kviff.com
News
Festival Guide
  • Tickets and Festival Pass
  • Accommodations
  • Transportation
  • Festival cinemas
  • No Barriers project
  • Kids at the festival
  • Festival Shop
Program
  • Catalogue of films
  • Accompanying programme
  • Archive of films
  • Audience award
  • KVIFF Talks
  • Film Entry
Film Industry
  • Industry accreditation
  • Film Industry at KVIFF
  • Industry Days Programme
  • KVIFF Eastern Promises
  • KVIFF Talents
Press
  • Press accreditation
  • Press Service
  • For download
  • Press releases
  • Photogallery
  • Videogallery
About the festival
  • Festival description
  • Programme sections
  • Awards
  • History
  • We support non-profits
  • Photogallery
  • Partners
  • Why We Support the Festival
  • Contacts
CZ
Sign in
Film Archive

Noriko's Dinner Table

Official Selection - Competition 2005 / Noriko no Shokutaku / Japan 2005

A family portrait and contemporary psychothriller about the rebellion of otherwise obedient daughters under the influence of a suicide circle. Since Nagisa Oshima started making movies, it seems that a strong generational conflict slumbers under the surface of Japanese society, a conflict which is the prime mover behind a film by a controversial director, a virtuoso manipulator of viewer emotions reminiscent of Lars von Trier.

Noriko's Dinner Table Noriko's Dinner Table

Synopsis

A family portrait from contemporary Japan about the generational rebellion of otherwise obedient daughters – since Nagisa Oshima started making movies, it seems that a strong generational conflict slumbers under the surface of Japanese society, a conflict which is the prime mover behind Sono’s plot as well. In the movie, which oscillates between psychothriller and Bildungsfilm, sisters Noriko and Yuka share an adolescent distaste for their father, for his rituals and values. Not even their mother’s love can protect them from ending up under the sway of a sect. The older Noriko is the first to leave her parents’ house. She meets a young woman named Kumiko in a chat room and soon takes off for Tokyo to visit her. The younger Yuka follows within a few months. With Kumiko they undergo complete transformation – they have new names and new lives, but they’re not the only ones. Their father is determined to get them back but he comes up against a conspiracy that proves difficult to penetrate.

About the film

158 min / Color, 35 mm
World premiere

Director Sion Sono / Screenplay Sion Sono / Dir. of Photography Souhei Tanigawa / Music Tomoki Hasegawa / Editor Junichi Ito / Producer Yutaka Morohashi, Takeshi Suzuki / Production Mother Ark Co. Ltd / Cast Kazue Fukiishi, Tsugumi, Ken Mitsuishi, Yuriko Yoshitaka / Contact Mother Ark Co. Ltd
www: www.sonosion.com

About the director

Sion Sono

Sion Sono (b. 1961, Japan), a native of Toyokawa, was originally a poet in the 1970s before turning to filmmaking. He began shooting 8mm movies after enrolling at Housei University. In 1985 his 30-minute short Ore wa Sono Sion da!! was screened in competition at the prestigious Pia Film Festival, and two years later he won the Main Prize there for Otoko no hanamichi. With the grant he received with the award, Sono made the 1990 feature Bicycle Sighs, screened at more than 30 festivals in Europe and Asia. Sono’s 1992 film The Room (Heya) was an even greater success. His trademark controversial style is evident as well in Tokyo GAGAGA, a project combining experimental and public performance. The multifaceted filmmaker (he is alsoa director of gay porn) captivated fans with his latest films Hazard, In a Dream and, above all, Suicide Club (2002), his greatest commercial success to date.

Contacts

Mother Ark Co. Ltd
10th Floor, Sogetsu Kaikan, 7-2-21 Akasaka Minato-ku, 107-0052, Tokyo
Japan
Phone: +81 3 541 460 35
Fax: +81 3 347 541 00
E-mail: [email protected]

Guests

Aya Kiyohara
Film Crew

Sion Sono
Film Director

Takeshi Suzuki
Producer

Yutaka Morohashi
Producer

Kayo Nosaka
Producer

Other partners
Newsletter

First-hand brews throughout the year.
Be among the first to learn about upcoming events and other news. We only send the newsletter when we have something to say.

Follow us on the web:

The Karlovy Vary International Film Festival
is part of the KVIFF Group family, which covers other projects as well:

© 2025 KVIFF GROUP

Rules for Visitors / Website visitors privacy policy / GTC / Personal Data Protection / Rules for Claim / Rules and Regulations / Contacts