Love Exposure at The Cinefamily

 

Love Exposure
The Cinefamily – Los Angeles, CA
11/27/09

Sion Sono is one of Japan’s most controversial and cutting-edge directors, boasting a filmography that includes 2002’s Suicide Club, a disturbing fictional account of Japan’s high suicide rates. A poet, writer and director, Sono explores uncomfortable truths about contemporary Japan, most notably in last year’s four-hour epic Love Exposure, a film about love, lust, family and religion. The film went on to win several world film festival awards and broke art house attendance records in Japan. As of yet unseen for the most part in the U.S., Love Exposure will screen at The Cinefamily, all 237 minutes of it.“Masterpiece” and “epic” are frequent words used to describe the film. The Cinefamily fully endorses the acclamations:

Ask yourself this question: when was the last time a movie really mattered to you, and shattered your world? Every so often, a film comes screaming out of the ether that magically reveals a larger truth about this thing we stumble through called life, and the latest cinematic salve is the unforgettable, uncategorizable, unmissable Love Exposure, the brand-new behemoth from Sion Sono (Suicide ClubStrange Circus) that gleefully tackles life’s biggest issues: love, death, sex, revenge, religion and up-skirt panty photography. Winner of festival awards across the globe, and breaker of art house attendance records in Japan, Love Exposure has only been seen in the U.S. at a handful of sell-out screenings, with its initially daunting 237 minutes leaving audiences desperate for another installment. Purportedly based on the life of one Sono’s friends, the film tells the epic story of Yu, a teenager who loses his Catholic faith when his mother dies and his bible-thumping priest father demands that the innocent boy confess to sins that he hasn’t committed. As he manufactures sins to keep his father pleased, Yu trains in the ‘art’ of panchira (clandestine panty snapshots!), and all bets are off when he crosses paths with Yoko, the woman of his dreams (his “Virgin Mary”), at a streetfight. As he pursues his heart, Yu finds himself tripped up by apocalyptic religious cults, Catholic guilt and the call of pornography, and must use his love to fight his way out of darkness. The Cinefamily is proud to present one of the top Japanese films of the last year — if not the last decade.

Don’t miss this opportunity to see one of the world’s most unique and daring directors at work.

Love Exposure (2008)

***
Via The Cinefamily

via EM Staff, 12 November 2009 6:40pm | Comments

Leave a Reply