Break Through!

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Break Through!
Japanese パッチギ!
Hepburn Pacchigi!
Directed by Kazuyuki Izutsu
Starring Erika Sawajiri
Shun Shioya
Yōko Maki
Cinematography Hideo Yamamoto
Release dates
  • January 22, 2005 (2005-01-22)
Country Japan
Language Japanese

Break Through! (박치기,パッチギ! Pacchigi!) is a 2005 Japanese film directed by Kazuyuki Izutsu.

Plot

Romeo, A.K.A. Kosuke Matsuyama (Shun Shioya), is a second-year high school student. A nice, normal, nonviolent type, he suddenly finds himself in the middle of a rampaging crowd of Korean boys, outraged by insults perpetrated by several of his idiotic class-mates on two Korean girls. He makes a narrow escape, but soon after, he and his best bud Yoshio (Keisuke Koide) are sent by their home-room teacher to invite the Korean students to a friendly soccer game as a way of restoring the peace.

Trembling like black-uniformed leaves, they enter enemy territory, where Kosuke encounters a doll-faced, but serious-looking girl (Erika Sawajiri) playing a Korean folk song, "Imjin River," on a flute. He and Yoshio are also nearly lynched by her older brother Lee Ang Son (Sosuke Takaoka) and his gang, but he is already smitten -- and eager to learn that haunting tune.

The story concentrates on Kosuke's struggle to not only master a song, but win the love of a girl who seems to live in an alien, hostile world. Meanwhile, Ang Son and his crew are street-fighting with Japanese toughs as if playing a contact sport, with one side scoring hits, then the other. He is macho to a fault, but when he learns that his sweet-heart (Kyoko Yanagihara) is pregnant and determined to keep the baby, he faces a choice that makes him quail: grow up or cop out.

Awards

48th Blue Ribbon Awards[1]

  • Won: Best Film

27th Yokohama Film Festival[2]

  • Won: Best Film
  • Won: Best Director - Kazuyuki Izutsu
  • Won: Best Cinematography - Hideo Yamamoto
  • Won: Best Newcomer - Erika Sawajiri and Shun Shioya

References

  1. "ブルーリボン賞ヒストリー" (in Japanese). Cinema Hochi. Retrieved 2010-03-31. 
  2. "第27回ヨコハマ映画祭 2005年日本映画個人賞" (in Japanese). Yokohama Film Festival. Retrieved 2010-01-16. 
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