Infinity Castle ‘leads the cinemas’ anime quartet’

Summer projections
Entertainment view Bank on the basis of growing fans of the United Kingdom with a quartet of theatrical outings anchored by the highly anticipated “Demon Slayer: Kimetsu No Yaiba – The film: Infinity Castle”, which takes place on September 12.
The exhibition chain will deploy two newly remastered 4K classics of an acclaimed director Mamoru Hosoda In addition to a fresh miku hatsune function. “”Summer wars“Launched on August 3 and will be followed by”Wolf children“August 17 and”Colorful step! The film: a miku who cannot sing“August 31.
“Summer Wars” follows a timid mathematics prodigy that accidentally unleashes a thug threatening the world digital infrastructure. “Wolf Children” focuses on a young mother who raises two half-wolf-human offspring through a decade story exploring identity and acceptance themes. The film Miku presents a torsion on the phenomenon of the virtual idol, starring a version of the character who lost his song capacity.
The sequel to “Demon Slayer” in September, a huge success in Japan, brought together the Tanjiro, Zenitsu and Inosuke demon trio for what seen as “the most awaited anime film of the year”.
“The anime fandom continues to grow here in the United Kingdom, and we are proud to be part of this community,” said Rachel Bland, content manager of the senior screen at View. “We recognize that looking at the anime does not concern the visuals on the screen; it is the atmosphere, the sound and the feeling of being completely immersed in a story. This is why we are so excited to project these films because they were supposed to be seen – on the big screen.”
Masters milestone
The 30th Busan International Film Festival will present “defining moments of Asian cinema”, featuring an unprecedented gathering of directors and acclaimed actors from September 17 to 26.
The special program marks the third iteration of “Asian Cinema 100”, developed with the Pusan National University Film Institute and the Korean film archives. After complete surveys on 161 figures from the 34 countries industry, the organizers have selected 119 films, with 10 titles to project at the festival.
Confirmed participants include Jafar Panhi (“It’s not a film”), Marziyeh Meshkiny (“The day I became a woman”), Jia Zhang-K (“Still life”), Tsai ming-liang And Lee Kang-Sheng (“Goodbye, Dragon Inn”), Wang Bing (“Tie XI qu: to the west of the tracks”), Johnnie (“Election”), Lee Chang-Dong (“Burning”), Chan-Wook Park (“Old boy”) and He said to Yuya (“No one knows”).
The program will present conversation sessions exploring the creative dimensions of Asian cinema. Biff will publish a commemorative book entitled “Definition of moments in Asian cinema – 100 best Asian films since 1996”, including essays of filmmakers and criticisms.




