A New Dawn dazzles visually in Berlin Film Festival debut

Yoshitoshi Shinomiya's directorial debut, the Japanese animated feature A New Dawn, impressed audiences at the Berlin Film Festival with its stunning visuals, though its narrative drew mixed reactions. As the competition's only animated entry, the film explores family ties and tradition amid urban change. The story centers on two brothers and their efforts to preserve a fireworks factory.

Yoshitoshi Shinomiya, known for his background as a painter, makes his feature directorial debut with A New Dawn, Japan's entry in the Berlin Film Festival's main competition. Reviewed on February 17, 2026, the 76-minute film unfolds over two days set four years apart, blending present-day eviction scenes with flashbacks to the protagonists' youth.

The narrative follows brothers Senataro, nicknamed Chichi and voiced by Miyu Irino, and Keitaro, voiced by Riku Hagiwara. Keitaro, stubborn and hot-headed, fights to save their late father's rural fireworks factory from gentrification and eviction. Chichi, now a civil servant in Tokyo, returns with childhood friend Kaoru, voiced by Kotone Furukawa, to persuade his brother to leave. As city officials approach with bulldozers, Keitaro and Kaoru race to launch a grand fireworks display called Shuhari—a term meaning protect, break, and separate, symbolizing an unfulfilled family dream.

Chichi grapples with guilt over abandoning his roots. The film's animation stands out for its painstakingly painted frames, featuring vivid yet muted colors, detailed natural elements from insects to mountains, and innovative sequences like a toy-like depiction of Chichi's drunken confusion. However, the story relies heavily on dialogue and exposition, with characters defined in broad strokes and the climax arriving late without much distinction from earlier visuals.

Produced by Asmik Ace and Miyu Productions in Japan and France, with world sales by Charades in Paris, the film features camera work by Anna Tomizaki, editing by Megumi Uchida, and music by Shuta Hasunuma. Producers include Fumie Takeuchi, Pierre Baussaron, and Emmanuel-Alain Raynal. Additional voice cast includes Takashi Okabe.

Related Articles

The 24th Hong Kong Asia Film Financing Forum (HAF), running alongside the 30th Hong Kong International Film & TV Market (FilMart), features a new Japanese section called Film Frontier. This initiative highlights emerging Japanese filmmakers and is part of seven Japan-linked projects across HAF's strands. Unijapan is driving this push amid Japan's record box office performance.

Reported by AI

A second trailer for the Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice anime series, titled Sekiro: No Defeat, has been unveiled. The series will air exclusively on Crunchyroll later this year, though no specific release date has been announced. Directed by Kenichi Kutsuna, the trailer showcases familiar bosses and hand-drawn 2D animation.

Shatara Michelle Ford's sophomore feature film will open in New York and Los Angeles this summer ahead of a wider U.S. rollout.

Reported by AI

The Annecy International Animation Film Festival announced on Tuesday (28) the lineup for its 2026 edition, set for June 21-27 in France. Among the selections is the Brazilian film 'O Filho da Puta', directed by Érica Maradona, Otto Guerra, Tania Anaya, and Sávio Leite, in the Contrechamp section.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline