This year’s Tokyo Film Festival (TIFF) has three Japanese filmmakers playing in competition — a haul that TIFF programming director Ichiyama Shozo told Deadline is a welcome high for the fest.
One of this year’s set is filmmaker Kotsuji Yohei, who screens his debut feature, A Foggy Paradise, an enigmatic pic shaped around two unrelated narratives that advance parallel to each other without specifying a setting, time, or destination.
The two loose stories depict ideas of life and death with a distinct sci-fi twist. On the ground here in Tokyo, the pic has been compared to the work of slow cinema masters like Ming-liang Tsai.
Kotsuji crafted the project over five years, during which he also worked as a teacher at a school for children with special needs.
Read more on deadline.com