The Best Bad Thing was originally a book authored by Yoshiko Uchida. A screenplay was developed and a film released in 1997. The story is set on the U.S. west coast during 1935 when the U.S. economy was still recovering from the effects of the Great Depression. It opens in a city, then moves to a rural cucumber farm, where the majority of the action takes place. The farm is described as along California's central coast.

The Best Bad Thing
Directed byPeter Rowe
Written byDavid Preston
Music byJimmy Tanaka
Production
company
Release date
  • 1997 (1997)
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Beginning of plot

edit

Most U.S. schools close during the summer, a throw-back to the days when children were needed to help with the annual harvest of crops. The story centers on the life of a twelve-year-old female character named "Rinko Tsujimura," who is sent from her parents' home, in an unnamed California city, for a character-building stay on an aunt's rural farm. Rinko, who is out of school for the summer, is sent to the farm for a month. However, she wants to spend the summer in her home town with her school friend.

Book

edit

The book was first published in 1983 with a second publication by Aladdin Books of New York during 1986, (ISBN 0-689-71069-0).

Feature film (1997)

edit

The 89-minute feature film is billed as a Cinar production in association with the Japanese television network NHK and Pittsburgh Public Television station WQED.

Dialog is English with about 30 seconds of the film in spoken Japanese. There are no subtitles but the context is sufficient for those who do not speak Japanese to understand and follow the plot. The film was shot in Quebec, Canada. People involved in the production include:

'Executive Producers:' Madeline A. Charest, Ronald A. Weinberg, Donna Mitroff, Yoshiki Nishimura.
'Directed by:' Peter Rowe.
'Producer:' Patricia Laroie.
Distributor: The Cookie Jar Company[1]

Cast

edit

Sources

edit
  • United States Library of Congress catalog.
  • Cinar Production VHS jacket and film credits.

References

edit
  1. ^ "The Cookie Jar Company | for the Kid Inside!". Archived from the original on 2012-11-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
edit