Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
arts

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

69 (2004 film)

2004 Japanese film directed by Lee Sang-il


Summary

2004 Japanese film directed by Lee Sang-il

FieldValue
name69
image69_2004Poster.jpg
captionJapanese poster
directorSang-il Lee
writerKankuro Kudo
based_on
starringSatoshi Tsumabuki
Masanobu Andō
Yuta Kanai
Asami Mizukawa
musicMasakazu Sakuma
Naoki Tachikawa
cinematographyKozo Shibasaki
editingTsuyoshi Imai
distributorToei Company
released
countryJapan
languageJapanese
gross$4,551,540

Masanobu Andō Yuta Kanai Asami Mizukawa Naoki Tachikawa 69 is a 2004 Japanese film adaptation of Ryu Murakami's 1987 novel 69. The film was directed by Lee Sang-il.

Plot

In Sasebo (on the Island of Kyushu, Southern Japan), in 1969, inspired by the iconoclastic examples of Dylan, Kerouac, Godard and Che, a band of mildly disaffected teenagers led by the smilingly charismatic Ken decide to shake up "the establishment", i.e., their repressive school and the nearby US military installation. A series of anarchic pranks meets with varying levels of success, until Ken and his friends focus their energies on mounting a multimedia "happening" to combine music, film and theater.

Cast

  • Satoshi Tsumabuki as Kensuke "Ken" Yazaki
  • Masanobu Andō as Tadashi "Adama" Yamada
  • Yuta Kanai as Manabu Iwase
  • Asami Mizukawa as Mie Nagayama
  • Rina Ohta as Kazuko "Lady Jane" Matsui
  • Yoko Mitsuya as Yumi Sato
  • Hirofumi Arai as Bancho
  • Hideko Hara as Ken's mother
  • Ittoku Kishibe as Matsunaga sensei
  • Jun Kunimura as Sasaki
  • Kyohei Shibata as Ken's father
  • Kenny Scott as Military Officer

Awards and nominations

  • 47th Blue Ribbon Award
    • 10 best Japanese movies (won)
    • Nominations: Best Director, Best Actor
  • 29th Hochi Film Award for Best Actor (Satoshi Tsumabaki) (won)
  • 19th Takasaki Film Festival: Best Supporting Actor Award (Kyohei Shibata) (won)

Reception

A review on Asian Movie Pulse concluded, "“69” is not the best novel of Ryu Murakami neither the best film of Lee Sang-il, and the fact that a film about the 60's is stripped of any elements of nostalgia definitely works against it. However, through Tsumabuki's charisma, the in-your-face buffooness and the music ends up being entertaining and quite pleasant to both eyes and ears." while Variety stated, "Helmer Lee Sang-il, a third-generation Korean-Japanese, does a serviceable, if undistinctive, job in the director’s chair. Compared with other films based on the work of Murakami (Audition, Tokyo Decadence), this is considerably tamer fare. Perfs are likable but generic, and tech credits professional but uninspiring."

References

References

  1. [https://boxofficemojo.com/movies/intl/?page=&country=W1&wk=2004W28&id=_f6901 "''69''"]. [[Boxofficemojo]]. Retrieved March 4, 2012.
  2. "The 47th Blue Ribbon Award".
  3. "69 sixty nine|日本映画作品| 映像制作・動画制作会社のボーダーレス".
  4. "過去の受賞一覧 {{!}} 表彰-報知映画賞".
  5. "柴田恭兵 - 人物情報・関連映画".
  6. Kotzathanasis, Panos. (2020-04-19). "Film Review: 69 (2004) by Lee Sang-il".
  7. Edwards, Russell. (2004-10-26). "69 Sixty Nine".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 69 (2004 film) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report