The village's Deputy Kuwata, a former postal worker, gives it to Mr.
The homeless village's Mayor borrows 600,000 yen from Shosuke.
The liquidator leaves Shosuke 1.3 million yen and schedules the pickup of the office supplies on the evening of the 27th. The liquidator arrives and take everything in Shosuke's printing shop apart from Shosuke's father's prized Heidel printer. In return, the members of the village make use their various ingenious resources as they embark on a complex scheme to blackmail Korijima. Shosuke plans to kill himself in his car through carbon monoxide poisoning but stops to assist a man from a nearby homeless village who has been injured by members of the Seiryu mob for threatening to tell the police about their illegal dumping of trash in the village. The wealthy businessman Korijima of Uwazoko-ya declares bankruptcy, leaving a 10-million-yen contract unpaid to Shosuke Umemoto's printing shop and thereby leaving Shosuke's brother Chusuke unable to repay a 9-million-yen loan to the loan shark Shoko. It is based on the autobiographical novel Tōgenkyō no hito-bito by Yūji Aoki. Shangri-La ( 金融破滅ニッポン 桃源郷の人々, Kin'yū hametsu Nippon: Tōgenkyō no hito-bito) is a 2002 Japanese comedy film directed by Takashi Miike.