An urban Japanese couple decide to move to the country.An urban Japanese couple decide to move to the country.An urban Japanese couple decide to move to the country.
- Awards
- 6 wins & 11 nominations
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- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Storyline
Did you know
- Quotes
Oume: These 'novels' of yours ... are they 'lies' or are they true stories?
Takao Ueda: Well, they are not 'true'. Maybe they're lies told in order to tell the truth. All right, then ... you can't eat burdock straight from the field but you can cook it to make kinpira. If you ask which is 'real', it's burdock from the field ... but if it wasn't kinpira you'd never know how good it was.
Featured review
A couple moves to husband's home village, where he was born as a son of a farmer. Husband is a novelist who won an award ten years ago, but since then nothing has been printed. Wife was a doctor of a leading edge hospital in Tokyo, but had been so busy that she had a panic disorder. In the village she works as an only doctor in the village. This movie describes how the couple are "healed" in this village community, particularly "Oume-san", a 96 years old woman living in a tiny temple of Amitabha Buddha, and Sayuri, a young woman who lost voice but writes for Oume-san. Actual lead is Oume-san. She is lively, frank, hardworking, and simple. This is a story of Oume-san, and the life in beautiful four seasons in Japanese village. The plot is fairly simple, except death of the teacher Kouda and healing of Sayuri. The movie seems to tell a single message through these contrasted episodes.
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- Also known as
- Letter from the Mountain
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $3,143,540
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