
Hold Me Back
New York Asian Film Festival 2021
August 6 - 22, 2021
A single office worker’s inner voice offers unpredictable and potentially limiting advice in this topical tale of modern romance and self-discovery.
Hold Me Back is available in the FLC Virtual Cinema beginning August 11. Get tickets here.
Akiko Ohku has emerged as an auteur who represents vibrant, modern women stuck at a crossroads between independence and commitment, a ripe metaphor for contemporary Japanese society. Adapted from a Risa Wataya novel, like the director’s 2017 Tremble All You Want, Hold Me Back chronicles a protagonist who is gradually becoming more mature and confident, yet is still vulnerable and fretful of all the world has to offer. Played with charming je ne sais quoi by the irrepressible Non, Mitsuko is a 31-year-old single office worker whose humorous inner voice acts as an unpredictable counselor and may be holding her back from the next stage of life. When an eligible young man from work shows interest, their mutually debilitating shyness is their own worst enemy. Told with effervescent appeal and a tongue-in-cheek quirkiness, Hold Me Back is as insightful and telling of contemporary romance as it is a bold proclamation of self-discovery.
Read More
Kamal Aljafari on With Hasan in Gaza and ‘The Camera of the Dispossessed’
Our 63rd New York Film Festival Talks featured a special conversation with With Hasan in Gaza director Kamal Aljafari, moderated by Film Comment editor Devika Girish.
Lucrecia Martel on Our Land (Nuestra Tierra), the Filmmaker’s First Feature Documentary
On the latest episode of FLC Luminaries, our video series that spotlights talent at all levels of the filmmaking process who uplift the art and craft of cinema, Our Land (Nuestra Tierra) director Lucrecia Martel discusses her expansive and enlightening first feature documentary.
Carla Simón on Her Poignantly Autobiographical Romería
This week we’re excited to present a conversation from the 63rd New York Film Festival with Romería director Carla Simón, moderated by NYFF Main Slate selection committee member Florence Almozini.


