When he seriously edited and organized, he starred in Naoko Ogami's new work, "Riverside Little days," which Naoko had been busy for four years, and starred in Kenichi Matsuyama and Yoshimoto. Describe a lonely man who came to work in the processing factory and recognized the strange uncle and the father and son who pushed the tombstone in four places in the community, as well as the worried female room. they each carried secrets on their backs and unwittingly became dependent on each other to support each other. The film has Naoko's unique style of simple and tranquil things, which makes people laugh, has a lot of taste of life and death, and extracts the understanding and tolerance between people in the seemingly ordinary daily life.