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Faceless

Originaltitel: Shoutai
  • 2024
  • 2 Std.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
740
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ryûsei Yokohama and Riho Yoshioka in Faceless (2024)
VerschwörungsthrillerAktionKriminalitätThriller

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAccused of a brutal murder, Kaburagi escapes and goes on the run across Japan. Detective Matanuki pursues him, but after 488 days missing, Kaburagi's true identity and motives remain a myste... Alles lesenAccused of a brutal murder, Kaburagi escapes and goes on the run across Japan. Detective Matanuki pursues him, but after 488 days missing, Kaburagi's true identity and motives remain a mystery.Accused of a brutal murder, Kaburagi escapes and goes on the run across Japan. Detective Matanuki pursues him, but after 488 days missing, Kaburagi's true identity and motives remain a mystery.

  • Regie
    • Michihito Fujii
  • Drehbuch
    • Michihito Fujii
    • Kazuhisa Kotera
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Ryûsei Yokohama
    • Riho Yoshioka
    • Shintarô Morimoto
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,8/10
    740
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Michihito Fujii
    • Drehbuch
      • Michihito Fujii
      • Kazuhisa Kotera
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Ryûsei Yokohama
      • Riho Yoshioka
      • Shintarô Morimoto
    • 3Benutzerrezensionen
    • 4Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 6 Gewinne & 9 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos10

    Poster ansehen
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    + 6
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    Topbesetzung16

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    Ryûsei Yokohama
    Ryûsei Yokohama
    • Kaburagi
    Riho Yoshioka
    • Sayaka
    Shintarô Morimoto
    • Kazuya
    Anna Yamada
    • Mai
    Takayuki Yamada
    Takayuki Yamada
    • Matanuki
    Yûya Endô
    Yûya Endô
    Hideko Hara
    • Yuko
    Hana Kino
    • Noguchi
    Gôki Maeda
    • Shohei
    Yutaka Matsushige
    Yutaka Matsushige
    • Kawada
    Yu Miyazaki
    • Oda
    Naomi Nishida
    • Sasahara
    Tarô Suruga
    • Taro
    Tetsushi Tanaka
    • Ando
    Shôhei Uno
    • Goto
    Takashi Yamanaka
    Takashi Yamanaka
    • Ashikaga
    • Regie
      • Michihito Fujii
    • Drehbuch
      • Michihito Fujii
      • Kazuhisa Kotera
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen3

    6,8740
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10mythmakergm

    Thriller with emotional depth & characters you connect with

    I cant remember the last time I connected with so many characters so deeply, and in so short a time. The character arcs are truly beautiful, and the relationships between them beautiful as well.

    I actually shed some tears at the end, which can not be said for many thrillers at all! It's equal parts thriller, drama, romance, and cultural/political commentary.

    The pacing is perfect. Some might find certain parts slow but I was on the edge of my seat for the entire movie, fully engaged.

    The mystery is unraveled at a satisfactory pace and with a good degree of intelligence. You, the viewer, are treated with respect. It's not the most complex or unexpected mystery, but the manner in which it is presented is top notch

    The other review touches on the depth of themes already.

    Please give this a chance if you are on the fence!
    1tkim-81372

    Repetitive, uninspired, poorly acted

    Nothing interesting happens for 80% of the movie, there is never any information or twists revealed that the audience didn't know past the first 15 minutes. Really felt like a drag sitting through the whole movie already going over the points that we already know, also acting from the main character is overexaggerated and characters' motivations are confusing throughout. The main character himself is such a boring and unrealistic character too like we get it he's handsome and an angel he'd never hurt anyone blah blah and yet somehow he's able to escape from prison, physically overtake multiple people at once and outrun the police for a whole year. No depth or nuance to the character at all. The whole side plot about the journalist's dad also felt unnecessary, are the writers trying to make a passing commentary on false accusations about sexual assault? Again only a surface-level exploration of the subject matter and I don't understand the comparison (?) to murder...
    8counselor-lin

    The Perils of Being Perceived

    Few things in life are as nerve-wracking as being misunderstood. One moment, you're a regular man walking down the street; the next, your face is plastered across television screens, and strangers are whispering in convenience stores about your supposed crimes. To be seen incorrectly-mistaken, misread, misjudged-is one of the great universal human terrors. And yet, paradoxically, to be unseen, to vanish without a trace, is an equally unsettling fate.

