Screen/Society--Cine-East: Japan Foundation Film Series--"Hanging Garden" (35mm)

Wednesday, November 14, 2012 - 2:00pm to 4:00pm
Screen/Society--Cine-East: Japan Foundation Film Series--"Hanging Garden" (35mm)

Film Screening:

 

Hanging Garden
(Toyoda Toshiaki, 2005, 113 min, Japan, in Japanese with English subtitles, Color, 35mm)

-- Introduced by Prof. Leo Ching (AMES)!

Enfant terrible of new Japanese cinema, Toyoda Toshiaki investigates the flimsy nature of reality in Hanging Garden. By exposing the underlying dynamic of the outwardly cheerful Kyobashi family, he reveals lives that rest upon a structure of secrets, lies and misremembered truths. The film revolves around Eriko Kyobashi (Kyoko Koizumi) a wife and mother obsessed with creating the perfect, happy family. To that end, she insists everyone in the household operate under one strict rule: "We never conceal the truth, no subject is taboo. We try to share everything with each other." On the surface, her social experiment seems to work; the family appears to be quite open with one another. But as the title's reference to the Hanging Garden of Babylon suggests, this "garden of perfection" may be nothing more than a myth.

-- Part of the Japan Foundation Film Series within Cine-East.

Cost: Free and Open to the Public!

Sponsors: The Asian/Pacific Studies Institute (APSI), the Program in the Arts of the Moving Image (AMI) and the Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies (AMES). Made Possible by the Japan Foundation (NY Office).

Bryan Center Griffith Film Theater