Barakamon is a 2014 Japanese comedy-drama film directed by Masaki Yuasa. The film follows the story of a young calligrapher, Seishu Handa, who moves to a rural island in Japan to find inspiration for his artwork. While on the island, he meets a variety of characters, including a group of children who become his friends.
The movie contains a few sexual moments that are handled in a tasteful and humorous way. One of the most memorable scenes is when Seishu is invited to a local hot spring by the children. While there, the children are curious about Seishu's body and ask him to show them his genitals. Seishu is embarrassed but eventually agrees, and the children are surprised to learn that he is not circumcised.
Another sexual moment occurs when Seishu is invited to a local festival. At the festival, he meets a young woman named Naru, who is attracted to him. Naru attempts to seduce Seishu by taking off her clothes and inviting him to join her in the hot springs. Seishu is initially hesitant, but eventually agrees.
The sexual moments in Barakamon are handled in a lighthearted and humorous way. They are not meant to be taken seriously, and instead serve to add a bit of levity to the film. The moments also serve to illustrate the innocence of the characters and the beauty of the island.
Overall, Barakamon is a charming and heartwarming film that contains a few sexual moments. These moments are handled in a tasteful and humorous way, and serve to add a bit of levity to the film.
One teen girl is a fujoshi, aka a fan of "yaoi" manga (male/male romances), which in real life are often pornographic. We see a page from her favorite manga, called "Overtime Work Lovers", showing two men about to kiss (one of them might be shirtless). Her obsession with seeing gay love everywhere becomes a running gag. On multiple occasions, she walks in on the main character in weird (although completely innocent) situations with other men (once, with not one but three other men) and thinks something gay/sexual is going on.
In a brief and humorous moment, the main character ties up a seven-year-old girl to get her to stop being so rambunctious. A teen girl walks in on this and mutters, "S&M?" at which the guy is absolutely horrified and adamantly protests. In a later episode, he deliberately tries to recapture his inspiration for calligraphy by humorously reenacting this scene with his two guy friends; his mom walks in and sees this (as well as hears some very-much-out-of-context dialogue) and shrieks, "BONDAGE?"
Two teen girls briefly tease a guy in the bath and try to see him naked. (They fail.) They aren't attracted to him, though -- they're just messing around. One of the girls brought a camera for "research" for a manga she's drawing; her friend tells her that full nudity can't be shown in manga, to which she replies (in the subtitled version) that a lot can be shown as long as you censor the "tip".
The abbreviation "S&M" is joked about in one episode, with a young girl jumping around repeating it. Will fly over the heads of young children and is all just a big misunderstanding. In the same episode, she innocently repeats some other suggestive phrases she overheard.
One character thinks two characters are kissing but in reality aren't.