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Memories of Matsuko

Original title: Kiraware Matsuko no isshô
  • 2006
  • 2h 10m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
9.3K
YOUR RATING
Memories of Matsuko (2006)
ComedyDramaMusicalMystery

When Matsuko is murdered, her nephew, Sho, gets to progressively unveil the many details of her mysterious past, discovering she wasn't just a forgotten outcast and had led an intriguing yet... Read allWhen Matsuko is murdered, her nephew, Sho, gets to progressively unveil the many details of her mysterious past, discovering she wasn't just a forgotten outcast and had led an intriguing yet bizarre life.When Matsuko is murdered, her nephew, Sho, gets to progressively unveil the many details of her mysterious past, discovering she wasn't just a forgotten outcast and had led an intriguing yet bizarre life.

  • Director
    • Tetsuya Nakashima
  • Writers
    • Tetsuya Nakashima
    • Muneki Yamada
  • Stars
    • Miki Nakatani
    • Eita Nagayama
    • Yûsuke Iseya
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    9.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tetsuya Nakashima
    • Writers
      • Tetsuya Nakashima
      • Muneki Yamada
    • Stars
      • Miki Nakatani
      • Eita Nagayama
      • Yûsuke Iseya
    • 45User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 10 nominations total

    Photos94

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Miki Nakatani
    Miki Nakatani
    • Matsuko Kawajiri
    Eita Nagayama
    Eita Nagayama
    • Shô Kawajiri
    • (as Eita)
    Yûsuke Iseya
    Yûsuke Iseya
    • Yôichi Ryû
    Mikako Ichikawa
    • Kumi Kawajiri
    Asuka Kurosawa
    • Megumi Sawamura
    Gori
    • Shûji Ôkura
    Shinji Takeda
    • Onodera
    Yoshiyoshi Arakawa
    Yoshiyoshi Arakawa
    • Kenji Shimazu
    Gekidan Hitori
    • Takeo Okano
    Magy
    • Detective
    Shôsuke Tanihara
    Shôsuke Tanihara
    • Shunji Saeki
    Takanori Takeyama
    Takanori Takeyama
    • Vice-Principal
    Masahiro Kômoto
    Masahiro Kômoto
    • Man with Stand on School Trip
    Nagisa Katahira
    • Self
    Takuzô Kadono
    • Principal
    Midoriko Kimura
    Midoriko Kimura
    • Tae Kawajiri
    Mari Hamada
    Mari Hamada
    • Norio's Wife
    Hirotarô Honda
    • Self
    • Director
      • Tetsuya Nakashima
    • Writers
      • Tetsuya Nakashima
      • Muneki Yamada
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews45

    7.89.2K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8kityujonatha

    A great tragedy with a charming comical outlook

    The movie is really wonderful and joyful. The package is really wonderful. As the female lives from 50's up to now, director of this film manage to dissolve a lot of pop culture stuffs, like MTV, TV etc into a fancy comical world. I am sure there would be only Japanese who can create such world.

    But what i admire most is he do not forget the story he want to tell. The story actually is a adaption from a original novel which depict a tragic life of a woman. The film, though have a comedy outlook, it is a typical tragic story. The director manages to find a new way to retell the story in a sense which youngster would feel related.

    And the story itself is great because it tells us what is so called life. ie ridiculous, unpredictable, etc. and how a woman face her life with constant hope of simply getting better.

    The story is a typical tragedy in a Greek kind of style. Though it may contain some preaching scene, but u are free to take it or leave, as the life of the woman is open to judge.
    chaos-rampant

    Attachment and release

    The film is about memory as the English title states, this brings it under one of the most vital (and most cinematic) subgroups in cinema, films about our ability to recall life as illusion and mind rather than as just a bunch of surrounding facts. So what kind of recall here?

    A vagrant middle-aged woman is discovered dead one day, the kind of nameless death that might make neighbors pause for only a brief moment, and this is the first admission here; ordinary life next door can be the center of a rich world. This is done with a little too much obvious caprice for my taste but the essence is the same, we go back to find this woman when she was a sweet young girl with all of life and heartbreak still ahead of her.

    I don't know how much is personal for the filmmaker here but much is revealed by simply examining appearances. A vibrant memory, with a hyperactive consciousness that joyously swims through tragedy. It starts like one of those hyper Japanese TV ads, the filmmaker apparently has plenty of experience in those, but as we progress the whole is mellowed and given resonance behind the popup colors. This is the second admission, that life deserves to be celebrated with as much color.

