Fall Focus

October 21, 2023 - 6:00 pm At The Brattle

$15 General Admission
$13 IFFBoston & Brattle members, students, and seniors*

*Limited to one ticket per screening per membership card or Student ID. Student and senior prices are only available at the box office with valid ID. Member discount cannot be combined with other offers.

IFFBoston members get priority seating for all Fall Focus screenings.

Showtimes

    Winner: Best Screenplay, Cannes Film Festival

    In Japanese w/English subtitles

    After a detour in France (THE TRUTH, Fall Focus 2019) and South Korea (BROKER, Fall Focus 2022), Hirokazu Kore-eda returns to his homeland to reconnect with the roots that nourished the deepest spirit of his cinema. His art thrives on subtle, delicate emotions, disregards the obvious, and explores the ordinariness and variables of the human experience.

    Quiet and reserved Minato (Sōya Kurokawa)—no longer a kid, but not yet an adolescent—lost his father when he was a young child and lives with his mother (Sakura Andō). When he starts behaving strangely, obsessed with the idea his brain has been switched with a pig’s, the mother suspects his teacher Hori (Eita Nagayama) and calls a meeting with the school principal (Tanaka Yūko) only to face a wall of silence and stiff apologies. Someone must have put that idea in Minato’s head, but something doesn’t add up. Is Minato telling the truth, or is his professor innocent? Looking at the story from various points of view, in a RASHOMON-inspired structure, reality changes and the actual subject becomes the hidden friendship between Minato and one of his schoolmates, often bullied by other kids.

    A great storyteller of family dynamics, Kore-eda shows once again his unique ability to depict the inner world of children, unveiling uncomfortable realities with a natural and necessary tenderness.

    A milestone in his impressive body of work, MONSTER is marked by two major collaborations: one with co-screenwriter Sakamoto Yûji, and the other with the legendary musician Ryuichi Sakamoto, who died last March, MONSTER being his last soundtrack.

    —Giovanna Fulvi, Toronto International Film Festival guide