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Flowers

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Flowers

Flowers examines the lives of six women across three generations, from the Show period all the way through to the present day.

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Release : 2010
Rating : 6.6
Studio : TOHO,  Asatsu-DK,  Nippon Television Network Corporation, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Set Dresser, 
Cast : Yu Aoi Yûko Takeuchi Rena Tanaka Yukie Nakama Ryoko Hirosue
Genre : Drama

Cast List

Reviews

Raetsonwe
2018/08/30

Redundant and unnecessary.

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Konterr
2018/08/30

Brilliant and touching

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Crwthod
2018/08/30

A lot more amusing than I thought it would be.

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Livestonth
2018/08/30

I am only giving this movie a 1 for the great cast, though I can't imagine what any of them were thinking. This movie was horrible

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Desertman84
2011/11/18

Flowers is a Japanese drama that covers the lives of six woman whose lives span a period of three generations from the Show period all the way through to the present day.It stars Yu Aoi,Yuko Takeuchi,Rena Tanaka, Yukie Nakama,Kyoka Suzuki and Ryoko Hirosue.The movie was written by Shu Fujimoto and Uiko Miura as well as directed by Norihiro Koizumi.Flowers covers six different Japanese women from different generations.Starting in the 1930's, Rin is worried about her arranged marriage that her parents setup. Eventually Rin has three daughters: Kaoru - who tragically loses her husband in a car accident, Midori - a career woman who becomes shaken by a marriage proposal, and youngest child Sato . In the 1960's Sato gives birth to Kanna and Kei. In the present day, Kanna is now worried about becoming a single mother.Flowers provides the viewer of the ever changing and evolution of the Japanese woman as the years go by starting from the 1930's to the present day.The movie presents the lives of the main female characters with beauty and grace.It tells us how they have managed to live their lives as well as how they have coped up with the difficulties and challenges presented to them by being a woman in the Japanese society.Also,it tells the viewer of their needs as well as what keeps them going and living life to the fullest as the years go by.Overall,it was a great character study of the Japanese woman all through out the years in this generational film.

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poikkeus
2011/09/18

FLOWERS is a skillful family drama spanning several generations, jumping between eras like flipping pages of a book. In 1936, Rin is young, about to enter into an arranged marriage, but uncertain if she has any other options in life. In 2009, the family observes her funeral, but a number of changes have altered the face of Japanese society. More than anything, it's a study of women over the years; some mores have changed, but most remain substantially the same. FLOWERS is quite accomplished from a cinematic point of view. The time periods of the film are defined by the seasons. The springlike 30s are photographed in appealing black and white, the the expected sprays of cherry blossoms; the segments in the fifties and sixties favor Fuji-color reds and flowers in full bloom; and the 90s are set in winter snow, with a more somber color scheme. Ultimately, the film is a portrait of a generation through the lives of its women, plotted in a genial, thoughtful pace that rarely flags for interest. Its only glaring failure is in the culminating montage, presented over a cloying version of "Have You Ever Been Mellow?" (sans Olivia Newton John). If you're going to see FLOWERS - and I recommend you do - you might want to reduce the volume until the montage finishes.The key actresses provide appealing performances. Fans of Yukie Nakama, Ryoko Hirosue, Yu Aoi, Yuko Takeuchi, and Rena Tanaka (in by far her best role yet) will be pleased by the drama.

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moviexclusive
2010/10/28

A combined effort of male director Norihiro Koizumi and male ad-agency creative director Takuya Onuki (he conceived the film's idea while working on a female shampoo commercial), it is not hard for the thinking girl to dismiss Flowers as an indulgent and idealistic patriarchal take on Japanese femininity. The title itself – a stereotypical image associated with being female. It does not help either that the problems that the six women face are either related to men or motherhood. From a forced marriage to fatal pregnancy complications to the loss of the newly wedded husband, tragic events not out of place in a soap opera plot seem to curse three generations of beautiful women. Through soft lingering gazes into the windy distance and solo teardrops on SK II-treated cheeks, they express minimal pain like ideal, perfectly restrained, silent Japanese women.Now girls, (depending on which feminist wave you are riding on) before you start burning or pushing up your bras and objecting to the lack of girl power, do consider that the film's subscription to feminine stereotypes is intended to portray the significance of family over self. The real struggle that the six women face is not of tragedy, but with choosing between self-expression and self-control or individualism and collectivism – something everyone can relate to. By portraying six different yet interconnected lives all choosing the self-sacrificing route and going back to the family as a point of healing, the film really tries to remind us of the importance of kinship. The story of Rin – the family's first generation woman – is particularly touching in its conclusion. Set in the 30s, she is faced with the traditional arranged marriage dilemma – please her father or please her self? You have to watch for yourself how she decides, but do prepare Kleenex at hand. In fact, that tissue paper is necessary in a few other scenes as well even though the film is not really a tearjerker. What Flowers considerably is, is a heartwarming chick flick, albeit a quite welcoming one in a genre filled with the same old storyline of predictable heroines finding love and living happily ever after. Its message of family is something to ponder upon. The film might go too much by telling six different stories to drive home the point, but maybe this is something we need to counter excessive individualism in today's Facebook-obsessed society.The montage quality of the film is easily appealing; as it not only allows the audience to make distinct three generations of characters, but to also let them enjoy the homage to past filming styles. As the film spans among four time periods – 1930s, 1960s, 1970s and early 2000s – each of them is directed according to the film style of the respective eras. The 1960s story of one of Rin's daughters – Midori – is probably the most enjoyable with its throwback to a comical retro sound stage vibe and vintage clothes.www.moviexclusive.com

