(Page 2) Kasumi Arimura’s Eye Acting Sets Record for ‘Umi no Hajimari’ | FRIDAY DIGITAL

Kasumi Arimura’s Eye Acting Sets Record for ‘Umi no Hajimari’

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However, those tears were not shed because her beloved had an illegitimate child. At the same time, Yayoi had also aborted a child with another man. This fact is eventually revealed in a reminiscence scene.

In other words, viewers are reminded for the first time that Yayoi’s tears were an outpouring of emotions that she had kept hidden from herself.

However, she has not confided this fact to Natsu and the others. Yayoi’s grief is further amplified by the contrast between Mizuki, who had a child, and Yayoi, who did not.

In episode 4, after aborting her child, Yayoi slips in the bathtub while cleaning the bath at home and unintentionally shields her stomach. In the fourth episode, Yayoi is cleaning the bathtub after having an abortion and slips in the tub, unintentionally shielding her stomach.

At that moment, Yayoi’s eyes sink into the depths of despair. Arimura’s two-minute-long performance, in which she weeps while taking a shower on her head to drown out her tears, has been inundated with comments from viewers who are moved to tears,” said a production company director.

The fifth episode aired on July 29. At her favorite beauty parlor, Yayoi wants to treat herself to a coloring and treatment. Then, next to her sits a single mother who has been visiting the beauty parlor for a long time while visiting her separated husband and child. She says

‘It’s going to cost me a lot of money.’

and apologetically requests only a cut of her hair, which has grown long and has noticeable split ends. Yayoi looks at her through the mirror, her eyes vacant with mixed feelings. They say that “eyes speak louder than words,” but how on earth did Kasumi Arimura get these “eyes”?

When she made her debut, director Ryuichi Hiroki, who was also her mentor, told her, “Acting is about subtraction, and that is the best way to get through to people. If you have feelings, they will be conveyed through your eyes, even if you don’t make a sad or happy expression. I was told, “Don’t do anything unnecessary,” and I have taken this lesson to heart. Yuji Sakamoto, who wrote the script for “Itsukoi,” also commented on Arimura’s performance, saying, “She was really just there and her emotions were conveyed.

In the film “The Filling of the Moon” (2010), Arimura teamed up with director Hiroki for the third time and co-starred with Ren Meguro for the first time. In this film, Ruri Masaki, played by Arimura, is a charming heroine who is both a mysterious adult woman and charming at the same time. There is a scene in which Ruri’s eyes, filled with deep sadness, grab the hearts of many in the audience.

Ruri is playing with a kitten she is holding on a bench by the river where camellias grow in clusters. Ruri’s eyes at that moment. I still tremble when I recall those eyes, which are filled with a painful sense of emptiness. Tetsuhiko (Meguro) tells Ruri that he would do anything if he could see her smile.

The escape triggered by these words eventually drives the two to tragedy. Her eyes, which sometimes shine with a lunatic light, are now actress Kasumi Arimura’s greatest weapon. ……

The second half of “The Beginning of the Sea” is finally underway. Where will her mysterious but beautifully shining “eyes” lead the story in the future? It may be frightening, but we will see.

  • Text Ukon Shima (Broadcaster, Video Producer) PHOTO Shima Sota

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