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Drama

Perfect Days

- In a world of fleeting moments, find the beauty that lasts.

Hirayama is content with his life as a toilet cleaner in Tokyo. Outside of his structured routine, he cherishes music on cassette tapes, books, and taking photos of trees. Through unexpected encounters, he reflects on finding beauty in the world.

Release Date : 2023-11-10

Language :EnglishJapanese

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Master MindWenders Images

Production Country : GermanyJapan

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Koji Yakusho

Character Name : Hirayama

Original Name : 役所広司

Gender : Male

Tokio Emoto

Character Name : Takashi

Original Name : 柄本時生

Gender : Male

Arisa Nakano

Character Name : Niko

Original Name : Arisa Nakano

Gender : Female

Aoi Yamada

Character Name : Aya

Original Name : 山田 葵

Gender : Female

Yumi Asou

Character Name : Keiko

Original Name : 麻生祐未

Gender : Female

Sayuri Ishikawa

Character Name : Mama

Original Name : 石川さゆり

Gender : Female

Tomokazu Miura

Character Name : Tomoyama

Original Name : 三浦友和

Gender : Male

Min Tanaka

Character Name : Homeless

Original Name : 田中泯

Gender : Male

Miyako Tanaka

Character Name : Old Lady with Brush

Original Name : Miyako Tanaka

Gender : Female

Ron Mizuma

Character Name : Businessman

Original Name : 水間ロン

Gender : Male

Soraji Shibuya

Character Name : Kid

Original Name : Soraji Shibuya

Gender : Male

Aoi Iwasaki

Character Name : Kid

Original Name : Aoi Iwasaki

Gender : Male

Kisuke Shimazaki

Character Name : Lost Boy

Original Name : Kisuke Shimazaki

Gender : Male

Yuriko Kawasaki

Character Name : Mother

Original Name : Yuriko Kawasaki

Gender : Female

Aki Kobayashi

Character Name : Baby

Original Name : Aki Kobayashi

Gender : Male

Bunmei Harada

Character Name : Priest

Original Name : 原田文明

Gender : Male

Reina

Character Name : Tourist

Original Name : Reina

Gender : Female

Shunsuke Miura

Character Name : Bath House Owner

Original Name : Shunsuke Miura

Gender : Male

Gan Furukawa

Character Name : Old Man

Original Name : 古川がん

Gender : Male

Atsushi Fukazawa

Character Name : Kat-Chan

Original Name : 深沢敦

Gender : Male

Taijirō Tamura

Character Name : Regular

Original Name : 田村泰二郎

Gender : Male

Masahiro Koumoto

Character Name : Bar Owner

Original Name : 甲本雅裕

Gender : Male

Makiko Okamoto

Character Name : Old Woman

Original Name : Makiko Okamoto

Gender : Female

Daigo Matsui

Character Name : Vinyl Store Staff

Original Name : 松居大悟

Gender : Male

Nao Takahashi

Character Name : Customer

Original Name : 高橋侃

Gender : Male

Nari Saitô

Character Name : Customer

Original Name : さいとうなり

Gender : Female

Hiroto Oshita

Character Name : Customer

Original Name : 大下ヒロト

Gender : Male

Naoko Ken

Character Name : Cat Lady

Original Name : 研ナオコ

Gender : Female

Mijika Nagai

Character Name : Office Lady

Original Name : 長井短

Gender : Female

Motomi Makiguchi

Character Name : Old Local

Original Name : 牧口元美

Gender : Male

Isao Matsui

Character Name : Old Local

Original Name : Isao Matsui

Gender : Male

Aoi Yoshida

Character Name : Dera-Chan

Original Name : Aoi Yoshida

Gender : Male

Motoyuki Shibata

Character Name : DPE Owner

Original Name : Motoyuki Shibata

Gender : Male

Inuko Inuyama

Character Name : Bookstore Owner

Original Name : 犬山イヌコ

Gender : Female

Moro Morooka

Character Name : Bar Regular

Original Name : モロ師岡

Gender : Male

Morio Agata

Character Name : Bar Regular

Original Name : あがた森魚

Gender : Male

Nijika Tonouchi

Character Name : High School Girl

Original Name : Nijika Tonouchi

Gender : Male

Yasushi Okuwa

Character Name : Keiko's Driver

Original Name : Yasushi Okuwa

Gender : Male

Hairi Katagiri

Character Name : Voice on Phone (voice)

Original Name : 片桐はいり

Gender : Female

Tateto Serizawa

Character Name : Taxi Driver

Original Name : 芹澤興人

Gender : Male

Yoneko Matsukane

Character Name : Parking Officer

Original Name : 松金よね子

Gender : Female

Tamae Ando

Character Name : Sato

Original Name : 安藤玉恵

Gender : Female

Reviews

B

BornKnight

@BornKnight

2024-03-04

Coproduction between Japan and Germany, directed by the german director Wim Wenders (Texas Paris, Wings of Desire among others) and written by him and Takuma Takashi. It won the Cannes Film Festival 2023 for Best Actor and Ecumenical Jury and it is nominated for Academy Best Foreign Movie (my favorite for this category). It tells some days at the life of a public bathroom cleaner at Tokyo, interpreted by Koji Yakusho Hirayama, as Hirayama, his daily routine and 4 events in between his usual days. It also shows how some people treat those invisible workers even in a modern civilized country as Japan. Hirayama have a simple, but happy life as he is and what his does with the maximum commitment - it is a marvelou movie about contemplation and what simple things and events can bring of happiness in the life, if you allow it. The cinematography is by Franz Lustig (Anselm), and it is beautiful in using the available light and daily variations, mostly in shots with the protagonist. With a slow minimalistic story focused on this philosophy and camera work also directed to the architecture of public bathrooms, it may not be a movie for everyone. My score for it is 9,6 out of 10,0 / A+.

