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After her father's sudden death, a Japanese high school girl travels to the southwest Pacific archipelago of New Caledonia in search of the location, which they had agreed to visit together, of the film's title. From her encounters with Japanese émigrés and locals, she learns where the real island closest to heaven may be found. [1] [2]
Come See the Paradise is a 1990 American historical drama film written and directed by Alan Parker, and starring Dennis Quaid and Tamlyn Tomita.Set before and during World War II, the film depicts the treatment of Japanese Americans in the United States following the attack on Pearl Harbor, and the subsequent loss of civil liberties within the framework of a love story.
Three women - tea planter's wife Adrienne Pargiter, model Rosemary Leighton-Jones and Australian nurse Susan Macarthy - swim their way to the shores of the island of Sumatra. The women are found by a Japanese officer, Captain Tanaka, and ushered firstly to a deserted village and then a prison camp in the jungle where they are reunited with the ...
Majimu: Island Dreamer: Kaoru Haga: Sairi Ito [128] Young and Fine: Toshiya Kominami: Taisuke Niihara, Yuka Kouri, Yuki Araho [129] Dwindling World: Makoto Kawamura: TBA [130] Lupin the IIIrd: The Movie: Takeshi Koike: Kanichi Kurita, Akio Otsuka, Daisuke Namikawa, Miyuki Sawashiro, Koichi Yamadera [131] Rewrite: Daigo Matsui
Welcome to Japan may refer to: Welcome to Japan, a video album for The Music's 2004 album Welcome to the North "Welcome to Japan", a song by The Strokes from their 2013 album Comedown Machine; Welcome to Japan, Ms. Elf!, Japanese light novel series; Welcome to Japan, Mr. Bond, a one-hour colour television programme made to promote the 1967 film ...
President Donald Trump could be heard telling reporters, “we love Japan” when he welcomed the Japanese prime minister to the White House on Friday (7 February. Trump and Prime Minister Shigeru ...
Pacific Overtures is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, and a book by John Weidman, with "additional material by" Hugh Wheeler.. Set in nineteenth-century Japan, it tells the story of the country's westernization starting in 1853, when American ships forcibly opened it to the rest of the world.
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