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Funeral Parade of Roses
Cast
Pītā, Osamu Ogasawara, Yoshio Tsuchiya, Emiko Azuma View AllCrew
Toshio Matsumoto (Screenplay), Toshio Matsumoto (Director) View AllRelease: Sep. 13th, 1969
Runtime: 1 hour, 45 minutes
Replies Discussions
We didn't find any linked discussions for this film. Here are the results of a quick search of possibly related threads:
0
The DVD Red Roses and Petrol
Hello. I have been looking for information about DVD Red Roses and Petrol. Although I have heard it's interesting movie, I couldn't see it in the theaters.
If somebody know about it, Can you share it?...
1
War of the Roses 1989
Of the films I've seen by Danny DeVito, War of the Roses was by far the best. I've seen the film several times and still enjoy its particular brand of black-comedy. There must be other die-hard f...
1
Red Roses and Petrol
I could't catch the movie Red Roses and Petrol when it came to Chicago. Since it's independent film, I am waiting for its DVD coming out.
But I don't know anything about it.
Has anyone heard about it?...
3
Movie about a funeral
This is some movie where an old man knows hes dying and plans his funeral and like invites the whole town to see it or something. I think it was from sometime in the mid 2000s. Can someone help?...
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Reviewed by
Takoma11
But that is ultimately what makes a film humanizing: we are shown the deepest flaws of these characters and can still care for them.
But that is ultimately what makes a film humanizing: we are shown the deepest flaws of these characters and can still care for them.
Iroquois
At this point in the film, there has been no real implication of incest, which makes the line into blatant foreshadowing of the reveal that Eddie's businessman lover is actually his long-lost father, prompting the extremely graphic and disconcerting conclusion of the film.
At this point in the film, there has been no real implication of incest, which makes the line into blatant foreshadowing of the reveal that Eddie's businessman lover is actually his long-lost father, prompting the extremely graphic and disconcerting conclusion of the film.