Film Threat by Andy Howell
It achieves that magic combination of nuance, depth, and having a big heart that makes it both a crowd-pleaser and a favorite of critics.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Hikari
Cast
Mei Kayama,
Misuzu Kanno,
Shunsuke Daitoh,
Makiko Watanabe,
Yoshihiko Kumashino,
Minori Hagiwara
Genre
Drama
Yuma is a young Japanese woman who suffers from cerebral palsy. Torn between her obligations towards her family and her dream to become a manga artist, she struggles to lead a self-determined life.
Film Threat by Andy Howell
It achieves that magic combination of nuance, depth, and having a big heart that makes it both a crowd-pleaser and a favorite of critics.
Movie Nation by Roger Moore
37 Seconds is a remarkably frank and surprisingly warm depiction of disability, care-giving and sexuality.
Variety
Deceptively delicate and quietly tough.
The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young
Sentimentality and pathos are banned from Hikari’s screenplay, which surprises with its fresh, often humorous realism. This is one of those films that starts slowly and predictably, but when the turning point comes, it lifts the pic into another dimension.
Variety by Lisa Kennedy
Deceptively delicate and quietly tough.
Los Angeles Times by Kimber Myers
This isn’t the anodyne, awards-baiting film about disability that viewers might be used to; instead, Hikari’s feature debut is sensitive and empathetic, showing a young woman who is more than just her cerebral palsy. Yuma is a wildly creative, sexual person who deserves more than her society often gives her.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Barry Hertz
Hikari’s work is well-meaning, and Kayama delivers an affecting, but not affected, performance that almost holds the story together. Eventually, though, the film loses confidence in itself.
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