Kus vaadata Inland Sea Eestis
Wai-chan is one of the last remaining fishermen in Ushimado, a small village in Seto Inland Sea, Japan. At the age of 86, he still fishes alone on a small boat to make a living, dreaming about his retirement. Kumi-san is an 84 year old villager who wanders around the shore everyday. She believes a social welfare facility “stole” her disabled son to receive subsidy from the government. A “late - stage elderly” Koso-san runs a small seafood store left by her deceased husband. She sells fish to local villagers and provides leftovers to stray cats. Foresaken by the modernization of post-war Japan, the town Ushimado's rich, ancient culture and tight-knit community are on on the verge of disappearing.
Vaata "Inland Sea" kohe DocAlliance Films ja avasta veelgi rohkem viise, kuidas Popcorn Time'i ülimat voogedastusjuhendit kasutades oma lemmik film sukelduda.
Avasta veel rohkem voogesitusvõimalusi Inland Sea jaoks!
Avasta, kuidas vaadata Inland Sea mitmel platvormil ja erinevates riikides! Olgu sa kodus või välismaal, legaalsete voogedastusvõimaluste leidmine pole kunagi olnud lihtsam. Alates , on Inland Sea kättesaadav juhtivatel teenustel nagu . Ligipääsetav 4 teises riigis, saad uurida kohandatud voogedastusvõimalusi, mis vastavad kohalikele litsentsinõuetele, tagades muretult ja legaalselt vaatamiskogemuse.
Rohkem infot
- Kestus
- 122 minutit
- Välja antud
- Päritoluriik
- Jaapan
- Keeled
- en
Sarnased filmile Inland Sea
Film
In the Japanese town of Ushimado, the shortage of labor is a serious problem due to its population’s rapid decline. Traditionally, oyster shucking has been a job for local men and women, but for a few years now, some of the factories have had to use foreigners in order to keep functioning. Hirano oyster factory has never employed any outsiders but finally decides to bring in two workers from China. Will all the employees get along?
Oyster Factory (2015 )
Film
The account of a journey through an imaginary city, filmed along China’s new trade routes. Like the fictionalized Marco Polo from Italo Calvino’s “Invisible Cities”, the traveller in this film talks of worlds that resemble familiar places but follow their own, sometimes seemingly incredible rules. The observations condense into a meditation about the nature of cities and the transformation of the concept of globalization.
A Million (2021 )
Film
The scratched and faded – and at times almost abstracted – home movies that pass through the projector in Tetsuya Maruyama's "Shashin no Ma" simultaneously welcome and resist nostalgia, in what is both a meditation on the physical nature of the analogue film strip and the ghosts that reside within it as well as a poignant tribute by an artist-filmmaker son to his amateur-filmmaker father.
Shashin no Ma (2020 )
Film
Science fiction and desire collide when an American researcher meets a Japanese translator. Clouds drift beyond the towering high rise blocks; down below, nature suffocates in a Tokyo river.
A Tiny Place That Is Hard to Touch (2019 )
Film
In the industrial city of Kawasaki, on the corner of the street where my grandparents used to live, bettors of keirin — a cycling race developed in post-war — gather in a tiny bar busy drinking, chatting and gambling at the velodrome nearby. Most are old men who struggle to make a living for themselves; most have lived in this town their whole lives. This film frankly captured with a fixed camera, gives voice to the lives of the elderly men who have been left behind by Japan's economy.
Kawasaki Keirin (2016 )