Little White Lies

Ryūsuke Hamaguchi

British cinemagoers finally get a chance to catch up with Japanese director Ryūsuke Hamaguchi with his eighth feature, the Haruki Murakami adaptation Drive My Car, which won Best Screenplay at Cannes earlier in the year. You’d have to look to Eric Rohmer, for instance, to find another filmmaker who has balanced out intimate insights and narrative constructs with quite the same reflective impact. While 2015’s 317-minute saga of thirtysomething Kobe womanhood, Happy Hour, remains Hamaguchi’s magnum opus, the still-expansive three-hour span of Drive My Car, in which a theatre director works through love and loss thanks to his stoic chauffeur, is still a magnificent achievement by any measure.

Hamaguchi: In Japan, Murakami is legendary because he doesn’t give up his rights easily. And we also knew plus additional material from two other stories in the same collection, and a significant input from Chekhov’s , with a note to say that there might be further changes in the same vein. Somehow that worked.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Little White Lies

Little White Lies1 min read
Silver Haze
Directed by SACHA POLAK Starring VICKY KNIGHT, ESME CREED-MILES, CHARLOTTE KNIGHT Released 29 MARCH Two minutes into Dutch filmmaker Sacha Polak’s fourth feature, Silver Haze, and the film that instantly springs to mind is Gary Oldman’s Nil By Mouth:
Little White Lies2 min read
The Last Year of Darkness
Directed by BEN MULLINKOSSON  Released 15 MARCH ANTICIPATION. An outsider perspective on Chinese alternative youth culture. ENJOYMENT. A wild and unpredictable ride with insane amounts of vomit. IN RETROSPECT.  A gorgeous and bittersweet time capsule
Little White Lies2 min read
The Delinquents
Directed by RODRIGO MORENO Starring DANIEL ELÍAS, ESTEBAN BIGLIARDI, MARGARITA MOLFINO Released 22 MARCH Newsflash: it turns out that the absolute worst bank in the world is situated in Buenos Aires. Security is so lax and the manager so chill that i

Related