1. Memories of Matsuko (Film) - TV Tropes
Missing: famous | Show results with:famous
A 2006 Japanese film written and directed by Tetsuya Nakashima, based on a novel by Muneki Yamada. Young aspiring-and-failing-at-it musician Shou, fresh from a painful break-up, is called to clean out the apartment of a recently deceased aunt he …
2. WTF ASIA 40: Memories of Matsuko (2006) My Favorite Movie
Missing: quotes | Show results with:quotes
Many people may believe that their favorite movies are perfect. Others may acknowledge that their favorite movies have issues, while still being their favorite movies. Well…this one…is …
3. Memories of Matsuko | Rotten Tomatoes
Missing: quotes | Show results with:quotes
While combing through the belongings of his recently deceased aunt, nephew Sho (Eita) pieces together the crucial events that sank her life into a sea of bitterness. As a schoolteacher in her youth, Sho's aunt, Matsuko (Miki Nakatani), took the fall for her student's crime. Unable to shake the resulting stigma, she was forced to live on the street and entered into a series of abusive relationships. But a chance at happiness with an old flame gave her a sliver of hope.
4. Memories of Matsuko (2006) – @quotethatfilm on Tumblr
Missing: famous | Show results with:famous
Memories of Matsuko (2006)
5. 'Memories of Matsuko' to hit stage in Shanghai - SHINE News
Missing: quotes | Show results with:quotes
Adapted from a novel by Muneki Yamada, the play centers on a woman's turbulent journey through life
6. Memories of Matsuko (2006) - Turner Classic Movies - TCM
Missing: famous | Show results with:famous
When a bored college student learns that a long lost aunt has been found dead in a park, he begins piecing together her life to see if it had any value. What he finds is a revelation.
7. Memories of Matsuko on Netflix | uNoGS
Memories of Matsuko (2006). Netflix; IMDB. After the death of his aunt, Sho uncovers the colorful, bizarre life she led, from beloved teacher to hardworking ...
See AlsoIs Francesco Guccini JewishWhy Do We Need This?
8. Memories of Matsuko (嫌われ松子の一生 Kiraware Matsuko no Isshō ...
Missing: quotes | Show results with:quotes
Japanese director Tetsuya Nakashima is primarily known for his 2004 film Kamikaze Girls winning him a reward of Best Director at Yokohama Film Festival and 2010 Confession acclaimed internationally a…
9. Incontro Con Nakashima Tetsuya Su Memories Of Matsuko
Not just reciting talking points, but rattling off answers with passion, clarity and nervous intensity. His view of his troubled heroine was certainly clear ...
Tall, bearded, bald and ruggedly handsome, Nakashima Tetsuya stands out in a crowd. Backstage at the Toho Cinemas Roppongi Hills cinema, following the Japan premiere of Memories Of Matsuko (Kiraware Matsuko no Issho), he also dominated his twenty minutes with this interviewer. Not just reciting talking points, but rattling off answers with passion, clarity and nervous intensity. His view of his troubled heroine was certainly clear enough: “I wanted to show that Matsuko’s life had value, no matter what it looked like on the surface,” he began. “That she was able to influence those who came after her, more than if she had lived a normal, happy existence.” Nakashima was first drawn to the project by reading Yamada Muneki’s eponymous novel. “If I start seeing images when I read a novel I know it’s filmable,” says Nakashima. “I certainly had that experience with Matsuko - the images came like crazy.” Nakashima, who also wrote the script, realized that filming Matsuko as a conventional melodrama would probably turn off much of his potential audience. “The story is dark - there’s no getting around it,” he comments. “By making it more colorful - by adding the musical numbers, the animation and all the rest, I thought I could make its central theme easier to understand.” Nakashima’s last film, Kamikaze Girls (Shimotsuma Monogatari, 2004), became a box-office smash in Japan and was widely screened abroad. It earned Nakashima a Best Director prize at the 27th Yokohama Movie Awards, whil...
10. Memories of Matsuko - DVDBeaver
Missing: quotes | Show results with:quotes
11. Memories of Matsuko (2006) | Movie and TV Wiki - Fandom
Miki Nakatani as Matsuko Kawajiri Eita as Sho Kawajiri Teruyuki Kagawa as Norio Kawajiri Mikako Ichikawa as Kumi Kawajiri Yusuke Iseya as Youichi Ryu Akira ...
Miki Nakatani as Matsuko Kawajiri Eita as Sho Kawajiri Teruyuki Kagawa as Norio Kawajiri Mikako Ichikawa as Kumi Kawajiri Yusuke Iseya as Youichi Ryu Akira Emoto as Kozo Kawajiri Asuka Kurosawa as Megumi Sawamura Shosuke Tanihara as Shunji Saeki Kankuro Kudo as Tetsuya Yamekawa Bonnie Pink as Ayano Gekidan Hitori as Takeo Okano Gori as Shuji Okura Shinji Takeda as Onodera Yoshiyoshi Arakawa as Kenji Shimazu Magy as Detective Nagisa Katahira as Herself Midoriko Kimura as Tae Kawajiri Mari Hamada
12. Memories of Matsuko - Soundtrack - Review - AsianMovieWeb
"What is a Life" is arguably the piece that was worked into the movie best. Although R'n'b isn't my favority music genre either, this song is very appealing ...
'Memories of Matsuko' delivers an outstanding and very diverse soundtrack, that is also fun to listen to detached from the movie. The mix of modern pop and return to good old 50s happy-life musical soundtracks is working out astonishingly well.
13. Quotes by Michelle Zauner (Author of Crying in H Mart) - Goodreads
I remember these things clearly because that was how my mother loved you, not through white lies and constant verbal affirmation, but in subtle observations ...
468 quotes from Michelle Zauner: 'It felt like the world had divided into two different types of people, those who had felt pain and those who had yet to.', 'I remember these things clearly because that was how my mother loved you, not through white lies and constant verbal affirmation, but in subtle observations of what brought you joy, pocketed away to make you feel comforted and cared for without even realizing it.', and 'Hers was tougher than tough love. It was brutal, industrial-strength. A sinewy love that never gave way to an inch of weakness. It was a love that saw what was best for you ten steps ahead, and didn't care if it hurt like hell in the meantime. When I got hurt, she felt it so deeply, it was as though it were her own affliction. She was guilty only of caring too much. I realize this now, only in retrospect. No one in this would would ever love me as much as my mother, and she would never let me forget it.'