All Under the Moon   SY-2010 

Sai’s breakthrough film builds a tragi-comic fresco of Asian-immigrant experience in Tokyo: the rip-offs and pitfalls, the subtle Japanese racism, the constant threat of deportation. In the first really ‘down’n dirty’ film about Japan’s working-class immigrants, Sai explores the dark side of Japanese politesse.

Sai’s breakthrough film, voted Best Japanese Film of 1993 by critics in the magazine Kinema Junpo, builds a tragi-comic fresco of Asian-immigrant experience in Tokyo: the rip-offs and pitfalls, the infinite varieties of subtle Japanese racism, the constant threat of deportation. Laid-back Korean-Japanese taxi driver Chung Nam (Kishitani Goro) takes the everyday racism of his colleagues and customers in his stride; the one thing that animates him is his passion for Filipina bar-girl Connie (Rita Moreno), who works in his mother’s ‘hostess pub’. But Connie has ambitions of her own, Mum disapproves of Chung dating a non-Korean, and then Chung’s social-climbing Korean boss goes bankrupt.… No previous film had ever got 'down’n dirty' with Japan’s working-class immigrants in the way that this one does, complete with words and phrases never before heard on a Japanese soundtrack. Sai shines a searchlight on the dark side of Japanese politesse.

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Japan 1993
DirectorSai Yoichi
ProducerAoki Katsuhiko
 Bong-Ou Lee
ScenarioSai Yoichi, Chong Wi-Shing, based on a novel by Yan So-Gil
CastKishitani Goro
 Ruby Moreno
 Ezawa Moeko
 Ogi Shigemitsu
 Endo Kenichi
 Arizono Yoshiki
 Maro Akaji
 Hagiwara Masato
PhotographyFujisawa Junichi
EditorOkuhara Yoshiyuki
Production designImamura Tsutomu
Sound designSaito Masatoshi
MusicNorman Orenstein, Sakuma Masahide, Yuukadan
Length109'
Themes
2010 Signals-Sai Yoichi