Japan Japan

Japan Japan
Directed by Lior Shamriz
Starring Imri Kahn
Release date(s) 8 August 2007
Running time 65 minutes
Country Israel
Language Hebrew, English
Budget 200 USD

Japan Japan (Hebrew: יפאן יפאן, Japanese:日本日本) is a 2007 film directed by Lior Shamriz, starring Imri Kahn.

Contents

Cast

Actor Role
Imri Kahn Imri
Tal Meiri Tal
Irit Gidron Irit
Naama Yuria Naama
Amnon Friedman Amnon
Benny Ziffer Benny

Plot

The film tells the story of Imri, who at 19 goes to live in Tel Aviv, but dreams of moving to Japan. Through his relationships and encounters and in diverse cinematic tools, we are introduced to the young man's life. An exploration of living in the exotic city of Tel Aviv is presented through a hero who is himself in the midst of exploring his own choice of an exotic place. A unique correlation is formed between the hero's misconception of Japan and ours of him. The movie was constructed by both improvised and pre-scripted scenes, as required by the nature of each scene.

Production

The film was reportedly produced for as little as 200 USD, with volunteer actors and no additional crew.[1] Nevertheless, it was presented at some prestigious venues around the world such as the Locarno Film Fesival,[2] the New York Museum of Modern Art,[3] the Buenos Aires Independent Film Festival and more than fifty film festivals. Due to dozens of copyright violations[4] the film has not been commercially released. It is, however, well distributed through the underground network of illegal art distribution.

Critical reception

The film received polar reviews from the critics, ranging from cutting edge, brilliant [5][6] to the horror of video when it falls into the wrong hands.[7] The film was named by MoMA chief curator as one of the top ten films of 2008.[8]

The filmmaker said about the film: One interesting challenge was how to create an interesting viewing experience in a film where it is impossible for the viewer to experience the film through the hero's eyes. As the hero says himself: 'Whoever looks at me, expects to see the drama or the thoughts, but the face is empty.' [9]

See also

References

External links