After an accident, the teenage girl Izumi gets superpowers and understands that she now has a special role in the universe. Edit Translation
- English
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- dansk
- Norsk
- Native Title: 水の中の八月
- Also Known As: Mizu no Naka no Hachigatsu
- Screenwriter & Director: Ishii Gakuryu
- Genres: Romance, Drama, Sci-Fi, Sports
Cast & Credits
- Komine Rena Main Role
- Aoki Shinsuke Main Role
- Amamoto HideyoSakaiSupport Role
- Kusakari Masao[Dolphin instructor]Support Role
- Machida Ko[Stone tribe messenger]Support Role
- Takarai MasaakiUkiya AokiSupport Role
Reviews
A self-assured exercise in style.
I wanted to start August off right and I knew August in the Water just had to be watched after my experiences with Gakuryū Ishii back in January. Mixing New Age spirituality, animism, astrophysics and advancement in technology, August in the Water can easily be described as the quintessential vaporware film, often feeling like several overlapping films that somehow complement and deepen each other's various mysteries. Ishii crafts a film that largely unfolds as a succession of mood pieces, remaining optimistic as it deconstructs the meaninglessness of our existence while simultaneously offering a hallucinatory analysis of coming-of-age malaise. The direction and framing are just sumptuous, it's all handled in a familiar and comforting style not too far removed from other Japanese filmmakers of the '90s. Part of that comfort comes from the film's incredible sound design and gorgeous musical score by Hiroyuki Onogawa, new age sound blending with classical synthesisers. Exceptionally intriguing and self-assured exercise in style with wry observations about modern Japanese life, August in the Water is simply beautiful in its deliverance, one that I can't recommend enough.Was this review helpful to you?
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