Sakura Guardian in the North

Sakura Guardian in the North (北の桜守, Kita no Sakuramori) is a 2018 Japanese drama film, directed by Yōjirō Takita and written by Machiko Nasu.[1] Stage Production was by Keralino Sandrovich, Director of Photography is Takeshi Hamada and the music was by Kei Ogura and Katsu Hoshi.

Sakura Guardian in the North
Directed byYōjirō Takita
Produced byRioko Tominaga
Screenplay byMachiko Nasu
Starring
Music byKei Ogura
Katsu Hoshi
Shōgo Kaida
CinematographyTakeshi Hamada
Edited byHidemi Lee
Distributed byToei
Release date
  • March 10, 2018 (2018-03-10)
Running time
126 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Plot

The story starts in 1945, with Tetsu Ezure (played by Sayuri Yoshinaga and her sons living in Sakharin. The Russian army invades, and Tetsu flees with her sons, while her husband (played by Abe Hiroshi) stays behind to fight. The family manage to flee to Hokkaido, and eventually settle in Abashiri. The plot then skips forward to 1971, and one of the sons, Shujiro (Masato Sakai) is now an executive at a US Multi National Hot Dog sales company.[2] While visiting Sapporo, he encounters his mother, from whom he had previously become estranged. His mother, now down on her luck, seeks his help. while he and his wife are reluctant to assist. The plot looks at the past of the family.[1]

Upon realising something is wrong with her, partially related to her post traumatic stress disorder, she leaves to go back to her original house in Abashii, however, it has been demolished. Shujiro, reaching out to his mother, accompanies her through the plains of Hokkaido, where they encounter stories of the past.[2][3]

Cast

Box office

The film took $2 million from 351 screens on its first weekend showing in Japan.[4]

References

  1. Schilling, Mark. "'Sakura Guardian in the North': A melodrama 'Sayurists' can be proud of". The Japan Times.
  2. "Sakura Guardian in the North info and high res photos from toei". SciFi Japan.
  3. Tanaka, Makoto (24 March 2018). "A moving tale of a mother and her son". Yomiuri Shimbun.
  4. Schilling, Mark (13 March 2018). "'Doraemon Treasure Island' Tops Weekend Chart". Variety.
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