SYNOPSICS
Umi no futa (2015) is a Japanese movie. Keisuke Toyoshima has directed this movie. Akiko Kikuchi,Azusa Mine,Yukichi Kobayashi,Orime Amagi are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2015. Umi no futa (2015) is considered one of the best Drama movie in India and around the world.
After leaving her career as a stage designer, Mari (Akiko Kikuchi) returns to her hometown to open an ice flakes store with Hajime-chan (Azusa Mine) who has a large burn scar on her face.
Umi no futa (2015) Trailers
Same Actors
Umi no futa (2015) Reviews
Life goes on
...this movie is very good directed. The shots, the color palette and the music(or lack off)interacting with the Sea s sound on and off are all items precisely crafted here making ordinary looks naturally. Yes, is a "suave" ongoing story, that in reality is more than one at the same time; however, the plot is not too focused in all these other potential stories, but for the wiser watcher, are all there: love stories (though love is not strong enough);growing; the economic problems in small towns; migration; lack of youth with enough guts to take control of these areas; struggling businesses; stubborn people et all. All that occur in a lovely little vacation town besides the Sea.
Going home
"There Is No Lid on the Sea" tells the story of Mari, a young woman that decides to give up her job in Tokyo and go back to her hometown, where she opens a little cafe selling 'kakigōri', a Japanese dessert made with shaved ice, syrup and sweetener. She gets the help of Hajime, a young woman who is staying with Mari's family for a short period. "There Is No Lid on the Sea" keeps all very simple and cozy. Mari, played with security by Akiko Kikuchi, is an interesting character, who suffers from remembering the past through a rose-tinted patina, all things better then than now. The movie, directed with little flash by Keisuke Toyoshima, is a naive and innocent look on the change that happens to little towns and cities when their inhabitants decide to move to the bigger cities, dying little by little (a situation that in some parts of Japan, as the one represented in the movie, has put a huge economic and demographic pressure on these places). In the end, the movie is about the need to accept change, the little dreams humans have and about accepting that going back to your roots doesn't mean you have failed in life. Its simplicity is part of its charm, but at the same time keeps it from being anything special.