Strawberry Fields (1997 film)
Strawberry Fields is a 1997 independent feature film directed by Japanese American filmmaker Rea Tajiri and co-written by Tajiri and Japanese Canadian author Kerri Sakamoto. PlotThe story of the film centers on Irene Kawai, a Japanese American teenager in Chicago in the 1970s who is haunted by a photo of her grandfather she never knew standing by a barracks in a World War II internment camp for Japanese Americans. Prompted by visits from the ghost of Terri, her dead baby sister, Irene journeys with her boyfriend Luke on a road trip to Arizona, where the Poston War Relocation Center once stood, and where the photo of her grandfather was taken. Main cast
ProductionFilmmaker Rea Tajiri, whose own grandparents and parents were interned, was inspired to make the project because of the lack of films that explored the effects of internment on internees' children.
Strawberry Fields was filmed in Chicago, Illinois, and in California. The film was completed in 1997, a process that took four years.[1] It took another two years to get commercially released.[1] The film received funding from CPB, NEA and ITVS. ReleaseIt premiered at the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival and was an Official Selection to the Venice Film Festival. It also screened at the Los Angeles Film Festival and won the Grand Prix at the Fukuoka Asian Film Festival.[1] It was released on VHS and DVD by Vanguard Cinema. ReceptionCritic Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times called the film "very impressive...a tough-minded, idiosyncratic coming-of-age story".[2] Variety was more critical, citing the film's "superficially sketched characters" and "hackneyed dialogue".[3] References
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