69 | |
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Directed by | Sang-il Lee |
Written by | Kankuro Kudo |
Starring | Satoshi Tsumabuki Masanobu Andō Yuta Kanai Asami Mizukawa |
Cinematography | Kozo Shibasaki |
Edited by | Tsuyoshi Imai |
Music by | Masakazu Sakuma Naoki Tachikawa |
Distributed by | Toei Company |
Release date |
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Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Box office | $4,551,540[1] |
69 is a 2004 Japanese film adaptation of Ryu Murakami's 1987 novel 69. The film was directed by Lee Sang-il.
In Sasebo (on the Island of Kyushu, Southern Japan), in 1969, inspired by the iconoclastic examples of Dylan, Kerouac, Godard and Che, a band of mildly disaffected teenagers led by the smilingly charismatic Ken decide to shake up "the establishment," i.e., their repressive school and the nearby US military installation. A series of anarchic pranks meets with varying levels of success, until Ken and his friends focus their energies on mounting a multimedia "happening" to combine music, film and theater.
A review on Asian Movie Pulse concluded, "“69” is not the best novel of Ryu Murakami neither the best film of Lee Sang-il, and the fact that a film about the 60's is stripped of any elements of nostalgia definitely works against it. However, through Tsumabuki's charisma, the in-your-face buffooness and the music ends up being entertaining and quite pleasant to both eyes and ears."[6] while Variety stated, "Helmer Lee Sang-il, a third-generation Korean-Japanese, does a serviceable, if undistinctive, job in the director’s chair. Compared with other films based on the work of Murakami (“Audition,” “Tokyo Decadence”), this is considerably tamer fare. Perfs are likable but generic, and tech credits professional but uninspiring."[7]