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Tokyo's LGBTQ+ Hub Inspires Intimate Cross-Border Film

Summary

  • New Japanese-Taiwanese co-production "Polaris" seeks financing
  • Film explores themes of self-identity and human connection
  • Adaptation of Li Kotomi's novel set in Tokyo's Ni-chome district
Tokyo's LGBTQ+ Hub Inspires Intimate Cross-Border Film

A new Japanese-Taiwanese co-production, "Polaris," is seeking financing at the Tokyo Gap-Financing Market. Directed by Seta Natsuki and produced by Twenty First City in partnership with Taiwan's Volos Films, the film is based on the novel "The Night of the Shining North Star" by Li Kotomi.

"Polaris" unfolds over one winter night at a bar in Ni-chome, Tokyo's LGBTQ+ hub. The film centers on women of different ages, nationalities, and sexualities who gather in the titular establishment, sharing drinks, laughter, and fragments of their lives under soft blue light. As their stories intersect like stars in a constellation, the film explores themes of self-identity and human connection before the women part ways at dawn.

For Seta, the project represents a meditation on authenticity and understanding. "This film is a reflection on what it means to be yourself and how hard it can be to understand one another," the director says. "It's also about how we define our sense of self and how we can begin to rethink what we once thought of as 'normal'."

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.

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"Polaris" is a film that explores themes of self-identity and human connection through the stories of women who gather at a bar in Tokyo's LGBTQ+ hub, Ni-chome.
The director of "Polaris" is Seta Natsuki.
"Polaris" is based on the novel "The Night of the Shining North Star" by Li Kotomi.

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