Hanamizuki -2010- May 2026

Director Doi is no stranger to melodrama (he directed Sekai no Chuushin de, Ai wo Sakebu ). He knows exactly when to hold the shot on a single tear rolling down a cheek and when to flood the speakers with Yo Hitoto’s iconic theme song. Does it manipulate your emotions? Absolutely. Does it work? For the most part, yes. The Hokkaido landscapes are breathtakingly melancholic, and the visual motif of the dogwood (a flower that represents a "return of love" in the Japanese "hanakotoba") is woven in with delicate precision.

Hanamizuki is not a perfect film. At 128 minutes, it drags in the middle act. The conflicts—rival suitors, disapproving parents, tragic accidents—feel ripped from a soap opera playbook. Furthermore, Kohei’s extreme emotional constipation may frustrate modern audiences who prefer direct communication over dramatic pining. hanamizuki -2010-

The film follows Sae (Yui Aragaki), a high school student in rural Hokkaido, who dreams of escaping her small fishing town. Her savior comes in the form of Kohei (Junichi Okada), a stoic, ambitious senior who dreams of becoming an international journalist. Their connection is instantaneous but star-crossed. As the titular dogwood tree blossoms, so does their love—only for Kohei’s scholarship to take him to America, leaving Sae behind. Director Doi is no stranger to melodrama (he

Director Doi is no stranger to melodrama (he directed Sekai no Chuushin de, Ai wo Sakebu ). He knows exactly when to hold the shot on a single tear rolling down a cheek and when to flood the speakers with Yo Hitoto’s iconic theme song. Does it manipulate your emotions? Absolutely. Does it work? For the most part, yes. The Hokkaido landscapes are breathtakingly melancholic, and the visual motif of the dogwood (a flower that represents a "return of love" in the Japanese "hanakotoba") is woven in with delicate precision.

Hanamizuki is not a perfect film. At 128 minutes, it drags in the middle act. The conflicts—rival suitors, disapproving parents, tragic accidents—feel ripped from a soap opera playbook. Furthermore, Kohei’s extreme emotional constipation may frustrate modern audiences who prefer direct communication over dramatic pining.

The film follows Sae (Yui Aragaki), a high school student in rural Hokkaido, who dreams of escaping her small fishing town. Her savior comes in the form of Kohei (Junichi Okada), a stoic, ambitious senior who dreams of becoming an international journalist. Their connection is instantaneous but star-crossed. As the titular dogwood tree blossoms, so does their love—only for Kohei’s scholarship to take him to America, leaving Sae behind.