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Plan 75

  • 2022
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 53 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,6/10
2748
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Plan 75 (2022)
Government program Plan 75 encourages senior citizens to be euthanized to remedy an aged society. An elderly woman whose means of survival are vanishing, a pragmatic Plan 75 salesman, and a Filipino laborer face choices of life and death.
trailer wiedergeben1:53
1 Video
39 Fotos
DramaScience-Fiction

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuFaced with a rapidly aging population, a Japanese government in the near future rolls out an unsettling agenda.Faced with a rapidly aging population, a Japanese government in the near future rolls out an unsettling agenda.Faced with a rapidly aging population, a Japanese government in the near future rolls out an unsettling agenda.

  • Regie
    • Chie Hayakawa
  • Drehbuch
    • Jason Gray
    • Chie Hayakawa
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Chieko Baishô
    • Hayato Isomura
    • Stefanie Arianne
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,6/10
    2748
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Chie Hayakawa
    • Drehbuch
      • Jason Gray
      • Chie Hayakawa
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Chieko Baishô
      • Hayato Isomura
      • Stefanie Arianne
    • 29Benutzerrezensionen
    • 74Kritische Rezensionen
    • 70Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 12 Gewinne & 17 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:53
    Trailer

    Fotos39

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    Chieko Baishô
    Chieko Baishô
    • Michi Kakutani
    • (as Baishô Chieko)
    Hayato Isomura
    Hayato Isomura
    • Hiromu Okabe
    • (as Isomura Hayato)
    Stefanie Arianne
    Stefanie Arianne
    • Maria
    • (as Sutefanî Arian)
    Taka Takao
    • Uncle Yukio Okabe
    • (as Takao Taka)
    Yumi Kawai
    Yumi Kawai
    • Yôko Narimiya
    • (as Kawai Yûmi)
    Hisako Ôkata
    • Ineko
    • (as Ôkata Hisako)
    Kazuyoshi Kushida
    • Fujimaru
    • (as Kushida Kazuyoshi)
    Yûsaku Mori
    • Young Man
    Yoko Yano
    • Michi's Co-worker
    Mari Nakayama
    • Michi's Co-worker
    Motomi Makiguchi
    Tamae Ônishi
    Reo Akamatsu
    Koshirô Asami
    Miho Hakuta
    Sheryl Ichikawa
    Sheryl Ichikawa
    Toshiko Igarashi
    Wakako Iwabuchi
    • Regie
      • Chie Hayakawa
    • Drehbuch
      • Jason Gray
      • Chie Hayakawa
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen29

    6,62.7K
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    8frankde-jong

    The employees are even more interesting characters that the participants

    The opening scene of "Plan 75" is very scary. It consists of a suicide attack on a Japanese nusring home to draw attention to the fact that elderly people (in the eyes of the perpetrator) put too heavy a burden on the Japanese economy and the younger generations.

    After this shocking opening the film slows down. The Japanese government starts a program in which citizens from age 75 onwards can opt for free euthanasia. The film folows two participants and three employees of this program.

    The film deserves high praise for the courage to select such a controversial topic. Speaking of the Dutch context, beginning with a situation in which euthanasia was only possible in the last stage of an incurable illness the scope of euthanasia has grown wider and wider. As a result the judgement of the patient has grown in importance versus the judgement of the physician.

    In "Plan 75" there is no judgement of a physician at all. Everybody above 75 who wants an euthanasia can get it for free. It then becomes crucial that the free will of the participants really is their free will, and in this respect the film succeeds in sowing the necessary doubt. The main motives of the two participants are poverty, loneliness and a feeling of guilt towards the younger generation. The first two may result from cuts in government spending on social welfare, the last one has more to do with social pressure than with free will.

    Maybe even more interesting than the participants are the employees of the Plan 75 program. In the film there are three of them: a recruiter, a call center agent and someone sorting out the belongings of the already dead participants. What is it like to recruit someone for his own dead? What sort of people have 5 minute conversations with participants with the explicit assignment to prevent withdrawals (to which participants are legally entitled) at all costst? The disturbing answer is that the employees are normal, even nice, people doing their job and earning a living. It nearly reminded me about what Hannah Arends had to say about the banality of evil.

