Morty
Oh man...

Shinji Aoyama, Regisseur von Filmen wie "Lakeside Murder Case", "Eureka" (meiner Meinung nach der beste japanische Film!) und "Eli Eli, Lema Sabachtani?" hat bereits seinen neuen Film am Start und will es anscheinend wieder richtig wissen. "Sad Vacation", so der Titel, startet noch dieses Jahr in Japan, mit einem absoluten Hammer-Cast bestehend aus Tadanobu Asano, Joe Odagiri, Aoi Miyazaki und Meiko Kaiji (ja, die Meiko Kaiji, aus Japan's Exploitationsfilmen der 70er!!!).
Viele Infos gibt es noch nicht, aber laut Twitchfilm wurde die offizielle Webseite des Films geupdated, welche bereits einige Bilder liefert.
http://www.sadvacation.jp/
With a mother who left him and a mentally ill father that committed suicide, Kenji grew up with no parents. Working as a designated driver, he meets Mamiya one day. At Mamiya's transport company, a variety of people on the run or with pasts they don't talk about exist together without scrutinizing their lives. Due to a certain coincidence, Kenji intuitively senses that Mamiya's wife Chiyoko is his mother who left him. From some certain speculation, the two start living together. Does their strong, inescapable bond make them do it? Is his mother playing with fate as Kenji must choose to oppose or be cursed by his blood relative? What awaits these two as they live together?
Das macht Laune.

Shinji Aoyama, Regisseur von Filmen wie "Lakeside Murder Case", "Eureka" (meiner Meinung nach der beste japanische Film!) und "Eli Eli, Lema Sabachtani?" hat bereits seinen neuen Film am Start und will es anscheinend wieder richtig wissen. "Sad Vacation", so der Titel, startet noch dieses Jahr in Japan, mit einem absoluten Hammer-Cast bestehend aus Tadanobu Asano, Joe Odagiri, Aoi Miyazaki und Meiko Kaiji (ja, die Meiko Kaiji, aus Japan's Exploitationsfilmen der 70er!!!).
Viele Infos gibt es noch nicht, aber laut Twitchfilm wurde die offizielle Webseite des Films geupdated, welche bereits einige Bilder liefert.
http://www.sadvacation.jp/
With a mother who left him and a mentally ill father that committed suicide, Kenji grew up with no parents. Working as a designated driver, he meets Mamiya one day. At Mamiya's transport company, a variety of people on the run or with pasts they don't talk about exist together without scrutinizing their lives. Due to a certain coincidence, Kenji intuitively senses that Mamiya's wife Chiyoko is his mother who left him. From some certain speculation, the two start living together. Does their strong, inescapable bond make them do it? Is his mother playing with fate as Kenji must choose to oppose or be cursed by his blood relative? What awaits these two as they live together?
Das macht Laune.