Taro Otomo
Directing
Known For

No description available.
あいねくらいねなはとむじいく

No description available.
盥の水

A boy has been aware of the presence of a girl beside him since he was a child. However, he does not know who she is. One day, a nuclear missile is accidentally launched at Japan. The children play innocently as if they have no idea of the fate that will happen in a few hours. Then the boy meets the girl again... The film tackles the heavy theme of nuclear fear, but instead of shouting hysterically against nuclear weapons as in previous works, it speaks poetically and dreamily. It is a requiem for children who have never known war to continue to be a generation that has never known war.
Let's Play Again Tomorrow

A short documentary film in the style of a private film that depicts the cat of Hiromiya Kamata, who is familiar with the "Nami Diary" that is being serialized at Epsteins. The direction was directed by Taro Otomo, who won awards at the Pia Film Festival and the Image Forum Festival, and recently worked as an assistant director at the latest film "Kaibatsu Hotel Blue" directed by Koji Wakamatsu and "A Thousand Years of Joy" scheduled to be released in the fall of 2012, and it is also a new work that he has been waiting for. Tetsuro Hirano, a steel photographer known as Kuro Kuda, who is also in charge of shooting in "Nami Nikki", has been shooting a movie for a long time.
浪のものがたり

A woman acts as if nothing has happened to her, and believes it. The space is gradually dominated by silence, and only the night trembles while watching.
震える夜

On August 9th, the glasswork was distorted. On the dead land, the glasswork was beautiful in the sunset. In it, a girl is trapped. The glasswork that was bathed in the sunset reflects the happiness of the girl. The glasswork that was bathed in the sunset is itself... Happiness has melted away together. And now that I cry again.
邂逅への幻想

The scene is Hiroshima. In the early summer, the boy looks up to heaven. In the boy's mind was a girl who took her own life, a poet with a sense of guilt, and a dead man. The poet's heartbreaking cry echoes in the boy's chest. The boy heads to the riverbank with a female student who knocked on the door of the boy's heart. The boys see the transparent river flowing red. Director Otomo, who has produced works with the motif of the atomic bomb, has worked on the theme of the atomic bomb three times, "Illusions to Encounters" and "Let's play tomorrow".