Fantasia XXV Review: Junta Yamaguchi’s BEYOND THE INFINITE TWO MINUTES Is A Humble, Inventive One-Shot Delight
Shot safely in the confines of a building with a first floor café during the 2020 pandemic, Beyond The Infinite Two Minutes introduces Kato (Kazunori Tosa), a café owner struggling to spread the word and get his band off the ground. After leaving home for the day to his upstairs apartment, he spots himself on his television monitor, effectively communicating with his future-self two minutes from then with a monitor in the café. The ordeal snowballs out of control when Kato’s friends each get curious about what they can learn or benefit from seeing the future, exacerbating an already potentially precarious moment for space-time, and leaving Kato wearily panicked and trying to wait out the situation after initially believing it was just a dream. What happens next presents a cautionary forewarning for Kato and friends as the result of getting too far ahead of themselves after consulting with their future-selves’, […]
