My Dearest Sister

no information on the tagline

As its title indicates, this first feature by Kyoka Tsukamoto is a love letter and a bid for reconciliation. It is the story of a woman who left Japan for Montreal, while her sister stayed behind. Geographical distance isn’t the main concern here, though: it is, instead, the unbridgeable chasm separating two visions of the women’s homeland. One of the women stayed rooted in a stifling patriarchal society; the other, the filmmaker, rejected it. She alternates brilliantly, and tragically, between her personal and family story and that of her country, questioning the foundations of a society that tolerates and even encourages psychological and physical abuse. A deeply intimate selfportrait, with many flights of poetry and lyricism that become sources of healing. (BD)

No information

Writers

$0

Budget

$0

Revenue

01-01-2018

Release Date

US

Country

-

Rating

-

Votes

-

Age Rating

73 min

Runtime

Released

Status

English, Japanese

Language

Popular actors
Media

View all media:

All Media

Нет информации по фоновой картинке

Медиа изображениеМедиа изображениеМедиа изображение
Director
Kyoka Tsukamoto

Kyoka Tsukamoto

Montréal based filmmaker Kyoka Tsukamoto has been working on some experimental films and essay works to establish her creative signature; the specificity of the film medium as the complexity of a mind - it is a sculpture of time and space, as it connects pieces of perceived reality, memories and dreams. Experimentations of cinematic language and explorations in artistic storytelling methods have always been her great interests. The stories that she tells carry several layers of psychological, geographical, social, cultural and spiritual content that are organically entangled, to mirror human nature which is never simple. Kyoka Tsukamoto produced/directed her first feature-length hybrid documentary “My Dearest Sister” which won the cinematography award from the Reelworld Film Festival, and earned the best female filmmaker award, “Die Tilda” nomination at the Braunschweig International Film Festival. The film was also an official selection at the Raindance Film Festival, the Montreal International Documentary Festival (RIDM), and the Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma. After graduating from the School of Fine Arts with a degree in Metal Craft (Toyama University), Tsukamoto, originally from Tokyo, moved to Canada to study film at Toronto Metropolitan University (Ryerson University). She then emigrated to Canada in 1998 and settled in Montreal, where she worked as an editor and a director. Since 2002, she has received several grants from arts councils, and produced and directed some artistic films, including her first feature-length essay which won Canada Council’s New Chapter grant and the support from the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec and la Société de développement des entreprises culturelles (SODEC). Tsukamoto also composes music for films and plays the piano. Since she started composing in 2014, the creation of music has become the vital force of the process of making films. Soundtrack is more than background sound that accompanies the moving image; it is like the soul of the body; something that is invisible, yet an essential spirit of a film that we watch.
Related Movies

There are no similar films yet.

You might like it

There are no recommended films yet.