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Fireflies(PART 1)



 


Fireflies(PART 1)


 



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Kato, how come you bring up fireflies in these wintry days? . . .



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Well . . . Good question! . . . I've got a long story to answer your question.


Then make it short and tell me about it.


I wrote the following story:


 



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Popes@Spotlight


 



Yes, I know you did.



You viewed "The Two Popes" at the Vancouver International Film Festival, didn't you?


Yes, I did. . . It is one of the best movies I've watched this year.


 



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Is the above film that good?



Oh yes, belive me. . . I swear to God it's that good.


Actually, I read the following article the other day.


 



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Zoom In


Actual Article


 



As you see, “The Two Popes” was nominated for the 2020 Golden Globe award.



So was “Marriage Story”.


Yes, both films were shown at the VIFF.


 



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Kato, have you watched “The Two Popes” yet?



No, I haven't. . . As you know, I made a request so that the library would hold the DVD for the movie.


 



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Are you gonna wait till the library gets the DVD?



Yes, I am.


Kato, . . . It will take some time for the library to get one. . . You can watch "The Two Popes" at Vancity Theatre on Seymour Street.


 



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Really? . . . Anyway, I searched the library catalogue for both movies, but I could find none of those movies. . . So, I viewed the following movie.


 



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"ZOOM IN"


"ACTUAL PAGE"




My Comment


December 12, 2019


 


Written and directed by Isao Takahata in 1998 based on the 1967 semi-autobiographical short story of the same name by Akiyuki Nosaka, this animated war film depicts the lives of two siblings, Seita and Setsuko as well as their desperate struggle to survive during the final months of the Second World War.


It turns out a profoundly gripping, haunting and achingly sad anti-war drama.



 



Are you saying that the above movie has something to do with "The Two Popes"?



Oh no. . . I chose it simply because I read the original short story written by Akiyuki Nosaka. . .


I see. . . Is the story well-known in Japan.


Yes, it is. . . Actually, Nosaka won the Naoki Prize for best popular literature for this story and "American Hijiki", which was published a month before. . . Both short stories along with four others were bundled as a book in 1968.


Then Isao Takahata directed the anime based on the short story, huh?


That's right. . . The film was released on April 16, 1988, over twenty years from the publication of the original work.


I see. . . How does it go?


It goes like this:


 



Grave of the Fireflies


 



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PLOT


 


On 21 September 1945, shortly after the end of World War II, a teenage boy named Seita dies of starvation in a Kobe train station.
A janitor sorts through his possessions and finds a candy tin, which he throws into a field.


The spirit of Seita's younger sister, Setsuko, springs
from the tin and is joined by Seita's spirit and a cloud of fireflies.
They board a train.


Some months earlier, Seita and Setsuko's house is destroyed in a firebombing along with most of Kobe.
They escape unharmed, but their mother dies from severe burns.


Seita and Setsuko move in with a distant aunt, who convinces Seita to sell his mother's silk kimonos for rice.
Seita retrieves supplies he buried before the bombing and gives everything to his aunt, save for a tin of Sakuma drops.


As rations shrink and the number of refugees in the house grows, the aunt becomes resentful of the children, saying they do nothing to earn the food she prepares.


Seita and Setsuko leave and move into an abandoned bomb shelter.


 



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They release fireflies into the shelter for light.
The next day, Setsuko is horrified to find that the insects have died.
She buries them in a grave, asking why they and her mother had to die.


As they run out of rice, Seita steals from farmers and loots homes during air raids, for which he is beaten.
When Setsuko falls ill, Seita takes her to a doctor, who explains that she is suffering from malnutrition.


Desperate, Seita withdraws all the money in their mother's bank account.
As he leaves the bank, he becomes distraught when he learns that Japan has surrendered.
He also learns that his father, a captain in the Imperial Japanese Navy, is most likely dead, as most of Japan's navy has been sunk.


Seita returns to the shelter with a large quantity of food, but finds Setsuko hallucinating - she assumes that a few marbles she finds are the previously mentioned Sakuma drops, and offers Seita rocks, thinking she had just made rice balls.


Seita hurries to feed her, but she dies as he finishes preparing the food, and she herself falls asleep.


 



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Seita cremates Setsuko's body and her stuffed doll in a straw casket.


He carries her ashes in the candy tin along with his father's photograph, and though his death is never explicitly shown again, it can be assumed this is where everything ends for them.


Seita and Setsuko's deceased spirits arrive at their destination, healthy and happy.
Surrounded by fireflies, the siblings rest on a hilltop bench overlooking the skyline of present-day Kobe.




SOURCE: "Grave of the Fireflies"
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



... seems like a sad story.



Yes, it is. . . You might cry if you see it.


Anyway, I'd like to watch the film.


You can see the full movie here.



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(To be continued)


by denman1720 | 2019-12-21 03:48 | 英語・英会話

徒然に綴る面白いブログ


by denman1720