FACTOID # 106: Americans are 15% more innovative than the Japanese. But in percentage terms, the Japanese grant 3.5 times more patents.
 
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Encyclopedia > The Family Game
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The Family Game is the English title of Kazoku Gēmu, an award-winning 1983 Japanese film by Yoshimitsu Morita. This black comedy dealt with the changing dynamics of home life in Japan at that time. The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ... Jump to: navigation, search 1983 is a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ... Yoshimitsu Morita (1950-present) is a Japanese film director. ... Black comedy, also known as black humor, is a subgenre of comedy and satire where topics and events normally treated seriously – death, mass murder, sickness, madness, terror, drug abuse, rape, etc. ...


Japanese critics interpreted the movie as a comment on the misplaced priorities of middle-class life in Japan — the family in The Family Game relates to each other not as human beings, but in terms of the social roles they are expected to take on, and the pressure of these social expectations further accelerates the breakdown in their communication. It was voted the best movie of the year by Japanese critics and won several awards, although it failed to win the Japanese Academy Award for Best Picture. The Japanese Academy Awards have been held since 1977 to reward excellence in Japanese film. ...


Plot Summary

The Family Game presents an exaggerated look at the family structure of the time through the Numata family. The father (Juzo Itami) is a distant, alcoholic salaryman who cannot relate to or exert any influence on his family. He is angry that his second son, Shigeyuki (Ichirota Miyagawa), is not as academically successful as his older brother (who is himself only modestly successful in that regard). The mother (Saori Yuki) is a powerless housewife who pampers Shigeyuki. Shigeyuki only finds a measure of success when Yoshimoto (Yusaka Matsuda), a college student, is hired as his tutor — and literally slaps sense into him, forcing him to spend hours every day studying both academic subjects and self-defense. When Shigeyuki eventually gets into a good school, Yoshimoto turns the victory party into a spectacle of food-throwing and violence. Juzo Itami (伊丹十三 Itami Jūzō) (15 May 1933 - 20 December 1997) was an actor and a popular modern Japanese film director. ...


Cast

  • Yusaku Matsuda as Yoshimoto
  • Juzo Itami as Mr. Numata
  • Saori Yuki as Mrs. Numata
  • Ichirota Miyagawa as Shigeyuki
  • Junichi Tsujita as Shinichi, the older brother

Yusaku Matsuda became an actor when he was 19 as a rookie police officer for a TV show in Japan. ... Juzo Itami (伊丹十三 Itami Jūzō) (15 May 1933 - 20 December 1997) was an actor and a popular modern Japanese film director. ...

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Family Feud - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (4600 words)
Family Feud is a popular television game show that pits two families against each other in a contest to name the most popular responses to a survey-type question posed of 100 people.
An answer is considered correct if it is one of the concealed answers on the game board (the number varies with each question, but it is usually between three and nine answers, although since 1999, the game board only allows for eight answers, with a limit of six for multiplied value rounds).
One family member leaves the stage and is placed in an isolation booth and the other is given 20 seconds (15 seconds before 1994) to answer those questions.
Game Review - Family Business by Mayfair Games (590 words)
The mobster family is layed out before each player, and then a set of 5 action cards are dealt to each player.
Proving its popularity, this game is now in its third edition beginning with the first in 1982 and most recently with the third in 1995.
The cards in each family are illustrated with identical cartoonish mobster faces, but each gangster has his own true-life historical name, lending much color and flavor to the game.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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