Japanese Film Love Exposure to Open in New York City’s Cinema Village

Comments Off on Japanese Film Love Exposure to Open in New York City’s Cinema Village

After an acclaimed one-week run at Cinefamily in Los Angeles, CA, Olive Films recently announced the theatrical release of the already-legendary Japanese film Love Exposure (2008), scheduled to open on September 1, 2011 in New York City at Cinema Village.

This bombastic feature film (clocking at a gargantuan 237 minutes) from director Sion Sono (Suicide Club, Cold Fish) ambitiously tackles life’s biggest themes: love, death, sex, revenge, religion and up-skirt panty photography.

Winner of dozens of international awards (including the FIPRESCI Prize at the 2009 Berlin Film Festival), Love Exposure tells the story of Yu (Takahiro Nishijima), a teenager driven to a life of sin, romantic extremes and sexual perversions by his father’s desperate conversion into extreme Catholicism.

After losing his wife and a maniac-depressive lover, Tetsu (Atsurô Watabe) becomes obsessed with his son’s spiritual (and certainly sinful) life. Pressed to confess a couple of dark crimes (and yet, as innocent as they come),Yu hits Tokyo’s underground in search of a perfect sin – and in the process, joins a gang of teenagers training in the ‘art’ of panchira (clandestine panty snapshots!).

On his search for the perfect photo, Yu harasses enough girls to shock his all-forgiving, bible-thumping father, who finally behaves as such and punishes his ‘perverse’ son. Happy to have his father’s attention, Yu decides to fully dedicate himself to the art of panchira – and he quickly becomes one of the very best. Yet, when Yun falls for the Virgin-Mary-like Yoko, he also gets involved with Zero Church, a fanatic religious group with a bizarre agenda of their own.

What comes next is a mix of apocalyptic fervor, pornographic empowerment and girl-power madness, in a film that unfolds into a mosaic of ecstatic narratives while remaining committed (and surprisingly focused) to its romantic main plot.

“At its heart,” wrote film critic Hayden Maxwell, “Sion Sono‘s film is a demented romance movie where the adversities love has to face are Catholic guilt, Japanese perversion, mistaken identity, a cult, and mental illness.” Not bad for a four-hour flick!

 

Read More Share

Recent Author Posts

Join Our Community

Connect On Social Media

Most Popular Posts

We Blog The World

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This

Share this post with your friends!