3.11 A Sense of Home Films

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Release dates
  • September 19, 2011 (2011-09-19)
(Nara International Film Festival)[3]
October 8, 2011 (Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival)[4]
October 27-30, 2011 (Short Shorts Film Festival & Asia 2011)[5][6]
Running time
75 minutes
3.11 A Sense of Home Films
Directed byCatherine Cadou
Shunji Dodo
Víctor Erice
Pedro González-Rubio
Bong Joon Ho
Naomi Kawase
Leslie Kee
So Yong Kim (as So-yong Kim)
Isaki Lacuesta
Jonas Mekas
Kaori Momoi
Takushi Nishinaka
Wisut Ponnimit
Mohd Naguib Razak
Ariel Rotter
Steven Sebring
Patti Smith
Kazuhiro Sōda
Apichatpong Weerasethakul
Toyoko Yamasaki
Jia Zhangke
Zhao Ye
Produced byNaomi Kawase[1][2]
Release dates
  • September 19, 2011 (2011-09-19)
(Nara International Film Festival)[3]
October 8, 2011 (Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival)[4]
October 27-30, 2011 (Short Shorts Film Festival & Asia 2011)[5][6]
Running time
75 minutes
CountryJapan

3.11 A Sense of Home Films is a 2011 anthology film. Following the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011, Naomi Kawase, executive director of the Nara International Film Festival, contacted numerous directors and artists to create short films, each 3 minutes and 11 seconds in length,[7] for a planned anthology.[1][2][8][9][10]

Cast

Production

In May 2011, producer and director Naomi Kawase announced her intention to commission short films of 3 minutes and 11 seconds in length from various directors as a commemoration of the date the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[13]

In an interview with producer and director Naomi Kawase after the anthology's completion in 2012, interviewer Yamato Nadeshiko of the magazine Highlighting Japan, published by the Public Relations Office of the Government of Japan, said to her, "After the Great East Japan Earthquake, you appealed to directors around the world to make '3.11 A Sense of Home Films.' Please tell us about your reasons." Naomi Kawase responded, "Many people lost their homes and towns in the Great East Japan Earthquake. When I was thinking about doing something through film, I had the idea of asking directors around the world to participate in making a film that would cast a new light on their homes and towns. Directors overseas reacted to the tragedy that occurred in Japan as if it had happened to them, and submitted works. Victor Erice, the great Spanish director, contributed the phrase 'The Planet Earth is the home of human kind' with his work. I was really happy when the evacuees from the Great East Japan Earthquake thanked us after seeing the film."[1][2]

Release

The anthology film was originally planned to premiere in Naomi Kawase's hometown of Nara, Japan, at the Nara International Film Festival on September 11, 2011,[13] but ended up premiering at the festival on September 19, 2011.[3]

Reception

References

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