Labyrinth of Cinema explained

Labyrinth of Cinema
Native Name:
Kanji:海辺の映画館 キネマの玉手箱
Director:Nobuhiko Obayashi
Producer:Nobuhiko Obayashi
Cinematography:Hisaki Sanbongi
Editing:Nobuhiko Obayashi
Music:Kôsuke Yamashita
Distributor:Crescendo House
Runtime:179 minutes
Country:Japan
Language:Japanese
Gross:$4,501[1] [2]

is a 2019 Japanese anti-war fantasy drama film[3] written, produced, directed and edited by Nobuhiko Obayashi.[4] It stars, and Yoshihiko Hosoda as three present-day Onomichi moviegoers who find themselves transported back to 1945, just prior to the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. The cast also includes Rei Yoshida, Riko Narumi, Hirona Yamazaki and Takako Tokiwa.

Labyrinth of Cinema premiered at the 2019 Tokyo International Film Festival. It is Obayashi's final film before his death in 2020, as well as Yukihiro Takahashi and Hiroshi Inuzuka's last film roles before their deaths in 2023.

Cast

Main
Others

Production

In 2016, Nobuhiko Obayashi was diagnosed with stage-four terminal cancer.[5] Despite this, he wrote and directed Hanagatami (2017), and decided to start production on Labyrinth of Cinema after Hanagatami was completed. While filming and editing Labyrinth of Cinema, Obayashi was receiving treatment for his cancer.

Plot

On the eve of closing down for the last time, a local cinema is hosting an all-night movie marathon, showing classic Japanese war films. Three men, Mario Baba (a film buff), Shigeru (a Buddhist monk turned Yakuza street-thug) and Hosuke (an intellectual film historian) have all come to the cinema, albeit for different reasons, to watch the film. A fourth individual, a young schoolgirl named Noriko, is also there to learn about cinema and the history of war. The action starts in earnest when the 13 year old Noriko falls into the Setouchi Kinema movie screen and becomes a part of the film's narrative. The three protagonists also jump into the screen, and find themselves a part of the fabric of the films they were there to watch, as they try to save people from the horrors of war.

The film is largely composed of several interlinked eras in Japanese military history, beginning with the Boshin War of 1868, moving into the Sino-Japanese War of 1894, and into the second World War, with a particular insight into the impact of the war on Okinawa, and later the impact of the Atomic Bomb drop on Hiroshima. The protagonists find themselves in various scenarios within each war.

Critical reception

Deborah Young of The Hollywood Reporter referred to Labyrinth of Cinema as "Nobuhiko Obayashi's opus", calling it "exuberantly shot" and "imaginatively edited". Mark Schilling of Variety wrote that the film "has [Obayashi's] characteristic blend of surreal whimsy and heartfelt emotion."

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Labyrinth of Cinema (2021). The Numbers. November 5, 2021.
  2. Web site: Labyrinth of Cinema (2021). Box Office Mojo. November 5, 2021.
  3. Web site: Tokyo Film Festival: Nobuhiko Obayashi Re-enters 'Labyrinth of Cinema'. Schilling. Mark. 27 October 2019. Variety. 11 April 2020.
  4. Web site: 'Labyrinth of Cinema': Film Review Tokyo 2019. Young. Deborah. 5 November 2019. The Hollywood Reporter. 11 April 2020.
  5. Web site: Nobuhiko Obayashi Dies: Influential Japanese Filmmaker Succumbs To Cancer At Age 82.. Haring. Bruce. 10 April 2020. Deadline Hollywood. 11 April 2020.