    A preeminent formulator of Noh wrote in the 1400s, Zen inspired, that "life is a lying dream, he only wakes who casts the world aside". There's no such effort here to awaken to what creates suffering and to purify, the film is simply taken in by the swirl and sadness of suffering. I was reminded of the lush Powell/Pressburger melodramas from the 40s as well as recent Julie Taymor with her song and dance. Others thought of Tim Burton. To be sure though the fixation with color and artifice is as recent in Japan as anime but as old as kabuki.

    So, overwrought and sentimental melodrama on one side, too much so for my taste. Just the same I appreciate the bubbly air that refuses to dwell on misfortune; it's quickly brushed aside for some new heartbreak to come along. Yet it doesn't address its own question about the meaninglessness of life and it's in this deeper way that the absence of awakening resurfaces. The girl is merely buffeted along by attachment and need and at no point, down to her final moments, comes to a realization.

    In the list of hearbreaking films ultimately this deserves its own place next to Capra's Wonderful Life. This is, as much as anything else, because the filmmaker leaves his heroine to a horrible life and meaningless end because in the end she's only the figment of a story that he uses to inspire with but that inspiration and change is never allowed to her inside the story. The bittersweet worldview says, suffer as much as you are able to bear, in the end there is release.

    The penultimate scene is possibly one of the twenty best shots I have seen in my life, a flow of consciousness that lifts up from her and races through waters. Marvelous work. This is the cultivated awareness of the illusory life the Japanese have known for centuries across Shinto temples, Zen and the Noh stage.

    But the maker ends this a scene late for my taste. The last one revisits the home of childhood as the place from which to ascend, paying homage to the well known stairway scene from A Matter of Life and Death by Powell/Pressburger, which just says too much now as it did then.
    9boku-2

    Just beautiful

    A really beautiful film to watch. It's funny, tragic, silly and thought-provoking all at the same time. I actually started watching this film at 1am and thought I'd probably fall asleep halfway through but my eyes were wide open the whole time. Fascinating following the life of Matsuko and all the different stages she goes through and the people she meets along the way.

    The problem with a lot of artsy kind of films is that whilst they're visually excellent, the story's lacking. Or whilst the story's interesting, they're just not that great to watch. Memories of Matsuko however is visually stunning and also really interesting. Can't understand how it didn't make a splash on the world scene.

    The only reason I gave it 9 and not 10 was that it was a bit long and felt it dragged towards the end.

    Memories of Matsuko is probably one of the best films I've seen. I borrowed it from a friend but will be buying my own copy.
    9Bribaba

    Memories are made of this

    Who is Matsuko and what memories are these? Mitsuko was a born optimist, a fervent believer in human goodness. The memories, therefore, are inevitably sad as she discovers the journey along the yellow brick road can be tough haul. We discover Matsuko through her brother's quest when he hears of her death (she left home some fifteen years ago). Porn star, convict, hairdresser - these are all part of a less than glittering cv. This could easily have been an unremitting 2 hours of grimness and probably would have been were this film British. But director Tetsuya Nakashima throws everything into this including the kitchen sink, just as he did with his similarly surreal Kamikaze Girls. The result leaves you reeling as you run the gamut of emotions as the heroine's fate unravels.
    8Tweekums

    Sometimes comic, sometimes tragic, always delightful.

    I hadn't heard of this film till it appeared on television as part of a short season of Asian films. I'm glad that I decided to watch it though as it was a delightful film which made me laugh and cry.

    Shou is living alone doing nothing with his life till one day his father comes by and asks him to clear up the house of his aunt Matsuko who had been murdered. Up until then Shou had no knowledge of his aunt but as he sorts through her belongings and meets people who knew her he learns what an extraordinary life she had, some happy but much sad. It is especially sad at the end when we learn how she died after surviving many hardships.

    The film has a surreal appearance that reminded me of a cross between Amalie and the TV series Pushing Daisies due to the artificially vivid colours. If you want to see something different I'd certainly recommend this charming film.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Julie Andrews in The Sound of Music (1965)
    Musical
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the protagonist T-shirt is written "Eu respeito o meio ambiente", this means "I respect the enviroment" in portuguese.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Stilt-Walker (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Trill Trill Recur
      Written by Kaela Kimura & Shigekazu Aida

      Performed by Kaela Kimura

      Courtesy of Columbia Music Entertainment, Inc.

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 27, 2006 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ký Uc Vê Matsuko
    • Filming locations
      • Japan
    • Production companies
      • Amuse Soft
      • Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $9,616,533
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 10m(130 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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