7.23 (Wed)Competition
Lucky Strike
- Onsite
- 7.23 (Wed) 10:30 Audio Visual Hall
Featuring: Over the Mountains, Another Day to Stay Alive, Mimesis, and Lucky Strike
©The Black Screen Brigade
Director: Yuki HOSHINO
Cast: Roy KISHIMA, Gentarou SHIMOFUSA, Gen SUZUMASA, Takashi NISHINA, Masako KAMIMURA, Soutarou SAKOU, Rintarou TAKEUCHI
2025 / Japan / 31min.
For four years, Jun had evaded telling his late friend’s mother that her son had passed away. One night, with the help of a male acquaintance, he finally summons up the resolve to accept this heavy responsibility. As their journey progresses, the story shifts between reality and imagination, threading together conversations about life’s “batting average” and recollections from the past, imprinting a lasting echo in the minds of viewers. While the two characters’ silent game of catch, intercut with whimsical music, makes a powerful motif, the gradual revelation of the truth quietly settles in the viewer’s heart with unexpected weight. Director Yuki Hoshino, who handled the screenplay, shooting, lighting, sound recording, and editing, portrays the love and bond within a family through the theme of baseball, creating a flawlessly executed short film that viewers will want to revisit time and time again. The light-hearted dialogue subtly weaves in the gravity of life and death as well as the past and the present, its emotional impact lingering long after the final frame. This screening marks its world premiere.
Director: Yuki HOSHINO
Born in 1973, Hoshino taught himself cinematography after graduating from university. He began his career as a cinematographer, working on his first commercial film In the Still of the Night (directed by Yusuke Kaida) in 2002. In 2007, he made his directorial debut with the short film The Windmill at Heart. His notable works include ABOUT ASHES (black and white, 24 minutes, 2021) and I’M ALL RIGHT (color, 182 minutes, 2024).
Message
In some ways, filmmaking is a means for me to hold on to my dignity and sanity. The great directors of the past have taught me that cinema is an art form particularly suited for capturing humans at our best. I hope that those who watch my films will, like me, find a way to preserve their own dignity and sanity. I believe that there is still hope for humanity and through my filmmaking I would like to convey that even humans can be truly wonderful beings.