Monday, August 11, 2025

1963 Japanese film High and Low (天国と地獄) in Pittsburgh, August 14 to 20.


The 1963 Japanese film High and Low (天国と地獄) will play in Pittsburgh from August 14 through 20, the third in a series of five classic Kurosawa films at the Harris Theater July through September.
Shoe company exec Toshiro Mifune is in the midst of a mortgage-everything takeover battle when the phone rings with a giant ransom demand for his son — but then in walks... Adapted from an Ed McBain 87th Precinct novel, this is the ultimate kidnap movie, with Kurosawa at the peak of his filmmaking powers: moral battles rage in a first hour almost totally confined to a single room jammed with distraught family, cynical advisers, and recorder-wielding cops led by super-cool detective Tatsuya Nakadai; the de rigueur money transfer aboard the Shinkansen (bullet train); sweaty police conferences shot in deep focus; a near-invisible drug pass in a jammed dance hall; and the jailhouse interview punctuated by the heaviest steel door closing in film history. High and Low is a virtuoso work that’s also a deeply moral one, exploring the meaning of “justice” in a society defined by vast economic disparity.
Tickets for the film are available online. The Harris Theater is located at 809 Liberty Ave. in downtown's Cultural District (map).

University of Pittsburgh to host Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) in December.


The University of Pittsburgh will host the Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) on December 7, offering a rare opportunity for test-takers in and around western Pennsylvania. Registration is set to open August 13 for the highest level, N!, with other levels to open throughout the month.
The Japanese-Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) was developed in Japan, and has been offered since 1984 in countries all around the world as a means of evaluating the proficiency of non-native learners of Japanese.

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Registration now open for Yanlai Dance Academy's 2025-2026 season of classes, including Kpop, Chinese dance, and ballet.


Registration now open for Yanlai Dance Academy's 2025-2026 season of classes, which will begin September 4.
Registration is open for Yanlai Dance Academy. Email or call us to register today for a new year of classes, performances, and community!

From Chinese dance to ballet and Kpop, we've got your dance skills covered from West to East. See more details on our website. Yanlaidanceacademy.com
Registration information is available on the school's website. Yanlai Dance Academy is a dance school in the North Hills that has long specialized in traditional and contemporary Chinese dances for all ages, as well hosting as Kpop sessions and adult dance troupes. It is located at 2260 Babcock Blvd. (map).

KPOP CLUB NIGHT with DJ Chen returns to Pittsburgh, October 3.


KPOP CLUB NIGHT with DJ Chen will return to Pittsburgh on October 3.

Come and get it! Get ready for Round 2 in PGH at AVALON SOCIAL!! Join mixmaster DJ CHEN and the world-famous Kpop Club Night crew on October 3rd to sing and dance our hearts out!

This is a 21+ event. 
Doors open 10pm, curfew 2:00 am.
Physical government issued ID required. 
No Refunds. Tickets are transferrable.

Early bird tickets are now available through August 15, with other sales beginning August 16. Avalon Social is a club located at 1601 E. Carson St. in the South Side (map) in what was most recently Foxtail.

Saturday, August 9, 2025

KPop Demon Hunters A Sing-Along Event in Pittsburgh, August 23.


The feature-length film KPop Demon Hunters A Sing-Along Event will play in the Pittsburgh area on August 23.
When they aren't selling out stadiums, Kpop superstars Rumi, Mira and Zoey use their secret identities as badass demon hunters to protect their fans from an ever-present supernatural threat. Together, they must face their biggest enemy yet -- an irresistible rival boy band of demons in disguise.
The 95-minute film plays locally at the Cinemark theater in Monroeville, and tickets are available online.

1988 film Grave of the Fireflies (火垂るの墓) in Pittsburgh, August 10 - 12.


The 1988 film Grave of the Fireflies (火垂るの墓) will play in Pittsburgh-area theaters from August 10 through 12, the next installment of Ghibli Fest 2025. A synopsis, from the distributor:
When an American air raid kills their mother in the final days of World War II, 14-year-old Seita and his 4-year-old sister Setsuko are left to fend for themselves in the devastated Japanese countryside. After falling out with their only living relative, Seita does his best to provide for himself and his sister by stealing food and making a home in an abandoned bomb shelter. But with food running short, the siblings can only cling to fleeting moments of happiness in their harsh reality.

