Asian Film Awards
最佳導演|最佳女配角提名

最佳導演|最佳女配角提名
最佳女配角提名
最佳女配角
最佳男主角

儘管是枝裕和有許多電影是以家庭為創作主題,但若留心每部作品的組成人物跟變化,也能看出那各異其趣的細微之處:《無人知曉的夏日清晨》拍的是長不大的母親與被迫長大的孩子他們的生存無力感;《小偷家族》是一群無血緣關係的人卻組合出家庭的核心定義;結構跟本片相似的《比海還深》描述了一個永恆少年般的男人如何成為父親;而《橫山家之味》則拍出了家庭之中必然的疏遠與遺憾。
There’s something magical about the seaside in summer— a charm that makes you forget time, inviting you to linger in the warmth of fleeting romance. Inspired by the Summer by the Sea feature in the latest issue of Japanese culture magazine Sanma, the editorial team curates a wistful film series set along the coastal towns of Japan’s Kanto region. These six summer films are perfect companions for the season’s memories. Wander through the nostalgic seaside home of Still Walking, soaking in the gentle friction of ordinary family life in Shōnan. Listen for the waves in the final notes of Ryuichi Sakamoto’s farewell. Escape into the dreamlike world of Swallowtail Butterfly and encounter the hallucinatory metropolis of Yen Town. Each of these cinematic landscapes captures a unique Japanese summer, stirring up the most enchanting waves in your heart. This summer, come watch the sea—and the films—with us.
For many, half of their family stories unfold at the dining table. Take Eat Drink Man Woman, where family storms brew and erupt between courses, or The Wedding Banquet, whose banquet scene captures what it means to live under “five thousand years of sexual repression.” The other half of those stories often lies beneath the table—hidden in secrets and silence. Like the cryptic relatives in The Walchensee Forever, or the adults in Yi Yi, each burdened with their own quiet thoughts. This Lunar New Year, after the family feast, gather once more—for a film. Let your family story play out on screen.
What’s your most unforgettable food memory? A fine dining experience with rituals and impeccable service? A family dinner full of casual conversations and shared dishes? Or a quiet afternoon alone with coffee and dessert? Food takes many forms. It leads us through moments both ordinary and profound. From the soil to the plate, every dish carries a story. In "Love × Food × Chefs", you’ll meet those who let crops grow at their own pace, those mad geniuses of the kitchen, and the ones who cook with slow-burning love and care. So come with an open heart—and appetite—and savor the stories simmering behind every dish.
.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
In pursuit of happiness, we sometimes end up unhappy. Youth is always dazzling—and cruel. Family ties are always volatile—and tender. Yet it’s often only in the aftermath of youth that we begin to understand: happiness cannot be frozen in time. This sticky, sun-drenched summer, Giloo presents 11 masterworks on family and fleeting joy—beginning with Shunji Iwai’s All About Lily Chou-Chou and closing with Edward Yang’s Yi Yi. From Ang Lee’s Father Knows Best trilogy to Tsai Ming-liang’s Water Trilogy, with appearances by Hou Hsiao-hsien and Hirokazu Kore-eda along the way, each film explores the paradox of happiness, or perhaps the quiet truth that happiness—like memory—can never be held still.
As a child, Lunar New Year was filled with rituals that stretched on forever: visiting flower markets on the first day, returning to Mom’s hometown on the second, sleeping in without guilt on the third, welcoming deities and appeasing spirits on the fourth, and opening shop on the fifth in hopes of great fortune. Especially after years of turbulence, watching a festive film during the holidays has become both a small indulgence and a quiet affirmation that life still holds its rhythm. A moment to feel that flutter of the heart, or to follow one’s instincts without question— letting that sense of tradition, pure and timeless, softly settle in, like a long-lost lover returning, slowly making their way toward us…
2023/3/31-2023/4/9 期間限定,兌換觀影序號【DEATH】免費觀看片單 30 天!