    Only when they are confronted with an ethical complication the employees wake up and begin to ask themselves questions. In the film the recruitment employee gets his own uncle as one of his clients and the call center agent meets with her own client in real life (what the program strictly forbids).

    As I said at the beginning of this review, after a scary opening scene the tempo of the movie slows down. One can even ask the question if it doesn't slow down too much. I am not a fan of movies going in the overdrive, but this movie presents a very controversial topic in a way that makes it almost natural. On the other side one can also argue that this is precisely a strong point of the movie. It is for everybody to decide for oneself on this issue. I have not made my final judgement on this point yet.

    In my reviews I like to make comparisons with other movies. For "Plan 75" a comparison with "The ballad of Narayama" (1958, Keisuke Kinoshita & 1983, Shohei Imamura) is very obvious. These films are about the Japanese mythical custom of "Ubasute" in which an elderly person (in the films of age 70) is carried to the top of a mountain to die. The elderly people in these films are putting pressure not so much on the social welfare system (the films are situated in the middle ages) but on the food supply.

    Given the above comparisons one can wonder if "Plan 75" is a film specific to the Japanese context. I am afraid it is not. Yes, Japan is one of the most aged countries in the World, but it certainly is not the only aging country. Yes, the Japanese people do have a collectivist culture with a tradition of self-sacrifice for the group. Remembering the discussions around old people occupying an intensive car bed during the Covid crisis also this sentiment is not only applicable in Japan.
    8dromasca

    shattering movie about life, age and death

    'Plan 75', the feature debut of Japanese filmmaker Chie Hayakawa, which premiered at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival, is an imperfect and shattering movie, one of those films whose idea and theme will follow viewers long after they have finished watching. The film addresses one of the most acute problems of Japan and many other developed countries - the downward demographic curve caused by the aging of the population, with catastrophic consequences for society and the economy. It is quite remarkable that the film describes this problem in a dystopian setting, but the attention of the script and the director is constantly directed towards the human dimension of the characters and the story.

    In the near future or perhaps even in an alternate present, the Japanese government adopts 'Plan 75'. Anyone over the age of 75 has the right to free assisted suicide. Not only is the program funded by the government, but an unconditional bonus of ¥100,000 is also given to each senior who chooses this path. The elderly - many of whom struggle with the hardships of life, the limitations of age and especially loneliness - are also given psychological assistance. The program is excellently organized and enjoying success. After all, sacrifice is in the Japanese tradition, and what is more noble than shortening one's life for the benefit of the common good, relieving the state of the burden of maintenance and thus ensuring an easier future for the young today?

    Three main characters are followed in three parallel narrative threads, the connection of which takes place towards the end of the film. Himoru is a government official who convinces the elderly to enroll in the program and helps them fill out the necessary forms. Maria is a foreign worker from the Philippines who ends up being employed in the institution where the final stages of euthanasia take place. Michi is a single woman who at 78 years old struggles with life's hardships, works to support herself and is in danger of being evicted from her home. Enrolling in 'Plan 75' is a desperate solution for her, due to economic and social pressure. All of the acting is excellent, but Chieko Baisho's as Michi is the most impressive. In fact, this part of the narrative is the most coherent.

    The film has undeniable cinematic qualities, including some memorable shots. However, the thematic is even stronger than the artistic achievement. It is a very Japanese film in atmosphere, characters, style of interpretation, but the problems it raises are universal. The Western conception that life is more valuable than anything else is being questioned. What is the scale of values of a society that prefers shortening - even in comfortable conditions - the lives of the elderly instead of easing them through care in their final years? How are elderly people dealing with loneliness? How 'humane' is assisted suicide? Isn't the very idea of suicide against human nature? 'Plan 75' manages to trigger these questions in the minds of the viewers without rhetoric or melodrama, by telling the stories of truthful characters, who win the empathy of the viewers. This is a debut film that has already achieved well-deserved international notoriety.
    6rosege-17382

    Good premise but not fulfilled.