Based on the personal accounts of survivor Nosaka Akiyuki, Grave of the Fireflies is hailed as one of the most stunning contributions to animation and cinematic history. Deftly depicting the beauty of the human spirit as well as its devastating cruelty, Grave of the Fireflies is a singular work of art from Academy Award-nominated director and Studio Ghibli co-founder Isao Takahata.
It plays locally at the AMC Loews Waterfront, Waterworks Cinema, Chartiers Valley Luxury 14, and the Cinemark theaters in McCandless, Monroeville, and Robinson. Tickets are available online.

1959 film Hiroshima mon amour in Pittsburgh, August 10.


Remembering Hiroshima, Imagining Peace will host a screening of the 1959 film Hiroshima mon amour on August 10.
A special screening hosted by Remembering Hiroshima, Imagining Peace, a group dedicated to creating events that commemorate the tragic atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. This screening will feature a short introduction by the group, and following the screening they will host a panel discussion.

A cornerstone of the French New Wave, the first feature from Alain Resnais is one of the most influential films of all time. A French actress (Emmanuelle Riva) and a Japanese architect (Eiji Okada) engage in a brief, intense affair in postwar Hiroshima, their consuming mutual fascination impelling them to exorcise their own scarred memories of love and suffering. With an innovative flashback structure and an Academy Award–nominated screenplay by novelist Marguerite Duras, Hiroshima Mon Amour is a moody masterwork that delicately weaves past and present, personal pain and public anguish.
It plays at the Harris Theater in downtown's Cultural District (map) and tickets are available online.

Lucky Bites eyes August 16 opening in Bellevue.


Lucky Bites, a new restaurant coming soon to Bellevue featuring boba and poke bowls, is eyeing an August 16 opening.
Delicious poke bowls, refreshing boba, and a variety of Asian treats!
The restaurant is hiring, and those interested may send their resume to hello@luckybitespgh.com. The new spot is located at 549 Lincoln Ave. (map), the former home of Dietz Floral and Gifts.

Friday, August 8, 2025

2024 Japanese film Cloud (クラウド) in Pittsburgh, August 15 - 21.

The 2024 Japanese film Cloud (クラウド) will play in Pittsburgh from Auguat 15 through 21.
Kiyoshi Kurosawa (Cure, Pulse) delivers one of his most chillingly prescient films with this riveting fusion of social satire, techno-thriller, and survival-action. Yoshii (Masaki Suda), a T-shirt factory worker, supplements his income by flipping merchandise online—dubious medical devices, counterfeit designer handbags, collectible figurines—until disgruntled customers begin organizing against him on an anonymous message board. As his profits grow and he quits his day job (even hiring an assistant), he becomes the target of a coordinated vendetta that ratchets into something increasingly brutal, absurd, yet eerily plausible. At once a pulse-pounding provocation and a cautionary tale for our atomized, hustle-economy era, Cloud—Japan’s official submission for the 97th Oscars—is a genre-bending vision of virtual grievances mutating into real-world terror, orchestrated with Kurosawa’s signature precision and nerve.
It plays at the Harris Theater in downtown's Cultural District (map) and tickets are available online.

Thursday, August 7, 2025

Shin Godzilla (シン・ゴジラ) in 4K, in Pittsburgh-area theaters from August 13.


The 2016 Japanese movie Shin Godzilla (シン・ゴジラ) will play in 4K in Pittsburgh-area theaters from August 13.
Something has surfaced in Tokyo Bay. As the Prime Minister of Japan pleads with the public to remain calm, a horrific creature of tremendous size makes landfall in the city, leaving death and destruction in its wake. Then it evolves. The government scrambles to assemble a task force to research and combat the monster. The next morning, an envoy from the US Department of State delivers a folder of classified documents bearing the name: “GODZILLA.” From visionary directors Shinji Higuchi and Hideaki Anno, Shin Godzilla offers a thrilling origin story to one of cinema’s greatest creations. Propelled by astounding visual effects and rapid-fire dialogue, Shin Godzilla is equal parts pulse-pounding action film and venomous political satire, worthy of the franchise’s towering history.
It is scheduled to play locally at the Cinemark theater in Robinson and the AMC Westmoreland 15 in Greensburg, and tickets are available online.

Most Popular Posts From the Past Year