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  • 1
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB13725224
    Format: 1 DVD Video (ca. 120 Min.) , 1 Beil. , Bildformat: 16:9 Letterbox
    Content: Shikoku Island, the fourth largest island in the Japanese archipelago. Matsuyama, a historical, quiet town facing the serene island sea. 1976, after the turmoil of years of student demonstrations, there came a time of nihilism. The new generation was given the nickname "Age of Three Nothings" signifying "Giving nothing, caring for nothing, being moved by nothing." Etsuko(15) lives with her reticent father and hard-working, fussy mother. They run a little dry-cleaning business. With them is Etsuko's grandmother who looks after the house and her 'brilliant' older sister who is leaving to attend a top college. Etsuko feels useless, with no role to play in the house-hold. The irony is that even though she is far from being an excellent student, she still managed to get into the best local high school. The emptiness of this achievement only worsens her sense of futility. One day she decides to run away from home. Her family don't flinch, assuming she just went out for a walk. Despondent and alone, even this gesture ignored, Etsuko stands on the sea shore and stares out across the waves. In the distance, she catches sight of something; it's a rowing team gliding through the water. At that moment something sparks inside her. She can't get this image out of her mind and sets her heart on joining the rowing team at the new school. However she finds out since it used to be a boys' school, traditional attitudes persist: there is no rowing team for girls. In a solution to all her recent frustrations with her life, she decides to do something about this. She bullies four other girls into forming a team. With their hearts not really in it however, their season ends in a humiliating defeat. Further burdened by the appearance of her childhood sweetheart on the boy's team, she begins to flounder. An awkward relationship with their melancholic coach followed by an injury that bars her from sport, threatens to wreck Etsuko's self-confidence. Just when it seems she will have to give up all that she struggled for, she finds it in herself to continue. "Rowing is everything for me," she says. By the second season, the girls have grown. With one voice they pull their oars through the water, heading for their first victory. "Ganbatte Ikimasshoi" was released in one small, independent theatre in September 1998. Although it's a readily identifiable story about the adolescence of average teenage high school girls, it struck a deep chord in Japan...Writer/director Itsumichi Isomura was also highly acclaimed for the sensitivity, lack of sentimentality and objectivity in his treatment of the fragility of youth. The film garnered 39 awards, among them prizes for direction, cinematography and sound. (Ganbatte Ikimasshoi fan page)
    Note: Ländercode: 1 und 2 , Orig.: Japan, 1998 , Japan. mit japan. und engl. Untertiteln
    Language: Japanese
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