Hana no Furu Gogo | |
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Japanese | 花の降る午後 |
Directed by | Kazuki Ōmori |
Based on | Hana no Furu Gogo by Teru Miyamoto |
Produced by | Haruki Kadokawa Atsushi Mihori Tsuneo Seto |
Starring | Yūko Kotegawa Masahiro Takashima Junko Sakurada |
Cinematography | Shinsaku Himeda |
Edited by | Kiyoaki Saitô |
Music by | Kazuhiko Katō Hikaru Ishikawa |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Toho |
Release date |
|
Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Box office | ¥300 million |
Hana no Furu Gogo (Japanese: 花の降る午後, Afternoon When Flowers Fell) is a 1989 film based on the 1988 novel of the same name by Teru Miyamoto. The film stars Yūko Kotegawa, Masahiro Takashima, and Junko Sakurada;[1][2] with Shigeru Muroi, Akiji Kobayashi, Miyoko Akaza, Kaku Takashina, Eriko Tamura, Susumu Kurobe, Masato Furuoya, and Tatsuo Umemiya playing supporting roles. Kotegawa plays Noriko Kai, a 37-year-old widow who runs her late husband's restaurant Avignon. She meets and falls in love with 27-year-old painter Masamichi Takami, played by Takashima, while trying to save her restaurant Avignon from Yukio and Misa Araki.[3][4]
Plot
After the death of her husband, Yoshinao, in 1981, Noriko Kai has been managing the French restaurant Avignon in Kobe left by Yoshinao for four years. One day, Masamichi Takami, a young painter, visited the recreant and offered to give a painting called White House to Noriko, as well as to hold his own exhibition. However, a letter from Yoshinao was found on the back of this painting and revealed to Noriko that he had a hidden child. Around that time, waiters Shuichi Akitsu, Toshihiro Mizuno, and manager Naoe Hayama quit their jobs at Avignon over a scandal that happened. When Noriko consulting with her acquaintance, Doctor Wong Kin Ming, she finds out that Yukio and Misa Araki, a gambling and diamond smuggling couple, were trying to take over Avignon Noriko asks Yoshinao's best friend Kenichi Kudo, a private detective, to investigate the Araki couple, but the driver Koshiba and chef Katsuro Kaga were attacked and injured. Avignon was forced to close temporarily, but with the encouragement of Takami and the efforts of Kaga, reopened soon after. However, Misa plans to take Jill, the daughter of her neighbor Reed Brown, as a hostage to try to take the land, but Noriko sneaks into the Araki couple's cruiser party and rescues Jill. Misa then tries to reach out to Mika, Yoshinao's secret child, but Noriko confronts Misa convinces her to not go with the plan, saying that she knew her sadness. After, Mika suddenly visits Avignon, and Noriko warmly welcomes and watches over her.[5][6]
Cast
- Yūko Kotegawa as Noriko Kai
- Masahiro Takashima as Masamichi Takami
- Junko Sakurada as Misa Araki, the wife of Yukio who wants to take over Avignon.
- Masato Furuoya as Yoshinao Kai, Noriko's deceased husband.
- Yūsuke Natsu as Yukio Araki, Misa's husband.
- Shigeru Muroi as Huang Ume
- Hiroshi Madoka as Kenichi Kudo
- Akiji Kobayashi as Naoe Hayama
- Miyoko Akaza as Yoshie Kaga
- Kaku Takashina as Wong Kin Ming
- Eriko Tamura as Mika Numata, Yoshinao's secret child.
- Nao Asuka as Kazuko Matsuki
- Susumu Kurobe as Seibei Matsuki
- Tatsuo Umemiya as Katsuro Kaga
Production
Filming and release
Filming took place in Kitano-chō, a district within Kobe.[7][8] Sakurada and Kotegawa became friends during the filming. Because it was set and filmed in Kobe, it was set to release a month early on September 15 in the Kansai region.[9]
Music
Kadokawa Haru Kiji Musho Sakuhin Hana no Furu Gogo Original Soundtrack | ||||
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Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | September 10, 1989 | |||
Label | VAP | |||
Producer | Haruki Kadokawa | |||
Kazuhiko Katō soundtrack chronology | ||||
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Carlos Toshiki & Omega Tribe chronology | ||||
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The official soundtrack was produced by Haruki Kadokawa, which mostly consisted of songs composed by Kazuhiko Katō as well as three Carlos Toshiki & Omega Tribe songs, one of which being an original song used for the theme.[10][11] The album was released by VAP on September 10, 1989.[12]
No. | Title | Music | Artist | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Miss Dreamer" | Carlos Toshiki | Carlos Toshiki & Omega Tribe | |
2. | "Kōbe Night" (神戸Night) | Kazuhiko Katō | Kazuhiko Katō | |
3. | "Ijin'yakata" (異人館) | Kazuhiko Katō | Kazuhiko Katō | |
4. | "Futari no Kankei" (二人の関係) | Kazuhiko Katō | Kazuhiko Katō | |
5. | "MmeN." | Kazuhiko Katō | Kazuhiko Katō | |
6. | "Hana no Furu Gogo" (花の降る午後) | Tetsuji Hayashi | Carlos Toshiki & Omega Tribe | |
7. | "Casino" | Kazuhiko Katō | Kazuhiko Katō | |
8. | "Avignon" | Kazuhiko Katō | Kazuhiko Katō | |
9. | "OPUS 7" | Kazuhiko Katō | Kazuhiko Katō | |
10. | "Sasupensu" (サスペンス) | Kazuhiko Katō | Kazuhiko Katō | |
11. | "Be Yourself" | Tetsuji Hayashi | Carlos Toshiki & Omega Tribe |
Awards and nominations
Category | Recipient(s) | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Best Actress | Yūko Kotegawa | Nominated | [13] |
Best Supporting Actress | Junko Sakurada | ||
References
- ↑ "古手川 祐子 Yuko KOTEGAWA". Connie LLC (in Japanese).
- ↑ "花の降る午後". Kotobank.
- ↑ "Afternoon When Flowers Fell (1989) (TV36)website=TV36".
- ↑ "花の降る午後". Shinema Kakarichō no Himitsu Kichi (in Japanese). Ameba. September 19, 2018.
- ↑ "花の降る午後". Eiga Purogure Sakurada Junko (in Japanese). Ameba. January 11, 2015.
- ↑ "花の降る午後". Eiga (in Japanese).
- ↑ "「神戸の映画」大探索". Kobe Planet Film Archive (in Japanese). March 31, 2016.
- ↑ "主な映画・TVドラマに登場する神戸(ロケ地)". Kōbe Hyōgo no Kyōdo-shi Web Kenkyū-kan (in Japanese).
- ↑ "桜田淳子さんの「花の降る午後」のDVD紹介 [桜田淳子 LP CD DVDBD]". Junko Sakurada Goodbye Happy Days (in Japanese).
- ↑ "加藤 和彦 Katoh Kazuhiko". Lindenhof.
- ↑ "花の降る午後 オリジナル・サウンドトラック". Geo Takuhai Rental (in Japanese).
- ↑ "花の降る午後". National Film Archive of Japan (in Japanese).
- ↑ "Afternoon When Flowers Fell (1989) – Awards". IMDb.
External links
Afternoon When Flowers Fell at IMDb