13th New York Asian Film Festival

Jun 27 - Jul 14, 2014

Photo:

U.S. Premiere

Au revoir l'été

ほとりの朔子

A light comedy of manners played out during 10 days in a seaside town, Au revoir l'été is a nicely played rondo of human behavior that's amazingly mature for a writer-director who's still in his early thirties. With its teenage central character Sakuko (a strikingly assured Nikaido Fumi), who philosophically observes the small hypocrisies and lies by the adults around her, as well as goes through a small learning experience of her own, Au revoir l'été echoes Eric Rohmer's films, especially Pauline at the Beach (1983). And when Sakuko's 10 days of "summer holiday" suddenly ends, so too does the movie. No one has changed, life goes on, eternal truths remain out of reach. But director Fukada doesn't look like he's just aping an established genre. From its acceptance of various social norms to the way in which the protagonists interact (or, more often, avoid confrontation), the film authentically Japanese, and is the better for it.

Director: Fukada Koji
Cast: Coshino Ena, Otake Tadashi, Sugino Kiki, Furutachi Kanji, Taiga, Tsuruta Mayu, Nikaido Fumi
Languages: Japanese with English subtitles
2013; 125 min.; DCP

SCHEDULE:

Tuesday July 8, 9:00pm
Film Society of Lincoln Center

Q&A with actress Nikaido Fumi.

Screen International Rising Star Asia Award
Nikaido Fumi
二階堂ふみ

"Nikaido... disappears into her roles, creating characters that are radically different from each other, from the swaggering gangster's daughter in Why Don't You Play in Hell? and the bubbly Gothic Lolita girl in Mourning Recipe to a cool-eyed student in the coming-of-age drama Au Revoir l'eté." –Mark Schilling

Born in 1994 in Naha, Okinawa, Nikaido Fumi has graced Japanese screens from an early age, starting from her first TV drama, Juken no Kamisama, in 2007, and Yakusho Koji's directorial debut, the bizarre family comedy Toad's Oil, in 2009. She rose to international prominence in 2011, when she received the Marcello Mastroianni Award (a prize awarded to best newcomers) at the 2011 Venice Film Festival for her outstanding electrifying performance in Sion Sono's Himizu, jointly with co-star Sometani Shota (whose girlfriend she played).

Since then, she has appeared in Brain Man, alongside star actor Ikuta Toma, Miike Takashi's Lesson of Evil, and Tanada Yuki's Mourning Recipe. As part of a focus on the meteoric ascension of the 20-year-old former model and now full-fledged actress, NYAFF will present Fukada Koji's summer-at-the-beach drama Au Revoir l'eté, Sono's action comedy Why Don't You Play in Hell?, and My Man by Kumakiri Kazuyoshi.