Fly Me to the Saitama

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Fly Me to the Saitama
File:Tonde Saitama poster.jpg
Japanese theatrical release poster
Directed by Hideki Takeuchi
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Hiroki Wakamatsu
  • Shinya Furugori
Written by Yuichi Tokunaga
Based on Tonde Saitama
by Mineo Maya
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Face 2 Fake
Cinematography Sohei Tanikawa
Edited by Shinji Kawamura
Distributed by Toei
Release dates
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  • February 22, 2019 (2019-02-22)
Running time
107 minutes
Country Japan
Language Japanese
Box office ¥3.76 billion (Japan)[1]

Fly Me to the Saitama (Japanese: 翔んで埼玉 Hepburn: Tonde Saitama?, stylized as Fly me to the Saitama) is a 2019 Japanese comedy film directed by Hideki Takeuchi, based on the 1980s manga series of the same name written and illustrated by Mineo Maya.[2][3][4] It was released to critical acclaim and received 12 nominations at the 43rd Japan Academy Film Prize, taking home the Director of the Year, Screenplay of the Year, and Best Film Editing. It also won the Best Film at Blue Ribbon Awards.[5] With a gross of $32.8 million it was the 13th highest-grossing film of 2019 in Japan.[6]

Plot

In present-day Saitama, Aimi's parents are driving her to her engagement ceremony. Aimi's parents are upset that Aimi plans to move to Tokyo after the marriage because residents of Tokyo have long looked down on residents of Saitama. To avoid arguing, they pass the time by listening to the radio, which is playing a supposedly historical drama about Saitama's fight for independence from Tokyo. The radio drama unfolds as Momomi, the son of the Tokyo governor, finds his social status at school threatened by the arrival of Rei Asama, a handsome male student who has been living in America. Unusually for a sophisticated Tokyo elite, Asama helps the scholarship students from Saitama, who live in poor conditions in a hut located off the main campus grounds.[7]

Momomi falls in love with Rei, but Rei is revealed to be a secret agent of Saitama sent to help achieve independence from Tokyo by infiltrating the Tokyo elite. Rei's true identity is discovered by Momomi's family butler, and Rei flees to return to Saitama and join the independence movement. Momomi joins him after discovering a plot by Tokyo elites to destroy the Saitama resistance. After Rei finds out the identity of his own father and leads the Saitama forces to a final confrontation with Tokyo forces at the provincial border, Rei and Momomi reveal Momomi's father's plot, removing him from power and achieving independence for Saitama.

Cast

Box office

In the opening weekend it topped the Japanese box office with $2.33 million.[2] The film had grossed $32.8 million in Japan by May 2019.[8] By the end of 2019, the film had grossed ¥3.76 billion, making it the eighth highest-grossing domestic film of 2019 in Japan[9] and the 13th highest-grossing film of 2019 overall in Japan.[6]

Critical reception

It was released to critical acclaim as received most (12) nominations at the 43rd Japan Academy Film Prize, and won for Director of the Year, Screenplay of the Year, and Best Film Editing, as well won for the Best Film at Blue Ribbon Awards.[5]

In a 4⁄5 review in The Japan Times, Mark Schilling praised the film for taking a Japan-specific story and making it appealing to international viewers, and singled out lead actress Nikaido's ability to move between serious and humorous moments in her performance of Momori Dannoura.[7]

References

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External links