106 mins |
Rated
PG (Violence)
Directed by Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
Starring Hitoshi Omika, Ayaka Shibutani, Ryûji Kosaka, Ryo Nishikawa, Hazuki Kikuchi, Hiroyuki Miura
The winner of the Venice Film Festival's Grand Jury Prize, Oscar winning director Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s eagerly awaited follow up to Drive My Car is a profound eco-parable that takes place in the regional outskirts of Tokyo.
In Harasawa, a tiny village located deep in the forest, single father Takumi and his eight-year-olddaughter Hana live a simple life surrounded by pristine lakes, mountains and roaming deer.
Their quiet lives are interrupted when agents from a Tokyo urban development company visit the town proposing a glamping project; - a resort for city vacationers looking for nature experience but not keen to get their hands dirty.
When Takumi and the townsfolk's warnings that the development will pose a threat to the delicate ecological balance of the area are ignored by the agents, it becomes apparent the lives of not only Takumi and Hana, but all the area's inhabitants will change.
Featuring a staggering finale that will spark
debate long after the credits, Evil Does Not Exist is a quiet and thought-provoking masterpiece about the delicate balance between humanity and nature.
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The winner of the Venice Film Festival's Grand Jury Prize, Oscar winning director Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s eagerly awaited follow up to Drive My Car is a profound eco-parable that takes place in the regional outskirts of Tokyo.
In Harasawa, a tiny village located deep in the forest, single father Takumi and his eight-year-olddaughter Hana live a simple life surrounded by pristine lakes, mountains and roaming deer.
Their quiet lives are interrupted when agents from a Tokyo urban development company visit the town proposing a glamping project; - a resort for city vacationers looking for nature experience but not keen to get their hands dirty.
When Takumi and the townsfolk's warnings that the development will pose a threat to the delicate ecological balance of the area are ignored by the agents, it becomes apparent the lives of not only Takumi and Hana, but all the area's inhabitants will change.
Featuring a staggering finale that will spark
debate long after the credits, Evil Does Not Exist is a quiet and thought-provoking masterpiece about the delicate balance between humanity and nature.