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Our Little Sister

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Our Little Sister

Upon the death of their estranged father, three sisters invite their 13-year-old half sister to live with them.

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Release : 2016
Rating : 7.5
Studio : Wild Bunch,  TOHO,  Fuji Television Network, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Production Design, 
Cast : Haruka Ayase Masami Nagasawa Kaho Suzu Hirose Ryo Kase
Genre : Drama Family

Cast List

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Reviews

Ehirerapp
2018/08/30

Waste of time

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CheerupSilver
2018/08/30

Very Cool!!!

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Listonixio
2018/08/30

Fresh and Exciting

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filippaberry84
2018/08/30

I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.

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alan_paul
2018/08/15

Feathery episodic nuggets float, fall, and accumulate to tell a gently emotional, meaningful story of four sisters. Beautifully photographed, edited, and directed, well-cast and performed, with lovely, understated music.Turn off your phone, and if you have sisters, watch this movie with them.

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maurice yacowar
2016/08/22

So why does Our Little Sister open with a shot of a woman's feet and pan up her bare legs to reveal her in bed with her lover, presumably naked under the blanket? This very sensual image is completely out of step with the film's quiet, meditative story of three sisters adopting the 13-year-old half-sister they meet at their father's funeral. The film pays a lot of attention to the women's legs and feet. The woman in bed is Yoshino, 22, who gives money to her wastrel lover, drinks heavily and has slept around. Later she prominently strips off her black stockings in the right foreground. All four sisters flash their legs in all the long and medium shots, an openness that contrasts to the scenes in which the traditional kimonos conceal their legs entirely. (In a culinary parallel to this movement away from tradition, all the chopstick eating scenes are joined by one scene where spoons are used for a curry.)In a scene of girlish mischief Chika,19, paints 13-year-old Suzu's toenails. Despite her youth, of the three senior sisters Chika has the healthiest and most stable affair, with the adventurous colleague at the sporting goods store. Despite having lost six toes to frostbite he is a full man, with the freest commitment both to his lover and life. The three sisters have been living in their grandmother's house since their mother abandoned them, their father having run off with his mistress (Suzu's mother). Nurse Sachi, 29, has been raising both sisters and takes the initiative in rescuing Suzu from having to live with her stepmother, their father's third wife, after his funeral. The father's death, Suzu's arrival and the tensions raised by their mother's callous visit force the sisters to confront their past and to take more conscious control over their lives. They become aware of how their parents' abandonment has been influencing their behaviour. After her lover dumps Yoshino she controls her instinct to please men at all costs, as if pleasing them would salve her irrational guilt for not having better pleased her father. Her new bank job with a compassionate male boss leads her to a new self-respect and responsibility. Young Suzu slips easily into her life with the sisters, her school, the co-ed soccer team, but she is unable to talk to her sisters about their father. Drunk and unconscious she calls her father an idiot. but through the family's experience is freed to express her suppressed anger at her mother's neglect. She begins to ease into a relationship with a class- and team-mate, in whom she first confides her reticence. Similarly the sober eldest sister, Sachi, reminded of the destructiveness and folly of her father's self-indulgence, refuses to join her paediatrician lover's move to America, despite his promise to divorce his unstable wife for her. Sachi will stay with her doubled responsibilities of guiding her sisters and serving her dying patients in the new palliative care ward.This cycle of life and death plays out against the seasons. There are shots of stunning autumnal glory. The harvesting of the plums and the mixed delights of plum swine recur in the narrative. In their make-up scene Sachi brings their mother a jug of their recent plum wine and the last jug of their grandmother's. Suzu's promising swain bicycles her through a tunnel of refulgent cherry blossoms. An old restaurant owner takes a dying woman for a last look at those blossoms —and offers to tell Suzu stories about her father. That dying woman is the sisters' mother surrogate. They have patronized her diner since their infancy. Bankrupted by her own brother's calling in a loan, the woman treasures the — now four — sisters as children she never had. Now dying, she finds ease in Sachi's hospital care and the attentions of the man who ran his own diner — and continues to serve her recipes. The surrogate mother's funeral provides an emotional climax in place of the complications their mother's death and funeral would have raised.In the last scene the four sisters leave that funeral to walk along the beach. They cavort together at the edge of the tide, still in their funeral blacks — but they don't take off their shoes. From all the film beach frolics we've watched we expect they would. Keeping on their shoes — even their heels — becomes an indication of their new self-knowledge, self-control and discipline. Legs, feet, they're an emblem of our grounding, the base on which we stand and move. The framing shots — naked legs and heels kept on at the beach — encapsulate the women's growth from the impulses of a sensual, unexamined life to the maturity of self-control and self- respect. The opening scene leads us to expect yet another story of sexual awakening. Instead we get what the sisters blossom into, the primacy of family connection and responsible, giving love.

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Red-125
2016/08/21

The Japanese film Umimachi Diary was shown in the U.S. with the title Our Little Sister (2015). Hirokazu Koreeda directed the movie.Haruka Ayase plays Sachi Kôda, one of three young-adult sisters living in a home owned by their mother. The other sisters are Yoshino, played by Masami Nagasawa, and Chika, played by Kaho. These actors look enough like each other to be sisters, and they are realistic characters. Each has her own personality, and, like any three people living together, they squabble.Their mother has abandoned them 14 years ago, so Sachi has been both mother and sister to them. As the movie opens, we learn that their father has died. The sisters go to the father's funeral, and meet their half-sister Suzu, who is portrayed very well by the young actor Suzu Hirose. She is their father's daughter, but she is the daughter of his second wife. He has married a third time. Now, she is an orphan, although her step-mother could provide for her. Instead, the three sisters invite her to come and live with them.The remainder of the movie is a calm reflection of Suzo's integration into the family. She actually knows their father better than any of the three older sisters, because she was with him from her birth until his death. So the older women ask her for more information about the father. Information about ancestors is important to the Japanese, and we see this theme repeated throughout the film.The movie was interesting to me because there was no fiery revelations, no scenes of caustic criticism, and no horribly sad moments. We follow the women through two years of life, and we get to know them and care about them.I learned the some facts about Japanese culture that I didn't know. For example, the spiritual importance of cherry blossoms, and the ritual of making plum wine.The acting was uniformly excellent. All the sisters are attractive in a low-key way. Haruka Ayase, the oldest sister, has been described as one of the most beautiful women on the planet, and I think this is true. However, what is striking about her in the movie is her calm, competent, dignified presence. She looks intelligent and caring, which is what her role calls for.This is a movie worth seeking out. We saw it in Rochester's excellent Little Theatre. It won't work as well on the small screen. Still, It's an outstanding movie, Don't miss it.

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Mintroll
2016/07/25

I was anxious about Suzu Hirose, one of the main actress appears in this film because she was young and has little experience about acting. So I am relieved that her natural action brought success to this movie.I love Japanese movie like this. Nothing big happens, but people's mind gradually and certainly changes. We can appreciate Japanese language in this film. On the other hand I feel it is difficult to carry it in other languages. Actually the subtitles does not mean what characters want to say. Anyway, the changes of distance between four sisters are sensitively described to their actions, emotions, and words. These delicate expression is one of the attractive point of Japanese film.

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