

Fukushima's ghosts don't scream—they surf, they wait, they remember.
Time stands still in the silent streets of Fukushima. Radioactive residues continue to taint the lives of the citizens with a slow, invisible anxiety, trapping them between past wounds and future uncertainties. As his old home was highly exposed to radiation, leading to his mother’s death, young Akira grows up aimless and uprooted. In his search for his lost father, he is assisted by Yuji, the owner of a down-at-heels surfboard shop, as well as a concerned classmate, Shinichi, who becomes increasingly entangled in Akira’s story.
Cinematography
Contaminated landscapes shot with devastating, toxic beauty.
Acting
Oshirō Maeda's hollowed-out grief never asks for sympathy.
Direction
Matsui's 40+ year career culminates in radioactive stillness.

Director
Yoshihiko Matsui
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Shot in actual Fukushima exclusion zones; some locations remain legally restricted. The surfing subculture depicted is real—youth who refused evacuation orders.
Director Yoshihiko Matsui, now in his 70s, called this his 'final statement on Japanese masculinity'—the father-son void mirrors his own post-war generation's failures.
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