If you loved Suspect X, try Midsummer's Equation
Un ponte tra un film che hai già visto e uno che quasi nessuno ha incrociato. Midsummer's Equation ha circa 3.3× voti in meno di Suspect X — è una scelta di nicchia, non una raccomandazione mainstream. Questo è ciò che condividono, e ciò che il secondo fa che il primo non fa.
Cosa condividono
Both films are directed by Hiroshi Nishitani, and they both carry the bittersweet, cerebral mood tags, and they sit in Crime / Drama / Mystery territory. If that's the register that drew you to Suspect X, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
What Midsummer's Equation is
Crisp October. A walkway by a tsunami wall. A physics paper flutters into the surf. A physicist on a coastal panel finds a corpse outside his inn. The dead man’s links to the innkeeper’s activist daughter—and a sharp-elbowed boy glimpsed on the train—begin to knot. Masaharu Fukuyama treats the Sherlockian puzzle to a post-Fukushima chill.

