Hanamizuki -2010- Official
★★★½ (3.5/5) Recommendation: Watch it on a rainy Sunday afternoon when you feel like having a good, cathartic cry. Just keep the dogwood flower emoji ready for when the credits roll.
However, if you are a fan of the original song, or if you are a sucker for the "right person, wrong time" trope, this film will wreck you. It is a nostalgic, lush, and deeply earnest tribute to the idea that true love isn’t about the time you have, but what you do with the time you’re given. hanamizuki -2010-
The film follows Sae (Yui Aragaki), a high school student in rural Hokkaido, who dreams of escaping her small fishing town. Her savior comes in the form of Kohei (Junichi Okada), a stoic, ambitious senior who dreams of becoming an international journalist. Their connection is instantaneous but star-crossed. As the titular dogwood tree blossoms, so does their love—only for Kohei’s scholarship to take him to America, leaving Sae behind. ★★★½ (3
There are romance films that make you swoon, and then there are those that aim to leave a permanent, gentle ache in your chest. Nobuhiro Doi’s Hanamizuki (Dogwood) falls firmly into the latter category. Based on the beloved song by singer-songwriter Hitoto Yo, this sprawling melodrama attempts the near-impossible: to translate the bittersweet, decade-spanning poetry of a pop ballad into a two-hour cinematic experience. It is a nostalgic, lush, and deeply earnest

