Piškotki, ki jih uporabljamo:
Google Analitycs
Z namenom pridobivanja statistike o obiskanosti spletne strani.Specifični
Specifični piškotki, ki so nujno potrebni za delovanje naše spletne strani.
Pomembno! Z novim finančnim obdobjem je na voljo novo enotno spletno mesto evropskasredstva.si.
Vse informacije o priložnostih evropskega financiranja na enem mestu, vabljeni k obisku!
Stran eu-skladi.si se bo posodabljala do zaključka izvajanja finančne perspektive 2014-2020.
SVETOVALKA EMA - Financiranje, EU sredstva, podpora
The struggle is not just social; Nakajima captures the harsh realities of the Japanese wilderness, showing how winter storms and avalanches are just as threatening to the Seburi's survival as the military police.
With a cast including Kenichi Hagiwara and Yumiko Fujita, the film uses an "elegant rhythm" to contrast its barbaric plot elements. Its visual style captures the "wild vein" of the mountainous terrain, emphasizing that the Sanka's habitat is as much a character as the people themselves.
Released in 1985 and entered into the 35th Berlin International Film Festival , The Seburi Story stands as a rare and haunting cinematic look at the Sanka, a nomadic ethnic group in Japan. Directed by Sadao Nakajima, the film uses the backdrop of World War II to highlight the final gasps of a culture being swallowed by a modernizing state.
The film highlights the deep-seated animosity and fear that non-nomadic townspeople feel toward the Seburi.
The struggle is not just social; Nakajima captures the harsh realities of the Japanese wilderness, showing how winter storms and avalanches are just as threatening to the Seburi's survival as the military police.
With a cast including Kenichi Hagiwara and Yumiko Fujita, the film uses an "elegant rhythm" to contrast its barbaric plot elements. Its visual style captures the "wild vein" of the mountainous terrain, emphasizing that the Sanka's habitat is as much a character as the people themselves.
Released in 1985 and entered into the 35th Berlin International Film Festival , The Seburi Story stands as a rare and haunting cinematic look at the Sanka, a nomadic ethnic group in Japan. Directed by Sadao Nakajima, the film uses the backdrop of World War II to highlight the final gasps of a culture being swallowed by a modernizing state.
The film highlights the deep-seated animosity and fear that non-nomadic townspeople feel toward the Seburi.