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Firefly Dreams

Firefly Dreams
List Price: $12.95
Medicine Alternatives Price: $11.49
Your Savings: $ 1.46 ( 11% )
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Manufacturer: Fox Lorber
Starring: Maho, Tsutomu Niwa, Etsuko Kimata, Haruo Hanahara, Shunsuke Kabeya
Directed By: John Williams
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5

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Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9780794204556
Format: Anamorphic
ISBN: 0794204554
Label: Fox Lorber
Manufacturer: Fox Lorber
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Fox Lorber
Region Code: 1
Release Date: 2004-03-16
Running Time: 105
Studio: Fox Lorber
Theatrical Release Date: 2001

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Editorial Reviews:

Naomi, a seventeen year-old city brat from Nagoya, finds her world turned upside down after the breakup of her parents' marriage. Packed off to the country, she reluctantly works at her aunt's inn until being asked to care for Mrs. Koide, an aging relative with Alzheimer's disease. At first, Naomi dislikes looking after the old woman, but over the course of the summer, the two develop an extraordinary friendship that transcends age and experience. The debut feature from international filmmaker John Williams (Midnight Spin), Firefly Dreams stars veteran Japanese actress Yoshie Minami (Akira Kurosawa's Ikiru) and newcomer Maho Ukai in a critically acclaimed performance.


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Sweet
Comment: Objectively speaking this movie doesn't cover new ground. Rebel youth gets sent away to relatives in a 'healthy' environment(this time the countryside) to learn responsibility.

However.. The way the movie tells its story is incredibly moving.
Likable yet spunky characters, some fine acting and beautiful photography bring Firefly Dreams' world alive and within minutes you're drawn into the story.

Sometimes the old stories just work. I mean if it ain't broke why fix it?
This film is a great example of this. Recommended to fans of fine (coming of age) drama.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Good, but not exceptionally memorable!
Comment: According to American director John Williams, the firefly, to Americans, is just a bug that lights up. But in Japan, the firefly is a symbol of nostalgia. Nostalgia plays a big role in this Japanese 2001 film where a 17-year old rebellious city-girl makes a transition and cares for an elderly woman with Alzheimers.

The character, Naomi, was based on his own experience and he said a few years after coming to Japan, he met a rebellious young girl and it reminded him of his own youth.

With her parents in a troubled marriage, Mom suddenly leaves; Naomi is sent to an work at an aunt's hotel, is clearly unsatisfied and the aunt sends her to care for an aging woman with Alzheimers. It is during this time that the two bond, share secrets, reminisce the past, embark on self-discovery, coming-of-age, etc.

Yoshi Minami, an 84-year old Japanese actress plays Mrs. Koide, an actress of the past who now has signs of Alzheimers disease. Naomi is intrigued with the old actress and pursues a search for the film she starred in.

Although the theme about young kid forced to stay with elderly isn't new in Japanese film, the movie brings to mind the Korean film The Way Home, about a relationship between a bratty kid and his deaf and very patient grandmother. To me, The Way Home offered much more and was more entertaining. Firefly Dreams moved slow and wasn't memorable.

See Firefly Dreams also through the eyes and ears of the commentary feature by the director. You will learn more about the symbolism and themes in the film. It is helpful. An interview with the director is also included on the DVD.

Cinematograpy was stunning! .....MzRizz


Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: exquisite
Comment: Firefly Dreams is touchingly observed, lovingly filmed and depicts nuanced characters whose dramas will resonate beyond the rural Japanese setting. Other reviewers will give you the storyline; the director (not an English teacher, a Welshman teaching Film in a Japanese university) was nominated for a Best Director Award by the Japanese Academy. The critical acclaim and international awards deservedly heaped on Firefly Dreams show why his second soon-to-be released feature is already creating a buzz. This is a filmmaker whose career is about to go stellar, and a look at this moving, assured debut will reveal why. The last shot is one of the most cathartic moments I have ever witnessed on film. This is a must-see film for fans of Japanese and international cinema.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: The best kind of Japanese movie...
Comment: ...subtle, slow-moving, so beautifully shot, with understated humour and sparse dialog so you have to read between the lines (a bit *too* much, hence the lack of a 5th star).

I watched it twice straight through, the second time to hear the director's voice-over, which is pretty interesting too.

It is a film of its time - its time being the late 90s or early 2000s (Oh that hair! Those fashions!) - but the basic messages are eternal (as are the whining complaints by the girl...).

It's a good "Coming-of-age" film for teens, as well as for those who are nostalgic for Japan.

The story is described in other reviews, so never mind that, but although I like that you have to work harder to understand certain things that happen in the story-

(at some point I thought, "God he's making us really work for this, he MUST be a teacher!" and indeed he is...)

-I was left especially frustrated re. the father and what happens to him. A bit too oblique.

All in all a lovely film though. Nice to see a bit of unspoiled Japan as well!

I have heard that, and can understand why, there are those who wouldn't be able to sit through it out of boredom. It's not an action movie, and don't put it on if you're feeling any pent-up aggression!

But it's a great film.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Gentle film of a teenage girl's coming of age
Comment: Marvelous in many ways, this film is confusing at times -- intentionally, pretentiously so, according to the director's own commentary. If any director was poised to make a film based on both an intimate knowledge of Japanese culture (from years teaching in Japan) and an understanding of what the person in the West understands about Japan (and what needs explication), that would have been Williams. It's a shame he did not take that opportunity but instead tried to make a strictly Japanese film (of a subject apparently already well covered recently in non-exported movies).

"Firefly Dreams" is essentially a Japanese version of the Korean "The Way Home" -- bratty, spoiled, modern teen Naomi (Maho Ukai, credited as Maho), with her orange knit dress and bleached hair, is sent to help her relatives who run a country inn when her parents' marriage is on the skids. She must cope with a simple cousin Yumi, and gets the task of helping the elderly Mrs. Koide (Yoshie Minami) who is losing her memory. In the process she become .. adult, human.

Many sad things ensue, which I won't detail since that would give away what plot there is. In spite of it all, Naomi makes a genuine friend of Mrs. Koide (as well as cousin Yumi), intrigued by her mysterious past, including a possible appearance in an obscure film, "Among the Fireflies". The interplay between newcomer Maho and veteran stage actress Minami is a pleasure to behold. As the film ends, Naomi has found a copy of this film and we watch her watching the young Mrs. Koide.

Despite its lack of originality, the story is touching nonetheless and holds the interest. The acting is good to excellent, and the cinemetography of the beautiful, unspoiled region of central Japan, Horaicho (in Aichi prefecture, only a couple of hours from Nagoya; definitely on my list of hoped for vacation spots!) is a joy to watch. The DVD commentary track is educational, both of the director's ego and of background for the film. (Most of the cast,incidentally, was made up by local casting.)

Despite my carps this is an enjoyable and beautiful film. You might want to wait until it's on the 5-day rental shelf, though (or,heck, go out and buy it), so you have time to watch the film, the commentary, then go back and watch the film again.



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