Aina Ashida
Japanese version: Ghost romance
Basic information
Ghost Type: Drama /Fantasy/Love
Release Date: November 13, 2010 Japan Country/Region: Japan/Korea Film Length: 116 minutes Dialogue Language: Japanese Director: Taro Ohtani Starring: Nanako Matsushima, Song Seung-heon, and Suna Suzuki Released Company: Paramount Pictures
Casts
Director: Taro Otani Writer: Bruce Joel Rubin....(based upon the screenplay by) Miho Nakazono .... (screenplay) amp; Shimako Sato .... (screenplay) Actor: Nanako Matsushima .... Hoshino Nanami Seung-heon Song ... .Sawa Suzuki Kirin Kiki Mana Ashida Satoshi Hashimoto Kazuko Kurosawa Y?ichi Nukumizu Daisuke Miyagawa Produced by: Takashige Ichise. ...producer Hiroaki Miki ....producer Original Music: Michiru ?shima
Plot introduction
This film is a remake of the Hollywood love classic of the same name. Twenty years later, the new version returns to the big screen on the stage of modern Japan. The romance of love is the only focus of its efforts to create.
Behind-the-scenes footage
"The Ghost Story" starring Patrick Swayze and Demi Moore has long become a classic among Hollywood romance films. Twenty years later, a film of the same name set in modern Japan was born. Speaking of the origin of this remake, it came from a momentary thought of producer Takanose Ichinose. As early as 2006, Takashi Ichinose, who is famous for producing the "Grudge" series, was invited to Los Angeles by Paramount, which was planning to enter the Japanese market. When the other party asked if there were any good ideas for Japanese movies, he liked Paramount very much. Ichinose, who produced "The Last Love" produced by Ramon Company, immediately proposed to make an Asian version of "The Last Love". However, the Asian version does not have the ambition to surpass the original work, just to let the audience experience the undying love again. At the same time, the setting of the characters' fate is opposite to that of the original work. The male protagonist who was attacked and killed by robbers became the heroine. Moreover, the heroine's identity is set as the boss of a large company, which is an aspect of the living conditions of modern Japanese women. The classic passage in the original work where the hero and heroine work together to make pottery has been preserved. What kind of experience the audience will get in the Asian version is a big expectation. The director of this film, Taro Otani, is a newcomer in the film industry. Before taking over the filming of "The Love of Ghosts", Otani had many years of experience in filming TV series and had won many directing awards in the TV series category. The talented Tsugu Asako Sato, who has filmed "The Man with Twenty Faces", serves as the film's screenwriter. Hinata Taneda, who is well-known in the international film industry, provided art support for this film. The reason why the film is called the Asian version rather than the Japanese version is because the male and female protagonists of the movie are from Japan and South Korea respectively. Not only is the story set like this, but so are their actors. Nanako Matsushima, known as the queen of Japanese dramas, and popular Korean actor Song Seung-heon work together to interpret this love that spans life and death.
Nanako Matsushima, who became popular in Asia in the 1990s, temporarily stopped acting twice due to childbirth. This comeback is her only film work since starring in "Meishan" in 2007. Songdao, who has seven film shooting experiences, has never had a pure love story. How Matsushima talks about love on the screen has become a highlight of the film. Song Seung-heon, who came to Japan from South Korea to shoot, had to receive special training in Japanese and ceramics. Recalling his college days, when he took a second foreign language elective, he took German instead of Japanese. Song Seung-heon regretted it very much. In addition, veteran actor Kiki Shirin and talented child star Ashida Aina play important supporting roles in the film, playing the roles of the psychic and the girl ghost respectively. Hope to adopt it!