picture, best director, best actor for Ryuhei Matsuda, best script plus technical prizes) with this captivating existential drama/comedy featuring a charmingly nerdy editor, Majime Mitsuya (Ryuhei Matsuda), who spends decades writing and compiling definitions for a "living language" dictionary while courting his landlady's granddaughter. Set in the mid-1990s, The Great Passage starts as the responsibility for putting together the massive dictionary project is passed on from long-time editor Kouhei Araki (Kaoru Kobayashi) to Majime Mitsuya, a much younger man with a degree in linguistics and an obsessive love for words. An oddball ode on the surface, the film is in fact a deeply humanist tribute to the power of language to connect people, a poignant study of life's slow but steady progression, and ultimately, about finding a reason to live. Director
Yuya Ishii Cast
Ryuhei Matsuda, Aoi Miyazaki, Joe Odagiri
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* = Special first show concession tickets available for senior citizens