You will see its DNA in the visual language of music videos, the plot of Korean film Burning , and the emotional core of the anime March Comes in Like a Lion .
The film’s answer is ambiguous, beautiful, and unforgettable. All About Lily Chou-Chou
Seek out the film (available on Blu-ray from Third Window Films or digital rental). Listen to the soundtrack before you watch it. And most importantly, remember the film’s first and final instruction, posted on the fan forum: You will see its DNA in the visual
To watch All About Lily Chou-Chou is not a passive experience. It is an immersion into a very specific frequency of pain. It asks a difficult question: When the real world is unbearable, is it okay to live entirely inside a song? Listen to the soundtrack before you watch it
Two decades after its release, All About Lily Chou-Chou remains a touchstone for disaffected youth, celebrated for its prescient take on internet culture and its unique sonic landscape, built around the ethereal, fictional music of its title character. The film follows two middle school boys, Yuichi Hasumi and Shusuke Hoshino, living in a small Japanese city in the late 1990s. Initially friends, their relationship sours into a brutal cycle of bullying and submission after Hoshino returns from a trip to Okinawa a changed, nihilistic person.
In the pantheon of films about adolescence, few are as haunting, visually radical, or emotionally devastating as Shunji Iwai’s 2001 masterpiece, All About Lily Chou-Chou (Riri Shushu no subete). Often described as a “cyber-coming-of-age” drama, the film defies easy categorization. It is at once a murder mystery, a concert film, a philosophical treatise on reality versus online identity, and a visceral portrait of the cruelty of youth.