Advertisement
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

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.
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.
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x