    I really like the premise of this film. Given Japan's problems with an ageing population this was the perfect country for this movie to be set.

    I feel though that it was a missed opportunity. This is because there was no real in-depth conversations about why the country needed to introduce Plan 75. Similarly it wasn't shown how the country was benefiting from it.

    No one debated the morals and ethics of it either.

    I kept waiting for people to discuss the core issues of Plan 75 but it never came. Instead we see people living depressing lives who consider Plan 75 because living has become so hard.

    Why not have someone who is doing quite well but shocks their family by choosing Plan 75 because they see it as doing the right thing for the country?

    Or show some young people that need medical attention but cannot get it because all the medical resources have been consumed by the elderly and hence why Plan 75 has become so important.

    Anyway I really wanted to like this movie but unfortunately it missed the opportunity to delve into the deeper aspects of what Plan 75 would mean.
    6Jeremy_Urquhart

    Slow and upsetting

    A slow, bleak, and ultimately decent film, Plan 75 apparently belongs in the science-fiction genre, but it's one of those uncomfortably realistic and plausible sci-fi movies that is far from fun or adventurous. It barely even feels like it takes place in the future at all, following several people in Japan who are all involved with a new government program that encourages elderly people (who exceed the age of 75) to end their lives via euthanasia, apparently because of overpopulation concerns.

    Not only is the premise bleak, but the slow pace also ensures this is a hard watch. It kind of makes you sit and feel discomfort at the whole thing, and never really suggests that there's much hope for some kind of upbeat conclusion. It's all very muted and quietly sad. I don't think that makes the film boring on it's own, but there was something lacking to make it hit a little harder or feel a bit more engaging. The slowness and uneasiness was definitely intentional, to a certain extent, but I also can't say the approach grabbed me all the time.

    But it's decently made and looks at something that I fear could come true, to some extent. It's dark and sad without being a tearjerker, or having much of an emotional release. It's overall probably one of the hardest types of movies to watch, and while I didn't love it, I respect it.
    6EUyeshima

    Intriguing But Relentlessly Somber Film Tackles Japan's Aging Problem

    By a large margin, Japan is the nation with the oldest population in the world, which has dire economic consequences in the future. Director/screenwriter Chie Hayakawa drew on this burgeoning reality and fashioned this quietly provocative 2022 character drama based on the dystopian idea of Plan 75, a government program that gives people 75 or older the option of euthanized suicide. It's a macabre (though not far-fetched) concept that Hayakawa cleverly turns into a subtle thriller based on the power of mass suggestion. The main protagonist is Michi, a lonely 78-year-old hotel cleaner who suddenly loses her job and her home, making her a prime candidate for the program. There are other key characters - a young, conflicted Plan 75 employee and a Filipina service worker who helps dispose the remains - but the focus is primarily on Michi played affectingly by Chieko Baisho. To its detriment, the film has a relentlessly somber tone. It could've benefited from a few scares or even laughs. There were just too many lengthy silent shots of Michi contemplating her fateful decision.

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    • Wissenswertes
      Official submission of Japan for the 'Best International Feature Film' category of the 95th Academy Awards in 2023.
    • Patzer
      The time when the uncle is brought to the clinic is running back and forth. (See the time on the wristwatch then on the car navigation, and later on again on the wristwatch.)
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Amanda the Jedi Show: The Most Theatre Walkouts I've EVER Seen | Cannes 2022 Explained (2022)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 12. Oktober 2023 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Japan
      • Frankreich
      • Philippinen
      • Katar
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Loaded Films (Japan)
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Sprachen
      • Japanisch
      • Tagalog
    • Auch bekannt als
      • 七五計劃
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC)
      • Daluyong Studios
      • Doha Film Institute
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      • 385.349 $
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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 53 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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