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SYNOPSIS Academy Award® Winner for Best Foreign
Language Film of the year, "Departures" is a delightful and sensitive
journey into the
heartland of Japan and an astonishingly beautiful look at a sacred part
of Japan's cultural heritage. A premiere symphony orchestra in Tokyo
disbands, leaving Daigo Kobayashi (Masahiro Motoki) suddenly
unemployed. Suffering from an innate sense that he is a mediocre
musician, he faces up to the fact that not everyone who has devoted
their life to music can become a top artist. With wife Mika (Ryoko
Hirosue) in tow, he moves back to his home town in the northeastern
prefecture of Yamagata. They move into the crumbling remains of
his mother’s house, which doubled as the local pub.
In desperate straits, Daigo overcomes his initial trepidation and begins to travel around Hirano with Sasaki. Sasaki is comically matter-of-fact but firm in his directives and the contention that they are providing an important service to their community. Some cases are markedly traditional, featuring beatific family members in time-honored transition. Others highlight family dramas fraught with inevitable collisions, eased into unexpected conclusion. True to Sasaki’s expectations, Daigo develops a deep respect for life in all its variations, and a profound empathy for people trying to make peace with the finality of death. Too embarrassed to tell his wife about his
conversation-stopping profession and admit that
he has fallen in love with the townsfolk, Daigo vainly tries to keep
his new life secret. As their
relationship hangs in the balance, the big question is how he’s
going to react to surprising news she brings, as an encoffineer, as a
husband, as a son and as a
human being. It is Daigo’s turn to deal with life and death
among the people who are dearest to him. A story of love, of discovery, of revelation and of the transcending human spirit, "Departures" will linger in your heart and mind long after viewing. |