Five Minutes to Tomorrow

Five Minutes to Tomorrow (Chinese: 深夜前的五分钟) is a 2014 Japanese-Chinese[1] romance suspense film directed by Isao Yukisada based on the Japanese novel of the same name by Takayoshi Honda.[2] It was released in China on October 23, 2014.[3]

Five Minutes to Tomorrow
Directed byIsao Yukisada
Screenplay byAnne Horiizumi
Based onFive Minutes to Tomorrow
by Takayoshi Honda
StarringCecilia Liu
Haruma Miura
Joseph Chang
Production
company
Shenzhen Meixun Jiarun Entertainment Investment Co.,Ltd
Beijing Fenghuang Liandong Entertainment Co.,Ltd
Shanghai GCod Entertainment Co.,Ltd
Fuxing Quanya Media(Shanghai)Co.,Ltd
Shimei Media(Beijing)Co.,Ltd
Xian Qujiang Meilin Entertainment Co.,Ltd
Shanghai Lezai Qizhong Entertainment Co.,Ltd
Release date
  • October 23, 2014 (2014-10-23) (China)
  • December 27, 2014 (2014-12-27) (Japan)
Running time
127 minutes
Country
  • Japan
  • China
LanguageMandarin
Box office¥8.35 million (China)

Plot

The story starts with a flashback of two twin sisters RuoLan and RuMei. Ruo Lan meets at the local pool a young Japanese clock repairman: Ryo (played by Haruma Miura),

Cast

Reception

As of October 28, the film had earned ¥8.35 million at the Chinese box office.[4]

gollark: The one thing with a baby's ribs being crushed is obvious evidence that the entire idea is bad but one idiot in Christianity is an isolated case?
gollark: There is LaVeyan or something Satanism, which is basically humanism rebranded to irritate Christians.
gollark: You're underestimating how many weird people exist.
gollark: Given that it's pushed out onto the fringes now, possibly? I don't see why it inherently can't be made to work.
gollark: Yes, bad edge cases happen sometimes?

References

  1. "行定勲監督「真夜中の五分前」の三浦春馬の中国語習得力に驚嘆も「うますぎる」". Eiga (in Japanese). 2014-11-23. Retrieved 2020-07-19.
  2. "三浦春馬&行定勲監督がオール上海ロケで挑んだ「真夜中の五分前」特報公開". Eiga (in Japanese). 2014-09-19. Retrieved 2020-07-19.
  3. 深夜前的五分钟 (2014). movie.douban.com (in Chinese). douban.com. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
  4. 深夜前的五分钟(2014). www.cbooo.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved October 26, 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.