2002 Japanese film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mars Canon (火星のカノン, Kasei no Kanon) is a 2002 Japanese film directed by Shiori Kazama. Themes of the film include adultery and homosexuality, as Mars connotes both fighting and sexual intercourse.
The Mars Canon | |
---|---|
Directed by | Shiori Kazama |
Written by | Tomoko Ogawa Syotaro Oikawa |
Music by | Masaya Abe |
Distributed by | Argo Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 121 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
The film explores the relationship problems of two couples, Kohei and Kinuko, and Manabe and Hijiri, and the solutions they try to devise as a way out. Kohei and Kinuko, despite their age differences, seem like a happy pair, but there is an insurmountable distance between them. Kohei is married to another woman, and Kinuko, though she knows he will never divorce, can't bring herself to break off the relationship and start anew. Manabe and Hijiri, meanwhile, start off happily enough, but eventually their passion begins to wane as Manabe starts looking to other women for sex. Hijiri, feeling rejected, moves into an apartment next door to Kinuko, where she plots to break up the mismatched couple to her own advantage.
The film won the Asian Film Award at the 2001 Tokyo International Film Festival held October 27-November 4, 2001.[1]
The film was presented at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 12, 2002. It was screened at the 24th PIA Film Festival on July 1, 2002[2] and was released theatrically in Japan on September 28, 2002.[3]
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