Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue Movie Download

Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue YTS Movie Download HD Links

Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue yts
Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue movie download hd
Plot Summary:
Mika works as a nurse by day; by night she entertains covetous men at a girls’ bar. Shinji is blind in one eye and ekes out a living as a construction worker. Young and grown-up at the same time, they both lead a lonely existence, but somehow their paths keep miraculously crossing under the Tokyo sky.
Director
Yûya Ishii
Top Cast
Top cast

Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue 2017 [JAPANESE] 720p torrent details

915.02 MB
1280*534
Japanese 2.0
NR

Subtitles
23.976 fps
1 hr 48 min
Seeds ….

Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue 2017 [JAPANESE] 1080p torrent details

1.72 GB
1920*800
Japanese 2.0
NR

Subtitles
23.976 fps
1 hr 48 min
Seeds 9.

Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue review

Reviewed by politic1983

7 / 10

Tokyo State of Mind
If the English title is something of a mouthful, Yuya Ishii’s most inventive film to date will leave you with a headful of undeveloped ideas. Using ‘guerrilla’ (that’s me quoting myself) poet and visual artist Tahi Saihate’s poetry anthology as inspiration, this is a whirlwind of ideas, visuals, noises, poetry and comment, all wrapped together under the Tokyo skyline.

Shinji (Sosuke Ikematsu) is a day labourer on a construction site in preparation for the Tokyo Olympics. Alongside fellow workers Tomoyuki (Ryuhei Matsuda), Iwashita (Tetsushi Tanaka) and Andres (Paul Magsign), they lift heavily by day and party heavily by night, living in cramped conditions, with limited funds and long-term prospects. Blind in one eye, Shinji’s mind races at a hundred miles an hour, spouting out verbal diarrhoea that no one can keep up with.

Chance sees his path regularly cross with that of nurse and hostess Mika (Shizuka Ishibashi), though she is initially drawn to the more confident Tomoyuki. Hiding an illness, however, Tomoyuki suddenly dies at work, with Shinji the closest thing he had to family. Shinji sees this as his chance to get closer to Mika, their paths frequently crossing in Tokyo’s busiest and noisiest districts until they build their own story together.

With a number of quirky coming-of-age comedies under his belt, there is a little more purpose and artistry in Ishii’s approach here, though perhaps treads on some rather fine lines. With no major plotline to speak of, this has the carefree air in the face of a thousand problems that comes with youth. The characters bounce around the city, seemingly living twenty-four hour lives, with life a series of fleeting moments.

Based on an anthology, this is a collection of ideas, never fully developed or explored to show the melting pot that is Tokyo. Numerous social comments are thrown in as the city prepares for the Olympics, often portrayed as a negative for the city, even before COVID. Day labourers work on low wages and little job security; nurses have to moonlight in hostess bars. You can dream to the night sky, but the city will crush many dreams.

With moving cameras, this creates the claustrophobic atmosphere of the hustle and bustle of Tokyo streets where you are never too far from the noise. It also highlights the reliance on mobile communications, where constant noise and bombardment are reflected in Shinji’s cluttered mind. Districts such as Shibuya and Shinjuku are where Shinji and Mika often find themselves, though neither seem to particularly like them.

Serving as a good companion piece to Ryuichi Hiroki’s “Sayonara Kabukicho,” this shows a changing face of Tokyo in the build up to the Olympics, where tidying up the city leaves a youth that is overworked and looking for an escape.

The fleeting nature of the city is reflected in the fleeting nature of the ideas contained within. Mika’s visits home and the two leads’ previous love interests are brought in, though don’t necessarily add anything to the overall story, apart from suggesting they could have had alternative lives. Shinji’s ramblings are little more than that, not necessarily offering conclusions. And Mika takes everything that happens to her in her stride, seemingly unaffected by it all.

“The Tokyo Night Sky is Always the Densest Shade of Blue” intrigues and leaves a lot to linger on the mind. Things come and go easily, but leave a lot of holes for you to fill in. It is earnest, yet naïve; full of ideas, but unable to fully articulate them. This will, therefore, frustrate or evoke depending on what you want from it. Throwing a lot of sounds and lights in your direction, and expecting you to take them in your stride, this is life in the city.

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