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Underdogs is a quietly powerful documentary that captures the lives of four elderly Japanese men in Manila's poorer areas. The director Tsuyoshi Kumeta brings an intimate lens to their stories, showing how they adapt to their new realities after losing their previous lives back in Japan. The film's pacing is deliberate, allowing us to really sit with these men as they navigate the complexities of aging, loneliness, and the struggle for dignity. There's a raw honesty in the performances, an unvarnished look at resilience amid hardship. The atmosphere feels heavy yet hopeful, a juxtaposition that lingers in your mind long after watching. What stands out here is how it humanizes a group often overlooked, making it a unique entry in the documentary space.
Documentary about aging and resilienceFocus on human storiesExploration of cultural displacement
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Key Crew
Tsuyoshi Kumeta
Director