In 21st-century Japan, the new generation has no interest in their studies and is even less interested in old news and anecdotes from hundreds of year[Expand All]
In 21st-century Japan, the new generation has no interest in their studies and is even less interested in old news and anecdotes from hundreds of years ago. Mika Kawabe (played by Rimi Ishihara), a teacher at a certain high school, can only pretend to be accommodating and muddle through when facing this group of children. One evening, Mika was embroiled in a dispute among her students, Masaya Takasawa (played by Tokio Hashimoto), Eri Morino (played by Haruna Kawaguchi), and Shintaro Matsuda (played by Yuuta Chiba). Later, she was sucked into a chaotic current of time and space by a strange light and was transported to Japan at the end of the Tokugawa Shogunate. At this juncture, the Satsuma army was approaching Edo. The martial arts faction led by the vice president of the Army, Ryozo Yanagita (played by Akira Hashimoto), was determined to defend the Tokugawa family to the death. Meanwhile, the president of the Army, Kaoru Katsuki (played by Hiroshi Tamaki), sent a secret letter to the new government army's staff officer, Takamori Nishigo (played by Hiroshi Sato), hoping to facilitate the opening of the city without bloodshed. The arrival of the teachers and students from Kawabe seems to have disrupted the course of history, and Edo is about to be plunged into a sea of destruction... This film is adapted from the short story "Snow of Farewell" by Takashi Meimura.[Collapse]