Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The film makes some alterations to the book, including the reordering of the plot, giving names to the novel's mostly anonymous characters (Nobuchi is solely addressed as "Sensei" in the book, and Kaji as "K"), and the emphasising of a possible homoerotic element in the relationships Nobuchi–Kaji and Nobuchi–Hioki.
The Anthem of the Heart (Japanese: 心が叫びたがってるんだ。, Hepburn: Kokoro ga Sakebitagatterunda, lit. ' My Heart Wants to Shout '), abbreviated as Kokosake (ここさけ) and subtitled Beautiful Word Beautiful World, is a 2015 Japanese animated youth drama film produced by A-1 Pictures and released in 2015.
Kokoro (こゝろ, or in modern kana usage こころ) is a 1914 Japanese novel by Natsume Sōseki, and the final part of a trilogy starting with To the Spring Equinox and Beyond and followed by The Wayfarer (both 1912). [1]
Sōseki's novel has been adapted for film and television numerous times, the first time for cinema by Kon Ichikawa in 1955 as The Heart.For his version, writer/director Shindō moved the story's Meiji era setting to the 1970s [4] and put his focus only on the novel's third and final part, "Sensei to isho" ("Sensei's testament").
Tokyo Movie Shinsha and Toho Directed by Isao Takahata. 1982 Space Adventure Cobra: The Movie: Tokyo Movie Shinsha Key animation by Hayao Miyazaki. 1982 Gauche the Cellist: OH Production: Directed by Isao Takahata. 1982 The Wizard of Oz: Topcraft: Music composed by Joe Hisaishi. 1984 Sherlock Hound: Tokyo Movie Shinsha: Six Episodes directed by ...
The CD single was released in five versions: Limited Editions A, B, and C; and Regular Editions A and B. Both Regular Editions were CD-only. All of the limited editions came with a DVD containing music videos, and included a serial-numbered entry card for the lottery to win a ticket to one of the single's launch events.
"Itoshisa to Setsunasa to Kokoro Zuyosa to" (恋しさとせつなさと心強さと, lit. "This Love, This Pain, This Strength of Heart") is the fourth single by Japanese singer Ryōko Shinohara , released on July 21, 1994, by Epic Records / Sony Music Entertainment Japan under the Tokyo Performance Doll label Cha-Dance.
Right after their first two Japanese maxi singles Kokoro and Distance, SS501 released their first full-length Japanese self-titled album, SS501 on October 24, 2007, by Pony Canyon. [ 2 ] The album consists of eleven songs: two singles from their first two maxi singles, "Kokoro" and "Distance"; two Japanese versions of "Again" and "4Chance" from ...