Strawberry Shortcakes
Strawberry Shortcakes (ストロベリーショートケイクス) | |
---|---|
Directed by | Hitoshi Yazaki |
Written by | Kiriko Nananan Kyoko Inukai |
Starring |
Chizuru Ikewaki Noriko Nakagoshi Yûko Nakamura Kiriko Nananan Ryō Kase Masanobu Ando |
Release dates | 2006 |
Running time | 127 min. |
Language | Japanese |
- This article refers to the Japanese movie. For the greeting card character, see Strawberry Shortcake. For the dessert, see shortcake.
Strawberry Shortcakes (2006) is a Japanese film by director Hitoshi Yazaki. The film, based on the Japanese manga of the same name by Kiriko Nananan, concerns the life of four girls, as they deal with their own insecurities while living in the metropolis of Tokyo. This movie ranked 7th Best Film at the 2006 Yokohama Film Festival[1] and got Best Supporting Actress and Best Cinematography prizes from the same festival.[2]
Plot
The plot revolves around four ladies struggle to find happiness in the capital city of Tokyo:
Satoko: Works as a receptionist at escort service “Heavan’s Gate.” At home, she often prays to God to find a boy that will love her.
Akiyo: Works at escort service “Heavan’s Gate” as a prostitute. She saves her money in order to eventually buy a condo situated on the 5th floor or higher. Once she gets old & senile, she plans to jump out of her apartment to her death.
Chihiro: Works in a low level office position. When her roommate, Toku, asks if there is a God, she replies “God would be something like a boyfriend. Buys me whatever I want and makes possible all my wishes.”
Toku: Works obsessively as an animator, suffers from bulimia.
Cast
- Satoko – Chizuru Ikewaki
- Chihiro – Noriko Nakagoshi
- Akiyo – Yuko Nakamura
- Toko Iwase – Kiriko Nananan (the original comic writer)
- Nagai – Ryō Kase
- Kikuchi – Masanobu Ando
Awards
- Best Supporting Actress: Yûko Nakamura, 2006 – Yokohama Film Festival[2]
- Best Cinematography: Isao Ishii, 2006 – Yokohama Film Festival[2]
References
- ↑ " 2006年日本映画ベストテン" (in Japanese). Yokohama Film Festival. Retrieved December 31, 2009.,
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 "第28回ヨコハマ映画祭" (in Japanese). Yokohama Film Festival. December 14, 2006. Retrieved July 3, 2010.