

A lunchbox becomes a lifeline when home becomes unlivable.
In 2010, a musician, Watanabe Toshimi was planning to go back to his hometown in Fukushima to do farming. His son Toui was going to re-take high school entrance exam which he had failed the previous year. Both looked forward to starting new chapters in their lives. In 2011, Toshimi had to cancel his plan because of the Great East Japanese Earthquake. His hometown was within 20 km of the Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant. To cheer up his father, Toui who passed a high school entrance exam promised him to go to school every day. Toshimi promised Toui to make him bento every day.
Acting
Tetsuya Bessho's restrained devastation hits harder than any scream.
Direction
Yamada treats bento prep like sacred ritual—every rice grain matters.
Director
Akane Yamada
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Bento culture carries specific maternal expectations; a father making them daily subverts Japanese gender norms around care work.
The 20km Fukushima exclusion zone still exists—this isn't historical drama, it's ongoing reality for 30,000 displaced residents.
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