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Film Mar 23, 2026

The Last Blossom: A Poignant Anime Exploring Redemption and Human Conscience

The Last Blossom is a contemplative anime film that tells the story of an elderly former yakuza, Ak…
The Last Blossom, directed by Baku Kinoshita and written by Kazuya Konomoto, is a quiet, contemplative anime feature that rarely gets a theatrical release. The film opens in a lonely prison cell, where the elderly former yakuza Akutsu finds an unexpected confidant in a talking balsam flower.Over the course of one sleepless night, Akutsu's life story unfolds in bursts. Thirty years prior, another balsam flower grows in the back yard of Akutsu's humble house, which he shares with Nana and her baby son, Kensuke. The relationship between the taciturn man and the bubbly young woman is seemingly platonic; Kensuke is not his son. Yet there are hints of romantic attraction; they share bowls of piping hot ramen noodles, play endless rounds of Reversi, and join in harmonising the Ben E King classic Stand By Me.In contrast to this alternative nuclear family, the yakuza world is still strictly traditional, revolving around machismo and codes of brotherhood. When Kensuke is diagnosed with a heart condition, Akutsu is lured into a criminal plot, which leads to his incarceration. Though encompassing much bloodshed and even a hidden treasure subplot, The Last Blossom is most moving as an exploration of human conscience, where a capacity for violence and kindness coexist.The paradox is reminiscent of Shōhei Imamura’s Palme d’Or winner The Eel, starring Koji Yakusho as a wife-murderer who shelters a pregnant woman after his prison release. With his unassuming buzzcut, in stark contrast to his flamboyant yakuza peers, Akutsu bears a striking resemblance to Yakusho’s protagonist. Though a minor work compared to Imamura’s, The Last Blossom similarly questions conventional notions of justice, and the impossibility of weighing one’s good and bad deeds.The Last Blossom is in UK and Irish cinemas from 27 March, and in Australian cinemas from 23 April.
#his #last #blossom
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Culture Mar 22, 2026

Saturday Night Live UK Debuts: A Promising Start Despite Imperfections

The inaugural episode of Saturday Night Live UK receives a mixed but generally positive review, wit…
In the end, a comedy show leaves you with a feeling that tells you whether it worked or not. The general consensus about the inaugural episode of Saturday Night Live UK is that it did work, though some may feel the cast of 11 actors and 20-strong writing team only just got away with it.The show began with an impression of Keir Starmer by George Fouracres, followed by the guest host monologue by Tina Fey, former head writer at the original SNL. Like many sketches to come, it started stiltly but warmed up to end in relative triumph.One of the stronger sketches featured a skincare range called Undérage by Pedolay, with the tagline "everyone will think your husband is a nonce!" While some sketches went on too long—a tradition almost as longstanding as the cold open—others hit their mark better.A sketch about David Attenborough's Last Supper with reanimated icons offered a disturbingly good Diana impression by Jack Shep, followed by two successful bits featuring Hammed Animashaun as an honest film critic and as part of a team dedicated to making the internet "as bad as it can possibly be."The team recovered with a solid Weekend Update presented by Ania Magliano and Paddy Young, which contained proper jokes for grownups, including references to "Boris Pistorius/Saddam Walliams" and a joke about "It's a Sin becoming a musical as if a TV show about the Aids crisis could get any gayer."While a Shakespeare sketch and a bra-fitting sketch had mixed results, and performances by Wet Leg were described as "god-awful," the reviewer concluded that the show did not fail and could become more successful as the team and audience settle in over coming weeks.The review acknowledges that while the show could have been a lot worse, it also could have been better. However, the attempt to retool a legacy American brand for British audiences was refreshing and ambitious, with potential for growth and improvement.
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