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On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 100% based on 19 reviews, with an average rating of 8.5/10. [6]In 2017, IndieWire ' s Michael Nordine gave the film a grade of "A−", calling it "very much a trip, the kind you might not be able to make sense of at every step of the way but later, after returning to reality, will be glad to have embarked on."
Flower Shop Without A Rose (薔薇のない花屋, Bara no nai Hanaya) is a Japanese television drama. It was broadcast and produced by Fuji Television . It started with a 22.4% (Kanto Region) rating on January 14, 2008.
Blue Spring (青い春, Aoi haru) is a 2001 Japanese youth drama film, written and directed by Toshiaki Toyoda [1] and based on Taiyō Matsumoto's manga of same title. It tells a tale of apathetic school students at a run-down Tokyo high school for boys. It was released on September 10, 2001. [1]
The DVD of Lost in Translation was released on February 3, 2004, [105] and includes deleted scenes, a behind-the-scenes featurette, a conversation about the film featuring Murray and Coppola, and a music video for "City Girl", [106] one of the original songs composed for the film by Kevin Shields.
"Tokyo Rose" by The Good Men "Tokyo Rose" by Hogsnort Rupert "Tokyo Rose" by Idle Eyes "Tokyo Rose" by Kamikaze "Tokyo Rose" by Riot "Tokyo Rose" by The Rods "Tokyo Rose" by Shok Paris "Tokyo Rose" by UK Subs "Tokyo Rose Sings The Blues" by Richie Cole (musician) "Tokyo Rush" by Brisk & Vagabond vs. Uraken "Tokyo Sally" by Creation (Japanese band)
The US-based Sukiya Living magazine (formerly Journal of Japanese Gardening) has awarded the Adachi Museum its highest honor – most beautiful traditional garden – for more than 20 years running.
In Yasushi Sasaki's Hatachi no Seishun (1946), the first kiss scene of a Japanese movie was filmed. The Mainichi Film Award was also created in 1946. [38] The first movie released after the war was Soyokaze, directed by Yasushi Sasaki, and the theme song Ringo no Uta was a big hit. [39] Yoshiko Kuga
"Blue Rose" was written by Kudo, under the pseudonym Aeri, and Takashi Tsushimi. [2] It is the first single since "Senryū no Shizuku" to have Kudo credited as a lyricist. The song is written in the key of C♯ minor and set to a tempo of 112 beats per minute. [6] Kudo's vocals span from E 3 to C ♯ 5. Lyrically, Kudo incarnates a woman ...