Friday, October 31, 2025

October 2025 calligraphy "homework"

The "homework" pieces that I submitted for October 2025.

Hanshi kanji 半紙漢字: 暮从碧山下
 
Single character 一字: 雖
 
Hansetsu kanji 半切漢字: 寧可清貧自楽 不作濁富多憂
 
Unsubmitted pieces:


September 2025 calligraphy "homework"

Friday, October 17, 2025

Three down

After more than 100 pieces, setting aside 54 pieces, I finally selected the piece for submission to this year's Onchikai Shodo Exhibition 温知会書道展.
 
The 54 pieces that I set aside:
 
A candidate which was not submitted:
 
The next one would be The New Year Exhibition of Sankei Sho International Association 産経国際書展新春展 with its deadline in November, which I have been more or less working on in parallel with this recently submitted piece.

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Violet Evergarden orchestra concert in Taiwan on 11 January 2026

The next Violet Evergarden orchestra concert outside Japan will be held in Kaohsiung, Taiwan on 11 January 2026. The concert will be held at Zhidetang, a concert hall at Kaohsiung Cultural Center.

 
Like the concert in Thailand, this concert will feature TRUE, Chihara Minori, and Yuuki Aira. Music will be by Kaohsiung City Wind Orchestra and conducted by Thanapol Setabrahmana.

Link to tickets (in Chinese)
 
It is so nice to see such orchestra concerts continue to be held overseas. I also hope that they will again hold the concert in Japan, since I really enjoyed the 2021 concert.

My overall thoughts on Violet Evergarden The Movie

Events:
 
Translations of short stories:
Gilbert Bougainvillea and the Fleeting Dream (unofficial translation of "ギルベルト・ブーゲンビリアと儚い夢")
The Starry Night and the Lonely Two (unofficial translation of 星降りの夜とさみしいふたり)
Diethard Bougainvillea's If (unofficial translation of ディートフリート・ブーゲンビリアIf) 
The Tailor and the Auto-Memories Doll (unofficial translation of 仕立て屋と自動手記人形)
 
Tellsis (Nunkish) translation:
Last line of Violet's final letter to Gilbert
 
Insights on the movie:
 
Audio commentary notes:
 
 
All posts related to Violet Evergarden.
 

Friday, October 10, 2025

Watching 5 Centimeters per Second (live-action adaption)

5 Centimers per Second (秒速5センチメートル) is an animated film by director Shinkai Makoto that was released in 2007. It is actually a collection of three short films, with the same protagonist named Tono Takaki, following him from 1991 when he was in elementary school, until 2008 when he was an adult working as a programmer. It's theme song is "One More Time, One More Chance" by Yamazaki Masayoshi.
 
Today, the live-action adaptation of this animated film premiered in Japan, with a stage event featuring the cast and director. This stage event was being live-streamed in cinemas, so I went to catch the movie and stage event at a local cinema.
 
The original animated film was three short films, each featuring a certain period of Takaki's life (part 1 was when he first got to know Shinohara Akari in elementary school until they parted ways in the first year of junior high school; part 2 was mainly at Tanegashima, with the focus mainly on Takaki's third year in high school and his classmate Sumida Kanae's crush on him; part 3 was adult Takaki working as a programmer and eventually moving on in life). The live-action film, however, followed the life of adult Takaki, with flashbacks that showed his past with Akari and Kanae. It also added other aspects to the story, such as adult Akari's life, an expanded backstory for Kanae's sister (who was a teacher at Takaki's and Kanae's high school), and other characters to beef up the story of how Takaki eventually moved on from his memories of Akari. It continued to feature the song "One More Time, One More Chance" but also had another song "1991" by Yonezu Kenshi as its theme song.
 
The live-action film made many attempts to show real footage of iconic scenes and places featured in the animated film. The director is actually a photographer, so I can understand why he wanted to try and capture those places and scenes on tape. But I feel that those scenes in the anime were depicted in certain ways and at certain times for their symbolism. The effect is just different when you change the medium. For example, the anime had a scene where the rocket plume cast a shadow that separated the sky into light and dark parts, implying that Takaki and Kanae live in different worlds. That symbolism just wasn't as strong in the live-action film.
 
The story itself also felt a bit disconnected. Because the live-action film tried to largely follow the story of the original story, beefed up with its own expanded material, you end up with a distinctive Shinkai Makoto story and a somewhat out-of-place expansion. This disjointedness becomes more distinct because of how the story flows back and forth between flashbacks (which are from the original anime story) and the main story time line (which is heavily expanded). In the end, you have a story that seems to be packed with filler to turn the original 63-minute animated film into a 121-minute live-action film. Personally, the story felt weak and diluted.
 
I think the reason why the film felt a bit dissatisfying for me was because of the expanded story. As the story progresses, the new and expanded parts made me feel like this could be a story set in a parallel universe, with a similar setting but different ending, maybe even a happy ending. But the ending was the same. It felt like time wasted when the story is basically the same, the ending is the same, and everything added was filler.
 
 
The stage event took place after the movie finished screening. It was about 30 minutes, featuring Matsumoto Hokuto (who played adult Tono Takaki), Takahata Mitsuki (adult Shinohara Akari), Mori Nana (Sumida Kanae), Kiryu Mai (Mizuno Risa), Miyazaki Aoi (Kanae's sister), Ueda Haruto (child Takaki), Shiroyama Noa (child Akari), and Aoki Yuzu (teenage Takaki), as well as director Okuyama Yoshiyuki. The main focus was on Matsumoto Hokuto; I mean, it was quite obvious because the cinema I was at had an 80% female audience, of all age groups. There were even mother-daughter groups, all of them obviously fans of Matsumoto Hokuto. The cast and director mainly talked about their gratitude for the audience, their strongest impression during their involvement in the movie (during filming or while promoting the movie), and their hopes for the movie going forward.
 
Official website (in Japanese) 

Thursday, October 09, 2025

Four types of leaders

There are four types of leaders.
 
1. Leaders with good ideas and the ability to implement them
2. Leaders with good ideas but not good at implementing them
3. Leaders with bad ideas but also not good at implementing them
4. Leaders with bad ideas yet have the ability to implement them
 
Type 1 leaders make things better for everyone.
Type 2 leaders are a pity.
Type 3 leaders are harmless.
Type 4 leaders can make things very bad for those around them (or worse, get them killed).