His Master's Voice

BDORSSES12
Director:Hirojuki Itaja
Cast:Taihei Hajašija, Najuta Fukuzaki, Jasuko Tomita
Length:95 minutes
Genre:Drama

His Master's Voice

Mo ichido; Hirojuki Itaja, 2014, versions: OR,SS,ES, languages: jpn

Free entrance. Please, pick up your tickets at the cash desk of Cinema Lumière 30 minutes before the screening.

Director: Hirojuki Itaja • Cast: Taihei Hajašija, Najuta Fukuzaki, Jasuko Tomita

Taihei Hayashiya is an excellent contemporary narrator of the rakugo genre. In the film Mō Ichido, a character of the same name takes us to the samurai city of Edo where the characters from many stories encounter their storytellers. Women and men, samurais and servants, an innkeeper and her guests, parents and children, neighbours and noodle vendors. These characters serve as a source of inspiration and slight parody for rakugo. A storyteller cannot faithfully mimic eating hot noodles without having actually tried them. This is what Sadakichi, a little boy determined to become a storyteller, experiences in the film. Will he convince his audience? The rakugo genre has been in existence unchanged for several centuries. Throughout the entire story, the narrator is sitting down and may only use a fan, a handkerchief and the viewer’s imagination. Turning the body to the right or left, he changes the characters, voices and style of communication. This is certainly not easy, and the relationship between a master and his student forms a lifelong bond.

Length: 95 min

Year: 2014

Country of origin:

  • Japan

Language version:

OR - Original version (japanese)
SS - Slovak subtitles
ES - English subtitles

Free entrance. Please, pick up your tickets at the cash desk of Cinema Lumière 30 minutes before the screening.

Director: Hirojuki Itaja • Cast: Taihei Hajašija, Najuta Fukuzaki, Jasuko Tomita

Taihei Hayashiya is an excellent contemporary narrator of the rakugo genre. In the film Mō Ichido, a character of the same name takes us to the samurai city of Edo where the characters from many stories encounter their storytellers. Women and men, samurais and servants, an innkeeper and her guests, parents and children, neighbours and noodle vendors. These characters serve as a source of inspiration and slight parody for rakugo. A storyteller cannot faithfully mimic eating hot noodles without having actually tried them. This is what Sadakichi, a little boy determined to become a storyteller, experiences in the film. Will he convince his audience? The rakugo genre has been in existence unchanged for several centuries. Throughout the entire story, the narrator is sitting down and may only use a fan, a handkerchief and the viewer’s imagination. Turning the body to the right or left, he changes the characters, voices and style of communication. This is certainly not easy, and the relationship between a master and his student forms a lifelong bond.

Year: 2014

Country of origin:

  • Japan

Language version:

OR - Original version (japanese)
SS - Slovak subtitles
ES - English subtitles