Nerves. Trepidation. Dread. Courage. Affection. All these emotions raised heart rates in the latest episode of The Dangers in My Heart anime, but none were as pulsating as Yamada's indirect confession and her tears, which was sealed with the release of a brand-new story visual. Episode 18 story visual The new visual is also an "answer" to a previous story visual released for Episode 6, pictured below. Episode 6 story visual Related: The Dangers in My Heart Season 2 Anime Picks Up the Beat in Creditless Theme Song Videos Based on the manga by Norio Sakurai, The Dangers in My Heart is directed by Hiroaki Akagi at studio Shin-Ei Animation, with series composition by Jukki Hanada ( Bloom Into You ), character designs by Masato Katsumata ( The Quintessential Quintuplets 2 ) and music by Kensuke Ushio. Seven Seas Entertainment, which publishes the manga's official English version, describes the series as such: Kyotaro Ichikawa, a boy barely clinging...
- 2/11/2024
- by Liam Dempsey
- Crunchyroll
Previously in Song Of The Bandits Episode 3, Hee-shin and Eon-nyeni made their way to MayeongJeong, while Lee Yoon and Seon-bok decided to wait for the vehicle carrying the railway construction money to arrive to perform the heist. However, seeing Lee Yoon alive, Eon-nyeni decided to kill him, resulting in a fight between them. However, the Japanese authorities’ intervention stopped their altercation from escalating and put them behind bars. Later, at the request of the Japanese consul, Yamada, Lee Yoon, Eon-nyeni, and Seon-bok were released from prison.
Episode 4 of Song of the Bandits opened with a grim visual, showcasing the brutality and torture the Japanese army had inflicted upon Joseon’s people. An army general called Lee Gawang to his office and expressed his suspicion about Gawang’s loyalty to the Japanese force. The general asked if Gawang was aware of the railway construction money getting transferred from Hoeryong to MayeongJeong,...
Episode 4 of Song of the Bandits opened with a grim visual, showcasing the brutality and torture the Japanese army had inflicted upon Joseon’s people. An army general called Lee Gawang to his office and expressed his suspicion about Gawang’s loyalty to the Japanese force. The general asked if Gawang was aware of the railway construction money getting transferred from Hoeryong to MayeongJeong,...
- 9/24/2023
- by Poulami Nanda
- Film Fugitives
Searchlight Pictures’ theatrical trailer for All of Us Strangers teases the fantasy/drama without completely spoiling the storyline. Following the film’s successful festival run – it currently sits at 94% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes – All of Us Strangers is set to open in theaters on December 22, 2023.
Paul Mescal (Aftersun), Andrew Scott (Fleabag), Jamie Bell (Shining Girls), and Claire Foy (The Crown) star in the drama based on the novel Strangers by Taichi Yamada. Andrew Haigh adapted Yamada’s novel and directs, with Graham Broadbent, Peter Czernin, and Sarah Harvey producing. Diarmuid Mckeown, Ben Knight, Ollie Madden, Daniel Battsek, and Farhana Bhula serve as executive producers.
Searchlight Pictures offer this synopsis:
One night in his near-empty tower block in contemporary London, Adam (Scott) has a chance encounter with a mysterious neighbor Harry (Mescal), which punctures the rhythm of his everyday life. As a relationship develops between them, Adam is preoccupied with memories...
Paul Mescal (Aftersun), Andrew Scott (Fleabag), Jamie Bell (Shining Girls), and Claire Foy (The Crown) star in the drama based on the novel Strangers by Taichi Yamada. Andrew Haigh adapted Yamada’s novel and directs, with Graham Broadbent, Peter Czernin, and Sarah Harvey producing. Diarmuid Mckeown, Ben Knight, Ollie Madden, Daniel Battsek, and Farhana Bhula serve as executive producers.
Searchlight Pictures offer this synopsis:
One night in his near-empty tower block in contemporary London, Adam (Scott) has a chance encounter with a mysterious neighbor Harry (Mescal), which punctures the rhythm of his everyday life. As a relationship develops between them, Adam is preoccupied with memories...
