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Après la tempête

Original title: Umi yori mo mada fukaku
  • 2016
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Après la tempête (2016)
Watch AFTER THE STORM - OFFICIAL US Trailer
Play trailer1:58
1 Video
99+ Photos
ComedyDrama

After the death of his father, a private detective struggles to find child support money and reconnect with his son and ex-wife.After the death of his father, a private detective struggles to find child support money and reconnect with his son and ex-wife.After the death of his father, a private detective struggles to find child support money and reconnect with his son and ex-wife.

  • Director
    • Hirokazu Koreeda
  • Writer
    • Hirokazu Koreeda
  • Stars
    • Hiroshi Abe
    • Yôko Maki
    • Satomi Kobayashi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Writer
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Stars
      • Hiroshi Abe
      • Yôko Maki
      • Satomi Kobayashi
    • 36User reviews
    • 145Critic reviews
    • 84Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos1

    AFTER THE STORM - OFFICIAL US Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    AFTER THE STORM - OFFICIAL US Trailer

    Photos377

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    Top cast58

    Edit
    Hiroshi Abe
    Hiroshi Abe
    • Ryôta Shinoda
    Yôko Maki
    Yôko Maki
    • Kyôko Shiraishi
    Satomi Kobayashi
    • Chinatsu Nakashima
    Lily Franky
    Lily Franky
    • Yamanabe
    Sôsuke Ikematsu
    Sôsuke Ikematsu
    • Kento Machida
    Yuri Nakamura
    • Manami
    Kazuya Takahashi
    • Masataka
    Yukiyoshi Ozawa
    Yukiyoshi Ozawa
    • Fukuzumi
    Taiyô Yoshizawa
    • Shingo Shiraishi
    Rie Minemura
    • Natsumi
    Izumi Matsuoka
    • Miku Andô
    Kanji Furutachi
    Kanji Furutachi
    • Miyoshi
    Daisuke Kuroda
    • Andô
    Shôno Hayama
    Shôno Hayama
    • High School Student
    Ryôko Tateishi
    • Nagaoka
    Mickey Curtis
    • Pawnbroker
    Michie Ikeda
    • Teshirogi
    Akemi Higashiyama
    • Mori
    • Director
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Writer
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    7.413.6K
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    Featured reviews

    breadandhammers

    Deep characters

    Koreeda always knows how to make deep character portrayals that are calm on the surface but roiling underneath.
    7Reno-Rangan

    A mother's one final push to save her son's marriage.

    Remarkable consistency in delivering great dramas. If you are a drama film fan without the language barrier, then you must have seen at least a couple of films of Hirokazu Koreeda. Less than a year ago I saw his new arrival 'Our Little Sister'. Despite not overwhelmingly impressed with that, I won't say that I did not enjoy it. I always fascinated with the realistic portrayal, but the points should be executed so well than leaving empty scenes and dialogues, and calling it an art film. This one was much better. The first impression was okay, but after giving some time between my watch and writing this review, I kind of started to like it more.

    First of all, this story was not new for me. I have already seen a few similar themed films from other parts of the world, particularly in Hollywood. But none of them were as serious as this one while narrating its tale. The storyline was simple, entirely focused on a family, fighting on stumbling marriage. It was a long introduction, particularly aimed at a father, like how he messed up in his life with gambling. But opening few minutes made him look like a man of example. Only in the following event you would know how deep his troubles are.

    Other than his family, his work field was introduced to us. Being a writer, but for a few quick bucks working as a private eye on his part time, he misuses the opportunity with his loyal friend. Once the film reaches the half way mark, the focus shifts back to the family where the remaining story takes place. It was a stormy day and they all gather in his mother's apartment. This is where everything will be cleared out, whether the marriage will be saved or not. But the mother's one final push as it seems planned perfectly, would it deliver a result is what you should watch it to learn.

    ❝I wonder why it is that men can't love the present. Either they just keep chasing whatever it is they've lost, or they keep dreaming beyond their reach.❞

    You can't doubt Hiroshi Abe's presence. He was perfect along with Kirin Kiki, whose a few films I've seen before, but only started to notice recently with her amazing performance from 'Sweet Bean'. The casting looked great, and the locations. I always like films about elderly people, especially to highlight their struggle. And most of the Japanese films I have seen on that concept were just like the way I wanted. Maybe because there are lots of aging people in Japan than anywhere else. Just kidding.

    Obviously dialogues are very important for a film and there were many good lines spoken. At one point in the final stage, it flips towards sentiments. Very touching conversation, particularly coming from an old and experienced woman, which is definitely worth taking heed. This is a family film. Despite about a marriage crisis, there is no speculation, like twist and turns. Interesting enough with its plain narration. True to its title and when the title part comes into play, that's where it gets its peak. With its nearly two hours runtime, the pace was acceptable, but patience needed for those got trouble with long films.

    This is the film about our life, that we can try for what we want to be, but achieving it not easy, not everybody would succeed that. Accepting the fact, as life my go on was the message. Incredible writing and direction. Feels like straight out of a book, it's an original screenplay though. Surely you don't want to miss this film, from this director. Because if you do, it is equal to failing to watch the latest Woody Allen film. Only he's a Japanese version. My final words are the director already made his masterpiece(s), but still it is near to one compared to the international cinemas. So I'm not saying it is a must, but surely worth a try.

