Deep in the Valley

October. 31,2009      
Rating:
6.2
Trailer Synopsis Cast

Deep in the Valley interlaces a story of young romance set in Yanaka (part of old downtown Tokyo) with a Japanese period drama based on Five-Story Pagoda, a classic literary work by Rohan Koda. In the contemporary story, Kaori, a young woman working for a non-profit organization that restores home movies, learns that there used to be a five-story pagoda in the middle of Yanaka Cemetery. It burned down in 1957, and rumor has it that someone has an 8mm film of the fire.

Ryohei Abe as  
Yuuki Nomura as  Hisaki / Jubei
Mayu Satô as  Kaori / Onami

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Reviews

TinsHeadline
2009/10/31

Touches You

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Claysaba
2009/11/01

Excellent, Without a doubt!!

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Intcatinfo
2009/11/02

A Masterpiece!

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Billy Ollie
2009/11/03

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

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munsonwork
2009/11/04

I saw this film yesterday at the CineQuest festival in San Jose. Based on a number of the comments I overheard after the showing, I think a number of people considered it rather slow and dull. But I found it a truly beautiful and different piece of film making. There's very little story and the pace is leisurely (to say the least). But it's one of those films where if you hang in there and give it a chance it becomes richly rewarding. The photography (both in color and black and white) is gorgeous. There is also a deepening sense of truly getting to know a unique corner of Tokyo. From what I know of traditional Japanese drama, there is also a real influence of a certain kind of Noh-theater aesthetic that makes the piece kind of magical and mysterious. All in all, it really stuck with me and I'm still thinking about it a day later. But there isn't a strong sense of a narrative drive or of a well-constructed plot where characters are solving problems or overcoming obstacles or any of the traditional elements of story telling. So if you come in expecting that kind of experience you will be frustrated and probably bored. But if you can "quiet your mind" and accept the film on its own terms, it is wonderful and enlightening.

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