Tag - tetsuya-bessho

 
 

TETSUYA BESSHO

Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Aug 21, 2020
Short Shorts Film Festival & Asia lineup delivers despite COVID-19
Other than delaying the festival from its usual June starting date, things are on track for the event, which will screen more than 200 films at venues around Tokyo.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
May 22, 2019
Short Shorts 2019: Short on time, but never short on creativity
Short Shorts Film Festival & Asia, whose 21st edition takes place from May 29 to June 16 at venues around Tokyo, is one of the largest festivals of its type in Asia. And, starting this year, four winners of its competitions will be eligible for an Academy Award in the short film category, up from just one in the previous edition. By comparison, Sundance, North America's premier festival of independent films, selects five shorts for Oscar consideration.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
May 25, 2017
Short Shorts Film Festival & Asia teams up with Exile's Hiro to create a contemporary fusion of vision and sound
From its debut in 1999 as the passion project of actor Tetsuya Bessho, Short Shorts Film Festival & Asia has grown into a big event on the local and regional film calendar. Size is one reason: The 19th edition, which unspools from June 1 to 25 at six venues in Tokyo and Yokohama, features nearly 250 films in a variety of genres.
Japan Times
JAPAN / Media
Feb 17, 2013
Bringing the love of short films to a local audience
If there was a birthday cake for the Brillia Short Shorts Theater, it would probably be an elegant, minimalist affair — no excessive decorations, nothing too calorific and five slim candles giving off a modest orange glow. One of just four movie theaters in and around Tokyo dedicated to short films, Brillia Short Shorts turns 5 years old this month. And the good news is: People really seem to like it. Not in a spectacular, queuing around the block kind of way, but just enough to fill the 128 lipstick-red upholstered seats, each embroidered with its own gold number, and have the lobby cafe (a secret find for foodies) thronged by discerning fans who see no reason not to have an artisanal latte just because they're at the movies.

Longform

Later this month, author Shogo Imamura will open Honmaru, a bookstore that allows other businesses to rent its shelves. It's part of a wave of ideas Japanese booksellers are trying to compete with online spaces.
The story isn't over for Japan's bookstores