After Life
Wandâfuru Raifu
Japan
1998
118 Min
JapaneseSubtitled in English
562 Views
562 Views
Hirokazu Kore-ede’s (Nobody Knows) award-winning film is a warm and inventive story about what matters in the world beyond. At a station somewhere between heaven and earth, the newly dead are greeted by guides that help the dead look through their memories and find the one defining moment of their lives. The guides are then tasked to re-create the past as the dead remember it, so that they may always keep with them their most beloved of remembrances. But what of the mysterious guides and their strange jobs of inspiring and then remaking and evoking events and emotions from the past? Were they once alive too, did they have memories? Kore-eda’s film explores a universal, human theme with an unusual story suffused in a glowing mysteriousness to find what is most touching, most surprising, most romantic, and ultimately most memorable about the lives people live.
Born in Tokyo in 1962. Originally intended to be a novelist, but after graduating from Waseda University in 1987 went on to become an assistant director at TV Man Union. Sneaked off set to film Lessons from a Calf (1991). His first feature, Maboroshi no hikari (1995), based on a Teru Miyamoto novel and drawn from his own experiences whilst filming August Without Him (1994), won jury prizes at Venice and Chicago. The main themes of his oeuvre include memory and loss, death and loss, and the intersection of documentary and fictional narratives.
(Source: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0466153/bio)



After Life is a profoundly interesting look at the importance of memories in how they are our only ties to our past. The idea of spending eternity with one memory is extremely intriguing and provides… read review
Intriguing theory of afterlife suggests that souls of the dead don’t go to hell or heaven… but first go through a process of soul-searching inquiry to determine which memory each soul willingly selects… read review