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I Wish, Movie

I Wish (Kiseki) 2011

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Brothers Koichi and Ryunosuke hatch a fantastic plan to engineer a miracle and reunite their divorced parents in this drama from Japanese director Kore-eda Hirokazu (Still Walking). More

"The brothers hear that at the moment two new bullet trains from north to south Japan whiz past each other, it will generate the energy to make wishes come true; for them, at last a way to reunite mum and dad. Kore-eda's combination of close, documentary-like observation and multi-layered story follows the children as their plan comes haphazardly together amid the complications of their and the adult worlds." (London Film Festival) Hide

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9 votes / 3 comments The Talk

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    • Rex H

      SEE THIS MOVIE! It's a wonderful experience.

    • Martin B

      Captures the essence of childhood. Makes you love life!

    • adeej

      A wonderful glimpse on the dreams kids have when their parents' marriage falls apart.

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Flicks.co.nz Review

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  • RexH

    The "minutiae" are for me what makes this movie's heart beat.

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Rebecca Barry Hill Flicks Writer

For a film inspired by Japan’s bullet trains, I Wish is ponderously slow. Clocking in at over two hours, award-winning film-maker Hirokazu Koreeda, director of Nobody Knows, masterfully evokes everyday life in modern Japan through the eyes of babes, putting characters before plot. More

It’s a shame this isn’t more tightly focused as it’s a sweet story of two brothers conspiring to bring their broken family back together, a moving tale of innocence lost. But glaring narratives are not Koreeda’s style. I Wish is epic in duration, yet humble. So your affection for the film will rely on your patience for gentle, observational and occasionally meandering storytelling.

Through a series of vignettes, we meet 12 year-old Koichi, who lives with his unemployed mother and grandfather. Further north in Hakata is Koichi’s effervescent younger brother Ryunosuke, who lives with his father, a rock musician. Koreeda allows the kids – actual brothers Koki and Ohshiro Maeda – to simply be kids, resulting in many amusing and wise conversations about life (when discussing what “indie” means in relation to their muso dad, they decide it’s “unsuccessful”).

Despite an abundance of pithy observations between the gifted comedic child actors, this train sometimes falters on the tracks, as the stakes in I Wish are neither high nor harsh. With its sprawling cast of peripheral characters, the film’s greatest strength is its evocative conjuring of fractured urban life against a bleak cityscape. You’d have to be hard of heart not to warm to the central ideas about childhood dreams and happy families – and the grown-up conclusions the children eventually come to. You could also be forgiven for feeling occasionally frustrated as things become mired in the minutiae. Hide

The People's Reviews

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4 ratings and 4 reviews

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I WISH... ALL movies about kids were like this!

RexH Flicks Superstar (?)

A good movie about children is a rare thing. It happens more commonly in Europe and Asia than it does in the USA, which has forever laboured under the curse of Disney. Even NZ pulled it off with "Boy".
So "I Wish" is a shiny gem worth cherishing. For me, this film was a major highlight of this year's International Film Festival and I'm delighted to be able to get the chance of seeing it again on general release.
Any film that opens in a town with a smouldering volcano as a backdrop should appeal to Aucklanders for a start! The locals accept it as part of life in this town, the pace of which is only one or two notches above slow.
It's all about the kids, too. Adults are around but in a peripheral sense and the camera is mostly at child height, accentuating the film's emphasis.
The story takes its time, following the lives and concerns of each of its protagonists while slowly building towards the story's McGuffin - the simultaneous passing of two bullet trains which supposedly enable the granting of wishes.
It's time well spent and I was somewhat reluctant to leave the cinema on first viewing.
This is not "The Goonies", so don't go expecting some kind of roller coaster Playstation ride. If I were to compare it to anything it might be "Stand By Me", though from a younger generation and culture. Oh, and no Body!
If you like kids and like movies about kids, go and see this one. It does not disappoint.

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Charming but Lengthy

Helen-Stone Wannabe (?)

As stylish and thoughtful as this Japanese film was,for me it failed to deliver in a few too many areas.








As stylish and thoughtful as this Japanese film was, I felt it didn't quite deliver as I might have hoped. What was essentially a very sweet tale of childhood innocence and the engineering of circumstances to fulfill dreams of family unity, it became bogged down with unnecessary detail and numerous subplots. The 2 hours plus, just added to the slow pace of things, and had me shifting and yawning somewhat in my seat.The movie was scripted from a childs eye-view so would appeal hugely to a younger audience(maybe an Engish version in an ideal world).The actors were brilliant, charming and endearing in their performances, portraying their various characters beautifully. If you have some time on your hands,and are whimsical at heart,this might just be up your alley:)



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A wonderful film focusing on children's dreams, although a little too long.

adeej Flicks Superstar (?)

I really loved this film! Having seen it at the New Zealand Film Festival, I want to see it again in the regular cinemas as I don't think I caught everything first time. The children in this film are very endearing, and the lead-up to when the main character's dream is fulfilled is great. There's also an interesting subplot of the reality of living in Kagoshima, with a smouldering volcano right on one's doorstep. Granted the film was relatively slow, and quite long, but I really got to love the main characters and wanted to see them do well. I didn't feel it dragging too much at all. There's also some really laugh-out-loud funny moments.

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GORGEOUS

TUBBS A-Lister (?)

A simple beautiful tale. The pacing is the opposite of a Bullet Train and quite appropriate.

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Press Reviews

AV Club (USA)

Full of life, heart, and funny little details about daily existence, as it meanders its way toward moments of real profundity. Full review.

Chicago Sun-Times (Roger Ebert)

Built around performances by two real-life brothers who are as unaffected, spirited and lovable as I can imagine... one of the pleasures of 'I Wish' is simply spending time with them. Full review.

Los Angeles Times

There is a lot of hope in the air in "I Wish," but the film never feels sappy. Full review.

New York Times

Whenever its children are on screen, lighted up with joy or dimmed by hard adult truths, the film burns bright. Full review.

Variety (USA)

Effortlessly pulls off the naturalism and charm desired from material that might have easily curdled into calculated preciousness. Full review.