    Shoutai, or as Netflix has rebranded it with its characteristic flair for streamlining nuance, Faceless, lives in this contradiction. Even its title plays with the theme: shoutai in Japanese means "true identity," a phrase that suggests revelation, unmasking, the grand moment where the truth is finally exposed. But the film delights in the opposite-it is a story about a man who erases himself in order to survive, becoming less of a person and more of a rumor. In that sense, Netflix's choice of Faceless isn't entirely off the mark, though it trades the film's quiet existential riddle for the kind of title that sounds like it belongs to a Travolta/ Cage movie.

    Its protagonist, Kaburagi (played by Ryusei Yokohama, a man who has perfected the art of looking both exhausted and deeply suspicious of his own reflection), is neither truly himself nor anyone else. He is a fugitive-not just from the police, but from the very idea of certainty. The question that lingers through the film is not just whether Kaburagi will be caught, but something far more unsettling: If a man's identity is determined by the way others see him, then what happens when the world decides to see him as someone else?

    At its core, Shoutai is a film about the suffocating power of perception. Kaburagi's problem is not simply that he is accused of a crime, but that, once accused, his innocence becomes largely irrelevant. The truth does not matter as much as the narrative others have decided to impose upon him.

    This is a predicament as ancient as civilization itself. History is filled with those who, through misunderstanding or malice, were cast in roles they never auditioned for. The witch who was never a witch. The heretic whose only crime was speaking a little too boldly. The stranger who "looked like someone" and never got the chance to correct the mistake. Kaburagi's crime is one of mistaken identity-but the real crime, as the film suggests, is how quickly the world embraces that mistake, as if eager to file him away in some grand cabinet of villains.

    And yet, Shoutai is not simply a tragedy. It is, in its own grim way, a comedy-albeit the kind of comedy where you laugh quietly before nervously looking over your shoulder. The bureaucratic incompetence on display is almost impressive. The police, with their unshakable confidence in their own wrongness, pursue Kaburagi with the determination of a Roomba slamming repeatedly into a wall. They don't need him to be guilty-they just need him to be someone they can label and move on.

    This, too, is familiar. The world, as it turns out, is astonishingly bad at distinguishing between reality and a well-constructed story. We do not have time to investigate every truth-we prefer our facts prepackaged, preferably in a 90-second news segment, a well-placed headline, or, if all else fails, a tweet. To be misunderstood, then, is not an unfortunate accident-it is an inevitability.

    Kaburagi, for all his desperate maneuvering, learns what all fugitives-and, to some extent, all survivors-have always known: the trick is not to be invisible, but to be forgettable. True invisibility is impossible, but insignificance? That is an art.

    As he moves through Japan, assuming new roles, slipping unnoticed into different lives, Shoutai reveals something quietly profound about human nature. People do not see what is in front of them; they see what they expect to see. The exhausted day laborer? Just another face in the crowd. The timid office worker? Nothing suspicious here. The man waiting alone at a train station? He must belong to someone, mustn't he?

    The film invites us to ask how much of our own lives are shaped by this tendency. How often do we overlook the stranger beside us, the small irregularities in the stories we tell ourselves, the quiet gaps in the identities of those we claim to know? If a man can disappear simply by playing the right role, then how many others are already hiding in plain sight?

    Despite its thriller premise, Shoutai refuses to indulge in the usual cat-and-mouse theatrics. There are no grand confrontations, no last-minute chases, no dramatic rooftop standoffs where a detective monologues about justice. Instead, the film operates in the quiet spaces between tension and resignation. It is not interested in proving whether Kaburagi is a criminal-it is far more fascinated by how quickly a person can be turned into one by public perception alone.

    This makes the film both haunting and oddly meditative. It lingers on everyday moments-waiting at a bus stop, staring at a bowl of soup, sitting alone in a tiny apartment-until they become suffused with dread. Even the most mundane actions carry an undercurrent of paranoia, as if the very act of existing in public is a liability.

    And yet, while the film flirts with the idea that Kaburagi could be anything-a hero, a villain, a tragic byproduct of mass hysteria-it ultimately does not leave the question unanswered. It does not hammer us over the head with it, but for those paying attention, the truth is there, waiting to be acknowledged.

    Of course, whether the world acknowledges it-or prefers the simpler story-is another matter entirely.

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 31. Januar 2025 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Instagram
      • Shochiku (Japan)
    • Sprache
      • Japanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Shoutai
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Shochiku
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      • 4.677.835 $
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