Fumi Ichii, who works at the bakery, has her own personal view of marriage that "I'm not confident that he will love me for the rest of my life and I'm not confident that I can love him. forever". Then the story begins when one day she accidentally reunites her first love in high school, Yuasa Tamotsu. ~~ Screening Dates: October 28, 2017 (30th Tokyo International Film Festival) || February 17, 2018 (Theatre) Edit Translation
- English
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- dansk
- Norsk
- Native Title: パンとバスと2度目のハツコイ
- Also Known As: Bread, Bus and First Love For The Second Time , Pan to Bus to Nidome no Hatsukoi , Pan to Bus to 2 Dome no Hatsukoi , Pan to Bus to 2-dome no Hatsukoi
- Screenwriter & Director: Imaizumi Rikiya
- Genres: Romance, Life, Drama
Cast & Credits
- Fukagawa Mai Main Role
- Yamashita Kenjiro Main Role
- Ito SairiIshida SatomiSupport Role
- Shida SaraNiko IchiiSupport Role
- YuhiShin KashiwagiSupport Role
- Otozuki KeiKumi KawamuraSupport Role
Reviews
1) The GREAT ones, stuff like the "Kazoku wa Tsurai yo!" trilogy, or "Umimachi Diary", or many many others, all magnificent examples of what makes Japanese culture so unique and fascinating
2) The SILLY ones, titles like "The World Sinks Except Japan" or "Oppai Volleyball" and many others; in a decent portion of these, the silliness is actually pretty funny, making such movies still enjoyable
3) The YAWNFESTS, or what I tend to refer to as "Victims of the nefarious influence of French 'Nouvelle Vague' and 'Cahiers du Cinéma'..."; pompous and artsy, painfully slow, with horribly thin (or even non-existing!) plots, unappealing dialogues etc.
4) All those which cannot fit in any of the previous (hey, I did warn you I was oversimplifying it! ^___^;;;.....)
Unfortunately, this "Bread & Bus Etc." fits in the third category. It took me FOUR DAYS to finish it, because I literally couldn't stand watching more than half an hour of it in one go (and usually my eyelids would start feeling horribly heavy already after ten or fifteen minutes...>____<).
The whole plot could fit on the back of a postage stamp, and if it had been done as a short movie (like, five minutes, tops) it might have been okay. But at close to two hours, it's almost unbearable.
Too bad, because Fukagawa Mai (the reason why I've watched it!) possesses a pretty nice acting talent. But it just couldn't shine in this yawnfest, alas.
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