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Asian cinema: Japanese films
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Review | Netflix movie review: Love Like the Falling Petals – frustrating Japanese romance weepie offers lame exploration of life

  • Honoka Matsumoto plays a hairstylist who has a romance with a would-be photographer (Kento Nakajima) but walks out on him – she suffers from premature ageing
  • The film’s focus shifts to her brother and his fiancée, left to pay for her care, but the director doesn’t have much to say about Japan’s rapidly ageing society

Reading Time:2 minutes
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Kento Nakajima in a still from Love Like the Falling Petals.
James Marsh

2/5 stars

Muddled and frustrating almost from the outset, Yoshihiro Fukagawa’s achingly sentimental weepie Love Like the Falling Petals struggles to tell its story with coherent clarity.

It offers a lament for the fleeting nature of existence while simultaneously bemoaning the financial and emotional burden the elderly impose upon their families.

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Honoka Matsumoto plays a disarmingly youthful hairstylist who is stricken by a rare condition that causes her body to age rapidly, leaving her first love, played by Kento Nakajima, reeling.

Fukagawa resists the temptation to turn Keisuke Uyama’s novel into a Japanese version of M. Night Shyamalan’s Old, and instead presents a cautionary tale about the dangers of dragging one’s heels.
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