A woman with an adopted child is contacted unexpectedly by the child's birth mother.A woman with an adopted child is contacted unexpectedly by the child's birth mother.A woman with an adopted child is contacted unexpectedly by the child's birth mother.
- Awards
- 5 wins & 14 nominations
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaActress Miyoko Asada studied thoroughly about spokespeople of adoption agencies and their business for the role of her character. For the seminar scene, it was entirely improvised as she took real questions from the extras and answered them fully. She spoke at the whole faux seminar in character for a full hour.
- ConnectionsRemake of Asa ga kuru (2016)
Featured review
Such a touching film. It's a little long, but by telling the stories of both the adoptive parents and biological mother in such careful ways, a load of emotional energy is built up over its runtime. Naomi Kawase gives us a woman's perspective on love and motherhood, and it's often in beautifully understated ways, like a few seconds showing the teenage boy going on with his life as before, a contrast to the young girl's world having been upended by her pregnancy. She's only 14 and gives up the baby regretfully then falls into a hard life on her own, paving the way for some commentary on class, with heart wrenching feelings amplified by beautiful cinematography.
Kawase handles these characters with such love, and we see compassion in so many little moments - the woman at the "Baby Baton" adoption agency providing non-judgmental refuge, the boss at the newspaper worrying about her and telling her a deeply personal story, and the wife's gentle reassurance to her husband when they decide to discontinue extracting his sperm (don't ask). One of the exceptions is the teenage girl's parents, who despite providing a stable home, make the mistake of giving her nothing but pragmatic instruction, without mixing in emotional support. Maybe that's what "true mothers" are, the ones who always want to be there for you, and who provide warmth above all else.
Kawase handles these characters with such love, and we see compassion in so many little moments - the woman at the "Baby Baton" adoption agency providing non-judgmental refuge, the boss at the newspaper worrying about her and telling her a deeply personal story, and the wife's gentle reassurance to her husband when they decide to discontinue extracting his sperm (don't ask). One of the exceptions is the teenage girl's parents, who despite providing a stable home, make the mistake of giving her nothing but pragmatic instruction, without mixing in emotional support. Maybe that's what "true mothers" are, the ones who always want to be there for you, and who provide warmth above all else.
- gbill-74877
- Jan 20, 2023
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Comes Morning
- Filming locations
- Toyosu Area, Tokyo, Japan(high rise where the Kuruhira family live)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $175,041
- Runtime2 hours 20 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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