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Harry T. Yung
2010/10/10

To followers of the Japanese cinema, the name of the cast of six top stars will make the heart skip 4 or 5 beats, maybe even 6, for some. But this is not simply star gazing. This is a very engaging, endearing, touching movie that is pleasantly devoid of crafty contrivances. Goes down like a draught of natural, smooth, clear spring water. The story spans three generations – 30s, 60s and 90s – starting with the first, moving to the last and back to the middle, with each period clearly labelled at the start of the segment. After that, it moves back and forth (but never to the extents that it is confusing) revealing the cause and effect of the various stories of these six women. For simplicity, I'll use the names of the actresses rather than the names of their characters in the brief synopsis that ensues. In the movie, the stories do not unfold in the linear fashion of my narration.Ironically, Yu Aoi the youngest of the six plays the oldest (in terms of generation), a daughter in the 30s when arranged marriage was the norm. Aoi, fortunate enough to have received a "modern" education, is somewhat rebellious. The love of the authoritarian father is depicted in subtle hints. In the end, Aoi, ever fortunate, finds happiness with the husband that she had never set eyes on before, and became the mother of three lovely daughters.In the 60s, we see two of these three daughters in a reunion at their old family house. The third never appears together with them in the same scene but is connected to them in a brief phone call. Of the two, Rena Tanaka provides most of the comedy in the movie, being a career-minded woman generally viewed as an outcast and monstrosity by the men in the office. Comedy notwithstanding, the choice between career and marriage (there is a devoted admirer) is a real dilemma in that period in time. Sharing in sisterly talks with her is Yuko Takeuchi, whose story is told in the most artsy style among the six, utilizing freely montages that might even be mystifying in the beginning. The story is actually quite simple: an ideal, romantic marriage is shattered with the lost of the husband in a tragic accident. It's about Takeuchi's struggle to carry on.The third sister in the 60s, Yukie Nakama, is the link to the third generation. Here is another happy family which includes also a wonderful young daughter (6 or 7) who has shown promises in music. What should have been a cup-runneth-over, a second pregnancy, becomes an agonizing dilemma when the doctors warn that the mother's life is at risk. Nakama however is determined to have the baby, knowing that she will not be able to live the rest of her life haunted by the thought that she has deprived this little baby of all the joys of life that her older sister is experiencing. The tragic outcome: the baby survived, the mother died.In the 90s, Yoaka Suzuki, the older daughter, is now a successful concert pianist, unattached despite some earlier romantic interludes. The younger sister Ryoko Hirosue is happily married, with an adorable little son. The sisters come together at the funeral of their grandmother Aoi who just died at 93. Hirosue, ever observant and considerate, asks Suzuki to quit smoking, having noticed that her sister is pregnant. It is Suzuki's painful decision whether to have the child as a single mother. The pregnancy opens old wounds as Hirosue struggles with her "original sin" – she is alive only because of her mother's courage and death, in insisting on giving birth to the second child. I have related the events without much reference to the emotion contents although it can be readily seen that there is no shortage of touching poignancy between father and daughter, husband and wife, mother and daughter, as well as between sisters. As mentioned, this movie does not succumb to cheap contrivances but depicts the emotions scenes naturally, as they would unfold in real life. The ending is upbeat, as an ode to life, with as accompanying music ONJ's "Have you ever been mellow", a wonderful choice. For those unfamiliar with some or, heavens forbid, all of the actresses, the movie starts with a short montage of each, preceded by their respective names (in Japanese Kanji which is the same as Chinese characters). The end credit is similarly handled.

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