    7½/10
    10simon-wang

    My love is deeper than the sea

    Most films these days do not have something to 'say' anymore. They don't have a deeper meaning. And if they do, it's mostly superficial or so complex you don't really understand. 'After the Storm' by Hirokuzu Kore-eda has something to say, it's like a condensed moment of life. You will be dumbstruck by it's beauty.

    The story deals with Ryota, struggling with financial problems, and trying to keep contact with his son after divorcement. He works as a private detective, spying on affairs and looking for lost cats while his real passion lies in writing literature.

    The entire film is built around a central story part where they take shelter from a taifun, it involves scenes of such profound beauty, you will be moved to tears. The beauty lies in the things that are not spoken out, yet linger in the air like rain: the missed opportunities to be happy, love gone by and yet - still there.

    To say the film deals with abandoned dreams in the face of reality is wrong, it's the contrary. The film says: If you keep waiting for beauty in life, you will not realize that it has already arrived. Just not the way you thought it would.
    8HLX1992

    Living a Desperate Life Hopefully

    I bet we all can find the shadow of the underachieved protagonist in ourselves, as chances are really slim in materializing one's aspirations in the cruel reality. There he is: down-and-out both in career and mariage, scraping by through blackmailing strangers, yet always managing to squeeze a complacent smile on his face when meeting his family. You would presume he is leading a hopeless, listless, even miserable life, but the means by which the Japanese director narrates the story also attached a rather warm hue to the banal life of the man. In the end, what do we know about life without living it through ourselves?
    9howard.schumann

    One of Koreeda's best films

    Fear that your children may mimic your worst qualities is the driving force in Hirokazu Koreeda's ("Our Little Sister") After the Storm (Umi yori mo mada fukaku), a compassionate look at the struggles of a Japanese family. Its title derived from the lyrics of an old pop song, the film is set in Kiyose, a city near Tokyo where it is beautifully shot in the housing compound where Koreeda grew up by cinematographer Yutaka Yamasaki. Ryota Shinoda (Hiroshi Abe, "Everest: The Summit of the Gods") is a novelist who has not had a story published in fifteen years and is forced to work for a private detective agency, which he claims is solely to do research for his next novel. Using his detective job to spy on Kyoko's new boyfriend with the help of his young detective-partner (Sosuke Ikematsu, "Mubansô"), he learns that she is dating a wealthy businessman who is intrusive in Shingo's life.

    A gambling addict who squanders much of his earnings, Ryota's relationship with his young son Shingo (Taiyo Yoshizawa) is in jeopardy as his ex-wife Kyoko Shiraishi (Yoko Maki, "Like Father, Like Son") threatens to keep him from seeing Shingo until he catches up on his child support payments. The first time we see Ryota we are not impressed. He is going through his recently deceased father's private belongings to see if he can find anything that he could sell. It seems, however, that his father was also a gambler and Ryota's search might have been better conducted at the local pawn shop. While it is clear that he is not a role model for parenting, Ryota is man of considerable charm and Koreeda does not stand in judgment of his actions but depicts his travails with warmth and humor. We see that in spite of his dubious habits, his sister (Satomi Kobayashi) and his employer are both willing to lend him money.

    With the help of his own mother, the spunky and very astute Yoshiko (Kirin Kiki, "Our Little Sister"), Ryota has his sights set on reuniting with Kyoko and Shingo. His love for his son is very real but he seems incapable of breaking from his demons, the same ones that dominated his father's life. Attempting to win back Shingo's love, he takes him out for a hamburger, buys him new shoes, and visits Yoshiko, the boy's beloved grandmother. Knowing that a typhoon is on the way, the family comes together to spend the night and to wrestle with the direction that their lives will take. "Why can't men ever love the present," Yoshiko wonders, highlighting an important message of the film, that people must accept the reality of how they really are.

    While there is truth to the idea that we must accept who we are, there is a thin line between accepting your limitations and recognizing that you have the power to transform your life, to live the life you want rather than the life you are resigned to. Also, while the idea that sons will always take after their father is accepted without question, the reality in my experience is that sons will either take after their fathers or make very sure that they do not. After the Storm is one of Koreeda's best films and, as always, he elicits exceptional performances from children as well as brilliant takes by Kiki and Hiroshi Abe, but, in my view, its message is debatable.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Albeit released later, this film wrapped earlier than Koreeda's previous film Notre petite soeur (2015). The month-and-a-half filming of After the Storm took place starting in May 2014 in between the production of Our Little Sister, which was shot throughout a year.
    • Quotes

      Shinoda Yoshiko: I wonder why it is that men can't love the present. Either they just keep chasing whatever it is they've lost... or they keep dreaming beyond their reach.

    • Connections
      References Mon voisin Totoro (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      Shinkokyû
      Music and lyrics by Takashi Nagazumi

      Performed by Hanaregumi

      Courtesy of Victor Records and Speedstar Records

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 26, 2017 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • Official Site (Japan)
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • After the Storm
    • Filming locations
      • Kiyose, Tokyo, Japan(Train station)
    • Production companies
      • AOI Promotion
      • Bandai Visual Company
      • Fuji Television Network (Fuji TV)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $272,132
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $27,880
      • Mar 19, 2017
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,382,886
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 58 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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