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Keihisa Setse filmed "The Changing Soul" starring Sato Shiro Motoaki

author:1905 Movie Network
Keihisa Setse filmed "The Changing Soul" starring Sato Shiro Motoaki

Changing Souls will be released in Japan in 2017

The director of the 1905 film "Showa 64" Keihisa Sete adapted the manga "Change" to the screen, and the film was titled "The Soul of Change" (provisional translation), and will be released in Japan in 2017. It is reported that Keihisa Sete has always been a fan of Tadao Tokasa, and after "Heaven Story" and "Showa 64 Years", he once again challenged the theme works that ask about the meaning of human life.

Due to the influence of his elder brother Yoshiharu Tuozhi, Tadao Tuozhi began to create manga and squeezed into the silent era to publish works intermittently. The movie "Changing Souls" will create a "big story" based on the four stories included in the original manga, with Keihisa Setse himself creating an original script story.

The story consists of four parts, "Change" tells the story of the old people who went fishing and dolls are involved in male and female strife and impulsively commit murder; "Night Cherry Shura" uses a man who has just entered old age as the protagonist to gaze at the men and women who went to see the cherry blossoms and assassinate each other; "The Ballad of Remembrance" depicts the love that occurred in the short post-war period, on the basis of the atrocities in the construction site shack; "Sound" depicts the wandering of the old man who has no way, and the family of the victim who is toyed with because of the bus accident.

It is reported that Shiro Sano, who played Yoshiharu Gare in the movie "Master of the Source Hall" by Ishii Keio, and Shiro Sano, who played Tadatoshi Tuosei in "Rogue Hirano", once again played the role of Tadao Tsuki Ueshina. In addition, Akira Tsunemoto, Masao Adachi, Masabu Yamada, Makoto Miura, Shuntaro Yanagi, Akasa Nakaten, and Yota Kawase and other powerful factions gathered to star. Yasukawa Yuro Yasukawa of "Japan's Worst Guy" and "Tuanji" was the music producer, and Nabeshima Junhiro of "When a Woman Sleeps" and "Goodbye Kabukicho" was the director.

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