Tag - yorgos-lanthimos

 
 

YORGOS LANTHIMOS

Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Feb 28, 2018
Yorgos Lanthimos' latest is absurd, abrasive and, on second watch, rather funny
Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos has been responsible for some of the most provocative and peculiar films of the past decade. His Oscar-nominated movie "Dogtooth" (2009) depicted a married couple who had kept their grown-up children confined at home for their entire lives. "The Lobster" (2015) — his first film in English, and an unlikely cult hit — was set in a world in which coupledom is legally mandated, and those who can't find a romantic partner are transformed into animals.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Mar 9, 2016
The Greek auteur who cooked up 'The Lobster'
When a gifted director ditches their native tongue and starts working in English, it can be a fraught process. For every Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, there's a Wong Kar-wai or Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, whose career still hasn't recovered since he parlayed the Oscar triumph of his 2006 drama "The Lives of Others" into the dismal Johnny Depp comedy "The Tourist."
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Mar 2, 2016
'The Lobster' offers a sci-fi solution for 'sexless Japan'
Back in the 1990s, an unmarried woman in Japan who was 25 or older might have been called a "Christmas cake." The term equated them with the seasonal cakes that were sold for half price after Dec. 24, and it contained an explicit warning for women: Catch a man before you turn 25 because that's your official sell-by date. It embodied Japan's embarrassing tendency to discriminate against women. But a mere two decades later, it's single Japanese men that are the target of this societal get-married-or-else pressure. And here's a movie that delves into that very issue — a wry, dry, brutally cynical work called "The Lobster."

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