From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lana Wilson documentary
The Departure |
---|
|
Directed by |
Lana Wilson |
---|
Produced by | Lana Wilson |
---|
Cinematography | Emily Topper |
---|
Edited by | David Teague |
---|
Music by |
Nathan Michel |
---|
Production companies | |
---|
Release date | |
---|
Country | United States |
---|
Language | Japanese |
---|
The Departure is a 2017 American documentary by
Lana Wilson. It concerns
suicide in Japan. The film premiered at the 2017
Tribeca Film Festival in New York.
[1]
[2] It was nominated for a 2018
Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary.
[3]
References
-
^ Erbland, Kate (April 22, 2017),
'The Departure' Review: 'After Tiller' Director Returns With An Intimate Documentary About Suicidal Tendencies – Tribeca 2017: Buddhist priest Ittetsu Nemoto wants to help you live, but he may no longer see the point in this stirring documentary,
IndieWire
-
^ Edelstein, David; Yoshida, Emily (April 20, 2017),
"17 Movies to See at the Tribeca Film Festival This Year", Vulture.com,
New York magazine
-
^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (2017-11-21).
"Spirit Award Nominations: 'Call Me By Your Name', 'Lady Bird', 'Get Out', 'The Rider', 'Florida Project' Best Pics". Deadline. Retrieved 2018-02-10.
- Hornaday, Ann (October 31, 2017),
"In the documentary 'The Departure,' a Buddhist monk occupies the thin place between life and death",
The Washington Post
- Jaworowski, Ken (October 12, 2017),
"Review: In 'The Departure', Watching Over Those Who Flirt With Death", The New York Times
- Bowen, Chuck (October 9, 2017),
"The Departure",
Slant
- Scherstuhl, Alan (October 10, 2017),
"Intimate Doc "The Departure" Finds a Monk Teaching Potential Suicides What Death Truly Means",
The Village Voice
- Scheck, Frank (October 12, 2017),
"'The Departure': Film Review",
The Hollywood Reporter
- Macaulay, Scott (October 13, 2017),
"Director Lana Wilson Talks Gaining Trust, Valuing Life and Her Wise, Empathetic Suicide Prevention Doc, The Departure",
Filmmaker
- Abele, Robert (October 19, 2017),
"'The Departure' looks at selflessness and suffering from a Zen monk's view",
The Los Angeles Times
External links