2014 JAPAN FILM FESTIVAL OF SAN FRANCISCO
WELCOMES SPECIAL GUEST OF HONOR DIRECTOR
MITSUTOSHI TANAKA FOR HIS NEW BIOPIC ON
JAPANESE TEA MASTER ASK THIS OF RIKYU
The 2014 Japan Film Festival of San Francisco, the first and only fully-dedicated Japanese film celebration for the S.F. Bay Area, is proud to present director Mitsutoshi Tanaka as an official Guest of Honor. Cinema fans are invited to join the Festival as it hosts the Bay Area premiere of Tanaka’s newest film, Ask This of Rikyu.
The film plays for a special single engagement at NEW PEOPLE Cinema on Saturday, July 19th at 6:00pm. Director Tanaka will personally introduce the film and appear for a special audience Q&A immediately following the screening. Tickets are $15.00 each. Advance tickets, trailers and more information are available at: http://jffsf.org/2014/ask-this-of-rikyu.
The 2014 Japan Film Festival of San Francisco is presented in conjunction with the 2014 J-POP SUMMIT Festival, San Francisco’s annual celebration of Japanese pop culture, music, fashion and film which takes place July 19th and 20th across the city’s Japantown district. More information is available at www.J-POP.com.
Based on the award-winning novel, "Rikyu Ni Tazuneyo," by Kenichi Yamamoto, Ask This of Rikyu depicts the final days of Rikyu, a renowned 16th Century tea master with the most profound influence on chanoyu, the Japanese "Way of Tea" tradition, and was the first to emphasize several key aspects of the ceremony, including rustic simplicity, directness of approach and honesty of self. His outspoken beliefs caused him to be ordered to commit ritual suicide by the chancellor Hideyoshi Toyotomi. Who was Rikyu – why did he inspire so much fear among the most powerful man of his time?
Born in 1958 in Hokkaido, Japan, Mitsutoshi Tanaka joined Dentsu Eigasha (now Dentsu Tech) upon graduation from Osaka University of Arts, making TV commercials for TV Man Union before establishing the Creators’ Union Co. in 1984. As a director of numerous TV commercials, he has won awards from the Allied CM Council (ACC) and the National Association of Commercial Broadcasters in Japan. Feature films he has directed include Kewaishi (2001), Shoro Nagashi (2003), and Castle Under Fiery Skies (2009).