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2024-03-06

Now I don't now about where you live, but in my town you are lucky to find a public toilet at all, let alone one with designer fittings and miracle blinds! Luckily, Tokyo has a dedicated and meticulous cleaner in "Hirayama" (Koji Yakusho) whose routine gets him from bed, via the coffee machine, to his rounds, the bath house, then his book and again to bed. Helped, occasionally but not too reliably, by the younger "Takashi" (Tokio Emoto) his joy when travelling from site to site is to listen to old cassettes from the likes of the Doors and Van Morrison. He is an outwardly rather humourless man, and he likes his daily pattern, so imagine his surprise when he returns home one evening to discover his niece. "Niko" (Arisa Nakano) has absconded from home and decided to come stay with him for a few days. With his pal at work having a new girlfriend to impress and now him a teenage niece to accommodate, his life faces a turmoil and we have to watch (and hope) as he tries to get through it. Who knows? Maybe it will help bring him out of his self-imposed shell? Might we find out what caused that introspection in the first place? There's quite a lot of repetition here, but as each day goes by Wim Wenders introduces us to a little more. More about the city, more about the characters and maybe just a little too much about multi-purpose bleach. Yakusho is perfect for his part and he engagingly delivers a characterful performance as a man who prefers not to speak and the whole drama evolves, gently, to not so much a conclusion as another day that may or may not be different from the previous ones.

B

Brent Marchant

@Brent_Marchant

2024-03-19

Films that feel like they're "reaching" in their attempts to make a statement can result in a frustrating watch, as is very much the case with the latest from acclaimed writer-director Wim Wenders. This character study about the life of a middle-aged public toilet cleaner in Tokyo (Koji Yakusho) follows him through his virtually unchanging daily routine of working, reading and taking nearly identical photos of trees. Even though there are minor differences in the events of his day-to-day life, much of his schedule is relentlessly the same, a comfortable yet mundane pattern that's cinematically repeated endlessly (and one can imagine what that does for holding viewer interest). He seems to purposely keep his life simple to avoid irritating complications, but that appears to be more of a way to stave off loneliness than to provide reassuring measures of certainty and predictability. He also appears to have undergone a painful (though largely unexamined) past that he's trying to escape, even though he clings to many elements that are rooted in that historical time frame (he listens to cassette tapes from the 1970s-80s, takes photos with a film camera, uses a flip phone and has little awareness about the internet). This lifestyle is presented as the source of some kind of supposedly profound wisdom, yet the insights that emerge from it are, quite frankly, innately simplistic ("the next time is the next time" and "now is now" - truly deep principles, to be sure). As a consequence, all of this makes for a rather tedious watch, one filled with story threads that go largely unexplored and, ultimately, unresolved. To its credit, the film features some fine cinematography and an excellent soundtrack, and it grows progressively more engaging the further one gets into the story (when a story actually begins to develop out of a largely flatlined narrative). But, despite these assets, much of the picture's opening half is riddled with extraneous material that could have readily been pruned. In fact, the removal of that superfluous content could have easily reduced this work down to a more manageable extended short without losing anything, a change that would have yielded a more worthwhile viewing option. I'm a longtime fan of Wenders' work, but this offering just doesn't measure up to his past releases. It's also somewhat baffling how this production has garnered as much attention as it has, such as its selection as Japan's entry in the 2023 Academy Awards' international film category, for which it garnered an Oscar nomination (amazingly beating out the far superior Japanese film "Monster" ("Kaibutsu")), as well as Yakusho's best actor award at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival. However, no matter how earnestly a filmmaker may strive to get his or her message across, sometimes it just doesn't work, as is the case here, and that, unfortunately, is far from perfect.

R

Randy Dreammaker

@Randy-Dreammaker

2024-04-08

**Life through his eyes** This is the story of a man who is caught between the past and the present. A man who has found contentment and happiness from being true to himself and his embracement of a time when things moved at a slower pace. A time when ones purpose was established in taking pride in what you do, no matter how insignificant it is perceived within society. **A movie about life.** What I enjoyed about this movie is how it brings the viewer into a first person perspective of the life journey of an ordinary person. This movie is as close to a first person encounter with Japanese day to day life, as you can obtain without actually living there. It does an excellent job of introducing a few unusual and odd personalities someone living in Japan will encounter. The majority of this movie could be watched without subtitles or audio, because it masterfully achieves the filmmaker goal of "show the story, instead of telling the story". Having lived in Japan as a teacher, this movie was like watching my own experience seen from the lense of a camera. It really represents life in Japan in true form. **Things I Didn't Enjoy** This is a very slow moving movie at three hours long. it could of been shorter and still achieved its goal. I'm not a fan of the transitional collages used to represent dreaming or the transition from night to day. These became redundant and felt like a waste of time. One of the things that makes a great story for a movie is its rising conflict and ultimately the resolution. This movie has a very slow rise in conflict, and the resolution felt almost to subtle. **Final Thoughts** The story is tight, the cinematography is well done, the editing is well done, the acting is authentic. I really enjoyed it, it is a really interesting story. I enjoyed the characters.