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Asian cinema: Japanese films
LifestyleEntertainment

ReviewYour Lovely Smile movie review: Lim Kah-wai, Hirobumi Watanabe’s movie shines a light on Japan’s independent cinemas

  • Part-documentary, part ode to the less glamorous side of the film industry, Your Lovely Smile follows Hirobumi Watanabe’s filmmaker as he travels across Japan
  • As he goes about his mission, to find a cinema for a retrospective of his work, he visits venues with unique personalities and histories that date back decades

2-MIN READ2-MIN
Hirobumi Watanabe in a still from Your Lovely Smile (category IIB, Japanese), directed by Lim Kah-wai. Shogen, and Hikaru Hirayama, co-star.
James Marsh

3/5 stars

Independent filmmaker Hirobumi Watanabe portrays a version of himself in director Lim Kah-wai’s Your Lovely Smile.

Part-documentary, part wistful ode to the less glamorous side of the film industry, it follows Watanabe as he travels across Japan, peddling his cinematic wares to the proprietors of small, family-run picture houses.

At once a gently satirical portrait of self-aggrandising artists, the film is also an elegiac rumination on an art form being squeezed out of existence by homogenised commercial content.

YOUR LOVELY SMILE trailer | 2022

The rotund yet unassuming Watanabe has, like his real-world counterpart, garnered plaudits for his avant-garde, micro-budget films. When we first meet him, he is struggling to complete his latest screenplay.

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