- 9/21/2023
- by Rebecca Murray
- Showbiz Junkies
Cauleen Smith’s capricious, slyly resourceful DIY feature debut, Drylongso, follows photography student Pica (Toby Smith) as she struggles to find her artistic voice in a school whose methodology is disconnected from the harsh realities of late-’90s Oakland. Countless Black men in her neighborhood have been victimized by police and gang violence or mercilessly swallowed by the prison industrial complex, and now there’s a serial killer on the loose targeting Black youth. In the film’s first scene, Pica even witnesses another young woman, Tobi (April Barnett), get beaten up in front of her house and abandoned by her boyfriend (Timothy Braggs).
Pica copes with, and confronts, these various forms of violence by taking Polaroid photos of as many Black men as she can, explaining to Tobi, whom she soon befriends, that it’s because they’re becoming an endangered species. A supportive teacher, Mr. Yamada (Salim Akil...
Pica copes with, and confronts, these various forms of violence by taking Polaroid photos of as many Black men as she can, explaining to Tobi, whom she soon befriends, that it’s because they’re becoming an endangered species. A supportive teacher, Mr. Yamada (Salim Akil...
- 8/30/2023
- by Derek Smith
- Slant Magazine
The hardships of life in the remote Japanese islands has been a topic of a number of movies lately, most of which, though, present it through a happy-go-lucky prism that occasionally even looks like some sort of promotion. Masahiko Nagasawa follows the same path essentially, but also highlights the issues people living in such locations face, through a subtle approach that also combines coming-of-age elements.
Nagi’s Island is screening at Camera Japan
Following her parent’s divorce, fourth grader Nagi has moved with her mother, Mao, a nurse, to her hometown on a small island in Setouchi in Yamaguchi Prefecture, where her grandmother, a doctor, runs the only clinic. Nagi appears normal and cheerful, but also fosters deep psychological traumas resulting from memories of her alcoholic father abusing her mother, which occasionally trigger panic attacks. The locals know of her issues and always try to help, and this mentality actually goes both ways.
Nagi’s Island is screening at Camera Japan
Following her parent’s divorce, fourth grader Nagi has moved with her mother, Mao, a nurse, to her hometown on a small island in Setouchi in Yamaguchi Prefecture, where her grandmother, a doctor, runs the only clinic. Nagi appears normal and cheerful, but also fosters deep psychological traumas resulting from memories of her alcoholic father abusing her mother, which occasionally trigger panic attacks. The locals know of her issues and always try to help, and this mentality actually goes both ways.
- 9/29/2022
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
It’s always a joy when a new film by Japanese director Naoko Ogigami is released. After “Close-Knit”, awarded at the Berlinale, “Riverside Mukolitta” (Kawapperi Mukolitta) is her latest feature, a film adapted from a novel written by Ogigami herself.
Riverside Mukolitta is screening at Camera Japan
Takeshi Yamada (Kenichi Matsuyama) is a lonely young man who arrives, penniless and looking desolate, in the coastal town of Toyama, to work at a shiokara (salted squid) factory. We don’t know at this point why Yamada is there or anything about his past, but factory CEO Sawada (Naoto Ogata) who knows everything, gives him a warm welcome and sends him to Shiori Minami (Hikari Mitsushima) who will be able to find him a cheap accommodation. In fact, landlady Shiori, a young widow with a daughter, lets a 50-year-old flat to Yamada for a good price, part of the small compound called Mukolitta Apartments,...
Riverside Mukolitta is screening at Camera Japan
Takeshi Yamada (Kenichi Matsuyama) is a lonely young man who arrives, penniless and looking desolate, in the coastal town of Toyama, to work at a shiokara (salted squid) factory. We don’t know at this point why Yamada is there or anything about his past, but factory CEO Sawada (Naoto Ogata) who knows everything, gives him a warm welcome and sends him to Shiori Minami (Hikari Mitsushima) who will be able to find him a cheap accommodation. In fact, landlady Shiori, a young widow with a daughter, lets a 50-year-old flat to Yamada for a good price, part of the small compound called Mukolitta Apartments,...
- 9/27/2022
- by Adriana Rosati
- AsianMoviePulse
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