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After Life

Wandâfuru Raifu

Japan

1998

118 Min
Japanese
Subtitled in English
  • Currently 4.1/5 Stars.
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562 Views

DIR Hirokazu Kore-Eda

PROD Shiho Sato, Masayuki Akieda

SCR Hirokazu Kore-Eda

DP Yutaka Yamazaki, Masayoshi Sukita

CAST Arata, Erika Oda, Takashi Naitô, Kei Tani

Synopsis

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.

Director

Hirokazu_koreeda_01

Hirokazu Kore-Eda

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)

Interview of Hirokazu Kore-Eda 

Wall

Displaying 4 of 25 wall posts.
Picture of Ann

Ann

28Dec09

Forget-me-not...a concentrate of poetry and blossoming humanity. If only this movie could come true...what would you do?  
Picture of visakh

visakh

26Dec09

brilliant script and a very poetic theme. it does leave you with a sense of void  
Picture of Wilm

Wilm

13Dec09

Fanciful, but simple and powerful conceit realised in a poetic but understated way.  
Picture of Mike War

Mike War

30Jul09

I'm not sure what to say about this film. It is rather slow, nonetheless, it leaves you wanting more. It is dramatic at times, but not in the sense of "drama" as we generally know it, but inspiring and eye-opening. I regard the photography to be prime, nonetheless the audio to be sub-prime. The movie is a great one in general, but the ending was not my favourite. I think it could have been closed in a warmer way.  

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 5 of 662 fans.

Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.
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Regrets & Memories: A Conversation With Hirokazu Kore-Eda

By Maya on August 29, 2009
Photo by SF360 (Pamela Gentile). In Hirokazu Kore-Eda’s Still Walking, a son and daughter return to the family home where their parents have lived for decades, bringing their own young families along
read article
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The Auteurs Daily: Hirokazu Kore-eda, "The Sun" and Midnight Eye

By David Hudson on August 27, 2009
Updated through 29/8. "What's remarkable about Still Walking, Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-eda's seventh feature film and one every bit as sensitive as his previous triumphs After Life (1998) and
read article
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The Auteurs Daily: Locarno and Other Fests and Events

By David Hudson on August 15, 2009
Updated through 17/8. The 62nd Locarno International Film Festival has wrapped tonight with its awards ceremony and the world premiere of Byambasuren Davaa's The Two Horses of Genghis Khan. But the
read article

INTERVIEW: Hirokazu Kore-Eda Remembers "Afterlife"

By Maya Churi on January 23, 2008
If you could only take one memory with you for the rest of eternity, which would you choose? Posed with this question, Hirokazu Kore-Eda ("Maborosi") documents the answers in his new film, “Afterlife.”
read article

Wandafuru Raifu [After Life], 1998

By Acquarello on January 23, 2008
Early Monday morning, four overworked, dedicated counselors are given a motivational speech by their supervisor in preparation for the week’s heavy caseload. A distant bell tolls, and one by one, people
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'After Life': In Death, a Fond Remembrance of Things Past

By Stephen Holden on January 23, 2008
When we say we “remember” something, what exactly is it we recall? A feeling? A smell? Words? Facial expressions? Invited to relive an especially happy memory, how many of us would be able to go beyond
read article

Lists

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Reviews

Displaying 3 of 3

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By Thorste​n on December 20, 2008
Vielleicht bewirkt die Energie, die in uns durch die Bewusstseinsarbeit solcher Filme freigesetzt wird, dass wir in die Lage versetzt werden alle Bilder, die in uns gespeichert sind, jeden Moment neu…

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By Akira Kar-Wai on April 11, 2008

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

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By Kim Packard on March 10, 2008

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

Forum

Displaying 1 discussion topic.

Trailer for Kore-Eda's latest film

5 posts by 4 people over 2 years ago