Blog

  • Ann Hui’s 2017 film “Our Time Will Come” stands as a powerful historical drama set during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong. The narrative follows a school teacher and her would-be fiancé as they become entangled with Chinese guerrilla fighters, ultimately forging their own uncertain path toward freedom. This intimate yet sweeping story of resistance,…

    Joe Hisaishi’s Haunting Score for Ann Hui’s ‘Our Time Will Come’
  • Hayao Miyazaki’s long-awaited return to feature filmmaking with ‘The Boy and the Heron’ (2023) presents a deeply personal meditation on grief, displacement, and transformation. Set against the backdrop of World War II Japan, the film follows Mahito, a teenage boy whose life is upended by his mother’s death. When he is relocated to the countryside…

    Joe Hisaishi’s Enchanting Score for ‘The Boy and the Heron’: A Masterclass in Emotional Storytelling
  • Manabu Hirose’s 2018 documentary ‘Extreme der Tiefsee – Abysses’ takes viewers on an extraordinary journey into Earth’s most inhospitable environments. The film follows two international scientific expeditions as they venture into the icy Antarctic waters and descend into the crushing darkness of the Mariana Trench. Through groundbreaking cinematography, audiences witness bizarre deep-sea creatures and organisms…

    Joe Hisaishi’s Ethereal Soundscape: The Music of ‘Extreme der Tiefsee – Abysses’
  • Director Wu Youyin’s 2018 survival drama ‘Till the End of the World’ presents an unexpectedly compelling narrative of human connection forged in the harshest environment on Earth. The film follows an unlikely pair stranded in Antarctica following a catastrophic plane crash: a wealthy, self-absorbed venture capitalist seeking exotic wedding destinations and a dedicated science photographer…

    Isolation and Redemption: Joe Hisaishi’s Masterful Score for ‘Till the End of the World’
  • Olivier Dahan’s 2001 adaptation of Charles Perrault’s classic French fairy tale “Le petit poucet” brings the beloved story of Tom Thumb to the screen with a distinctly contemporary visual sensibility. The film follows young Poucet and his siblings as they navigate a dark forest after their impoverished parents abandon them, encountering magical creatures and fantastical…

    Joe Hisaishi’s Enchanting Score for Olivier Dahan’s Tom Thumb (2001)
  • What a Wonderful Family! 2, released in 2017 and directed by the legendary Yoji Yamada, represents the continuation of one of Japanese cinema’s most beloved comedic franchises. Following the events of the original film where patriarch Shuzo’s wife Tomoe proposed divorce as a birthday surprise, this sequel finds the Hirata family navigating fresh complications. When…

    Joe Hisaishi’s Delicate Artistry in What a Wonderful Family! 2
  • Why This Blog Exists If you have attended one of Joe Hisaishi’s concerts in Europe over the past few years, you already know something is happening. The venues are getting bigger. The audiences are getting louder. And the programmes, depending on which evening you chose, may have surprised you in ways you did not expect.…

    Two Kinds of Concert, One Composer — and Why This Blog Exists
  • Yoji Yamada’s “What a Wonderful Family! 3” (2018) represents the third installment in the beloved comedy-drama series that captures the warmth and occasional chaos of multigenerational Japanese household life. The film follows the Hirata family as they navigate an unexpected crisis when housewife Fumie awakens from an afternoon nap to discover that a thief has…

    Joe Hisaishi’s Gentle Mastery in What a Wonderful Family! 3
  • Myriam Constantin’s 2024 film ‘Opus Carré’ represents a fascinating collaboration between cinema and music that has captured the imagination of audiences across Europe. The film, a contemplative exploration of artistic creation and human connection, arrives as a thoughtful meditation on the creative process itself. Constantin’s directorial vision emphasizes visual poetry and introspective narrative, creating an…

    Joe Hisaishi’s Luminous Score for ‘Opus Carré’: A Masterclass in Visual-Musical Harmony
  • Nobuhiko Obayashi’s 2012 film ‘Casting Blossoms to the Sky’ stands as a poignant meditation on disaster, memory, and human resilience. Following the catastrophic 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami that devastated Japan’s northeast coast, the film traces a journalist’s journey to Nagaoka, a city bearing its own scars from historical tragedy. Already ravaged by American bombing…

    Resilience in Sound: Joe Hisaishi’s Score for ‘Casting Blossoms to the Sky’