Coming Soon

The Taste of Tea

Directed by Katsuhito Ishii
Film Movement Classics
2004
143 Minutes
Japan
Japanese
Comedy, Fantasy, Asian, Classics
Not Rated

The Haruno family makes its way in a small town in rural Japan. Yoshiko is an artist and her husband, Nobuo, is a hypnotist. Their son, Hajime, has fallen in love with a girl at school, while his sister, Sachiko, is seeing bizarre visions, usually her own gigantic doppelganger following her through town, a specter she's convinced will go away if only she can pull off a perfect backflip. Presented in a new HD master supervised by the director.

Director & Cast

  • Director: Katsuhito Ishii
  • Starring: Takahiro Sato
  • Starring: Maya Sakano
  • Starring: Tadanobu Asano
  • Starring: Satomi Tezuka
  • Starring: Tatsuya Gashuin
  • Starring: Anna Tsuchiya
  • Starring: Tomoko Nakajima
  • Starring: Tomokazu Miura

Where to Watch

Trailer

Photos

Reviews

  • "Patience is often rewarded, and it certainly is by this droll and oddly touching film by Katsuhito Ishii. The movie is a family portrait as painted by a moderately demented Cubist: the family involved is nothing like yours, yet somehow, in its fractured way, exactly like yours."
    Neil Genzlinger, The New York Times
  • "The most charming comedy in town, writer-director-editor Katsuhito Ishii's 2004 piece is a modern Japanese variation on You Can't Take It With You, with some lovely fantastical flourishes."
    Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune
  • "A true delight that elevates feel-good cinema to a whole new level and charms from start to finish."
    Niels Matthijs, Screen Anarchy
  • "'Weird but cool,' as one character says -- yet the movie is also remarkably touching."
    Andrea Gronvall, Chicago Reader
  • "The imagery is joyous, delightfully imaginative, serene and beautiful, and ultimately enchanting."
    Sean Axmaker, Seattle Post-Intelligencer
  • "Ishii's domestic frame is as tightly packed and layered as his horizons are expansive."
    Michelle Orange, Village Voice
  • "Touching and funny, with charming performances."
    V.A. Musetto, New York Post
  • "A messy, heartfelt entanglement of tangential indulgences into the wild eccentricities of human behavior."
    Rob Humanick, Slant Magazine