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Japanese Story
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MPAA RATING: R for some sexuality and language
Starring Toni Collette, Gotaro Tsunashima, Matthew Dyktynski, Lynette Curran, Yumiko Tanaka, Kate Atkinson, John Howard, and Bill Young
A cross-cultural journey, an emotional drama and a haunting love story between an ambitious geologist and a Japanese businessman. (Samuel Goldwyn Films)
| GENRE(S): | Drama | Foreign |
| WRITTEN BY: | Alison Tilson |
| DIRECTED BY: | Sue Brooks |
| RELEASE DATE: |
DVD: May 11, 2004 Video: May 11, 2004 Theatrical: December 31, 2003 |
| RUNNING TIME: | 100 minutes, Color |
| ORIGIN: | Australia |
Best Film, Best Director, Best Actress (Collette), Best Cinematography and Best Composer, 2003 Australian Film Critics Circle Awards; Best Film, Best Director, Best Actress (Collette), Best Original Screenplay, Best Score, Best Original Score, Best Sound, Best Cinematography and Best Editing, 2003 Australian Film Institute Awards
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
The average user rating for this movie is 5.7 (out of 10) based on 12 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Margo W. gave it a3:
Toni Collette is superb, but the film isn't. I think the film would have been better if the two leads had remained friends (a too short and unlikely jump from antagonism to romance), and if the swerve at the end hadn't occurred.
John P. gave it a10:
Undoubtedly one of the most intelligent and sensitive explorations in cultural differences, Japanese Story gently but accurately portrays how two almost opposite persons can share their deepest emotions whether in love or death. An astute glimpse into the nature of love, commitment and death. See it more than once and take away something new and wonderful. Breathtaking, stunning and heartful. A hidden gem!
Craig S gave it a9:
Slow paced, and deliberately so. This film is beautiful yet unrelentingly sad. I must be getting soppy in my old age, because it left me blubbering like an infant. Not bad for a 30 year old cynic.
Ty S. gave it a 4:
I really wanted to enjoy this movie but it left me empty . I love anything in the Australian desert as it is an amazing part of the world but this movie lost me once the two started to get intimate. It jumped far too many gaps in too short a time and then that scene at the waterhole ?? What the ?? Not my kind of movie I guess as it was just too boring and far fetched. Ty.
Scazz A. gave it a 9:
What a powerful story, simply told in the enigmatic Australian Desert.
Stephen S. gave it a 6:
Since PJ Hogans Aussie hit Muriels Wedding gave her a lift, Toni Collette has gone from strength to strength, scoring good roles with prominent American directors. Shes the only name actor that Sue Brooks, also an Australian, uses here. As a true local, not seeking to curry favour in the international market, Brooks gets the laconic Australian speech and manner right. Her story is that of a hard-bitten female geologist who falls for the uptight Japanese shes squiring around the northwest of Australia. In Australian movies, going to the outback is often an indication that the director lacks ideas. While the outback cinematography is a great strength of Japanese Story, it is also true that the desert is used as a character in its own right to paper over limitations in the story. Brooks confident, but portentous, directorial style is a little rich for the one-trick script. Which doesnt do enough to establish Collette as a professional geologist, or to convince us of her sudden shift from contempt for her companion to concupiscence. Which doesnt really nail the presumed point of the movie that the honorable Japanese is undergoing considerable personal growth while hanging out in the Kimberleys. Patriotic Australian critics salivated over this one, but a more objective summary for the American audience would be tolerable for an Australian film. But were grateful that Brooks did not use the ubiquitous Nicole Kidman as the Aussie geologist.
TC-fan gave it an 8:
Toni Collette gives an incredibly moving performance in this film - maybe her best, which is saying something.

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