Ai no Kotodama

Ai no Kotodama (愛の言霊, lit. Words of Devotion) is a 2007 Japanese film directed by Satoshi Kaneda and based on the manga of the same name by Keiko Konno. The film stars Yasuka Saitō as Miyako Tachibana and Hidenori Tokuyama as Shinya Ōtani. The film was released on DVD on October 27, 2007.[1] A sequel under the name of Ai no Kotodama: Sekai no Hate Made, with new plot and cast, was released on August 7, 2010.[2]

Ai no Kotodama
Directed bySatoshi Kaneda
Produced bySatoshi Kaneda
Screenplay byRie Yokota
Based onAi no Kotodama
by Keiko Konno
StarringYasuka Saitō
Hidenori Tokuyama
Rinako Matsuoka
Masashi Kagami
Junko Ōkura
Yui Iwata
Kentarō Sakai
Music byMoku
CinematographyRie Yokota
Production
company
Video Planning
Distributed byVideo Planning
Release date
  • 27 October 2007 (2007-10-27) (Japan)
Running time
72 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

The film focuses on a young gay couple while they struggle with jealousy and insecurities.

Plot

Shinya Otani and Miyako Tachibana have been inseparable since high school. Now college students, both live together in a small rented apartment in the city while keeping their relationship as a secret, in order to avoid unnecessary complications. However, their happy life begins to fall apart after they meet Yukiko Mizusawa, an old friend from high school. While Tachibana welcomes her with open arms, Otani is not as excited as he is, mainly because at school there used to be rumors that Tachibana and Mizusawa were dating. As time goes by, Otani can not help feeling more and more jealous of Mizusawa, especially after realizing how perfect she was and believing that she was in love with Tachibana. His jealousy only gets stronger when she gives Tachibana a perfume for his birthday called "Jealousy", which turns out to be the same one that she uses. Otani becomes hostile and unfriendly, even beginning to doubt about the feelings of his lover for him and treating him coldly. This situation continues until, due to a series of misunderstandings after another, both argue and decide to separate for a while.

Otani refuges in the apartment of Shougo Sunochi, a college friend who deals with a long-distance relationship with a young American boy named Alfred. Tachibana, meanwhile, tries to fix the things between them and sends Otani a text message citing him to talk, but he does not see it as his cell phone stops working after getting wet. Believing that Otani had ignored him, Tachibana begins to fall into depression. Mizusawa, aware that something bad was happening between the two, finds the courage to confess to Otani that it was really him and not Tachibana who had always been in love with, only to come to the shocking realization that Otani and Tachibana were in fact, a couple.

After clarifying things, Otani and Tachibana make up again. Otani, feeling sorry for his behavior, invites Mizusawa to throw fireworks with them at their university, where Mizusawa concludes that her feelings for Otani would never be reciprocated, but that was okay because she had always enjoyed seeing them together. The film ends with Otani and Tachibana being a happy couple again and enjoying their company, with Otani hoping that one day his words of devotion, having so much power, will reach Tachibana.

Cast

  • Yasuka Saitō as Miyako Tachibana
  • Hidenori Tokuyama as Shinya Otani
  • Rinako Matsuoka as Yukiko "Yuki" Mizusawa
  • Masashi Kagami as Shougo Sunochi
  • Junko Ōkura as Kana Morikawa
  • Yui Iwata as Yūko Kitagaki
  • Kentarō Sakai as Ramen Shop's Owner
  • Kimiaki Tasaka
  • Shiomi Andō

Production

The music was composed by Moku, while the theme used for the end credits was eve by Hidenori Tokuyama. Tokuyama also sung the song Life, inserted later in the film. A sequel, Ai no Kotodama: Sekai no Hate Made, was released on August 7, 2010 with new plot and cast. Yasuka Saitō repeated his role as Miyako Tachibana in a supporting role.

gollark: In the old days of the internet, you had open SMTP relays and no encryption and whatever. This was apparently quite nice, as long as nobody touched it and nobody did evilness.
gollark: Too bad, it is, you can't just arbitrarily trust everyone ever and systems which actually recognize this are important.
gollark: This does not prevent you from trusting people if you want to for whatever reason.
gollark: The whole blockchain thing is a clever mechanism to low-trust-ly synchronize data, in this case a transaction log.
gollark: I don't want to *have* to arbitrarily trust people. This is why I do things like "TLS" and "not giving everyone my SSH keys".

References

  1. "愛の言霊 (Words of Devotion)". Eiga. Retrieved July 20, 2018.
  2. "愛の言霊". fwinc. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved July 20, 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.