TARACHIME

Naomi Kawase / 40’ / 2006 / Japan

Direction: Naomi Kawase
Country: Japón
Year: 2006

A ninety-year-old woman, naked and with life’s scars exposed, breaks down crying before the reproaches of her adoptive daughter, the filmmaker Naomi Kawase, who spares no sincerity in her quest to find her place in the world. In a brief period of time, the young woman will experience motherhood and having to say goodbye first-hand: she will have a son and she must go, leaving her grandmother alone at home, aware that her life is fading.

NAOMI KAWASE Born and raised in Nara, Naomi Kawase continues to make her films there today. Her pursuit to capture “reality” through film beyond simplistic documentary-fiction dichotomies has received worldwide acclaim, including at the Cannes Film Festival. She is also a director of commercials, radio program DJ, essayist, and pursuer of various expressive activities including calligraphy and installations. Recently, she has become fascinated by the world of Ryukyuan dance and has been working on conveying its unique expression of time and space through visual expressions and stage sets. While continuing to expand her activities across the globe, she remains deeply rooted in her hometown. As executive director of the Nara International Film Festival, which she launched in 2010, she focuses on nurturing the next generation of visionaries and has produced nine films in this pursuit. She is the official Film Director of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and a Thematic Producer for the 2025 Osaka-Kansai World Expo. She serves as UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador and was awarded the Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres of France. In her private life, she is a mother of one who enjoys cultivating rice and tending to her garden.

Category
Muestras, Naomi Kawase
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