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[1] [4] At the age of 55, after the death of her husband, she started writing full-time, drawing on her own experiences of age and loneliness. [ 5 ] Wakatake's first book, Ora ora de hitori igu mo ( I'll Live By Myself ), about a Tōhoku dialect -speaking widow coping with life alone after the death of her husband, was published in 2017. [ 6 ]
I, a Woman (original Danish: Jeg - en kvinde) is a 1965 black-and-white Danish-Swedish erotic film whose break-through popularity helped initiate a wave of sexploitation films into mainstream American theaters in the late 1960s, [2] and inspired Andy Warhol to write and direct his feature-length experimental film version I, a Man.
As a Wife, As a Woman, also titled The Other Woman and Poignant Story (妻として女として, Tsuma to shite onna to shite) is a 1961 Japanese drama film directed by Mikio Naruse. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Plot
The Eternal Breasts (乳房よ永遠なれ, Chibusa yo eien nare), also titled Forever a Woman, is a 1955 Japanese drama film directed by actress Kinuyo Tanaka. It is based on the life of tanka poet Fumiko Nakajō (1922–1954).
Senpai Is an Otokonoko is a romance manga [1] following Makoto Hanaoka, a high school student who dresses like a woman despite his mother's disapproval. [3] Saki Aoi, a girl attending the same high school as Makoto, falls in love with him under the belief that he is a woman, and only learns the truth after confessing her feelings for him and getting rejected. [4]
Two years later, on the day of Itsuki's memorial ceremony, Hiroko looks through his high school yearbook and finds an address under his name. She writes a letter to him and receives a reply from a woman named Itsuki Fujii, who bears a striking resemblance to Hiroko. The movie alternates between Hiroko and Female Itsuki as they exchange letters.
Be with You (いま、会いにゆきます, Ima, Ai ni Yukimasu), is a 2004 Japanese drama film based on a Japanese novel of the same name written by Takuji Ichikawa. [2] [3] The film was adapted from the novel by Yoshikazu Okada, and it was directed by Nobuhiro Doi. [2] It stars actress Yūko Takeuchi as Mio Aio and actor Shido Nakamura as ...
I Am What I Am (Japanese:そばかす, Hepburn: Sobakasu) is a Japanese film released on December 16, 2022, and is the third production by (not) HEROINE movies. [1] [2] It was written by Atsushi Asada, directed by Shinya Tamada, and stars Tōko Miura in the lead role.