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Asako I & II

Original title: Netemo sametemo
  • 2018
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
Asako I & II (2018)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:26
1 Video
99+ Photos
DramaRomance

Asako lives in Osaka. She falls in love with Baku, a free-spirit. One day, Baku suddenly disappears. Two years later, Asako now lives in Tokyo and meets Ryohei. He looks just like Baku, but ... Read allAsako lives in Osaka. She falls in love with Baku, a free-spirit. One day, Baku suddenly disappears. Two years later, Asako now lives in Tokyo and meets Ryohei. He looks just like Baku, but has a completely different personality.Asako lives in Osaka. She falls in love with Baku, a free-spirit. One day, Baku suddenly disappears. Two years later, Asako now lives in Tokyo and meets Ryohei. He looks just like Baku, but has a completely different personality.

  • Director
    • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
  • Writers
    • Tomoka Shibasaki
    • Sachiko Tanaka
    • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
  • Stars
    • Masahiro Higashide
    • Erika Karata
    • Sairi Itô
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
    • Writers
      • Tomoka Shibasaki
      • Sachiko Tanaka
      • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
    • Stars
      • Masahiro Higashide
      • Erika Karata
      • Sairi Itô
    • 16User reviews
    • 70Critic reviews
    • 69Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:26
    Official Trailer

    Photos965

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    Top cast8

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    Masahiro Higashide
    Masahiro Higashide
    • Baku…
    Erika Karata
    • Asako
    Sairi Itô
    • Haruyo
    Kôji Nakamoto
    • Hirakawa
    Kôji Seto
    • Kushihashi
    Misako Tanaka
    • Eiko
    Daichi Watanabe
    • Okazaki
    Rio Yamashita
    • Maya
    • Director
      • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
    • Writers
      • Tomoka Shibasaki
      • Sachiko Tanaka
      • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    7.15.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6MarcoParzivalRocha

    Could have been better

    Asako falls in love with Baku, and they live an intense love, until he disappears without a trace. Years later, Asako meets Ryohei, who looks exactly like Baku. I usually like this kind of tragic romance, however, Asako I & II is not consistent enough to leave a mark. The main character, Asako, is very superficial throughout the film, with attitudes that disconnect her from real life events, making hard to the viewer to bond with her. If the goal was to address the moving on issue in relations, and seeing true love through different perspectives, it fails completely. The best that comes out of the film is Masahiro Higashide, who plays both roles (Baku and Ryohei) very competently.
    6ThurstonHunger

    Ryohei I & II

    Part of my accidental trilogy of "love" films in Oct 2022, this film shares some aspects with "Marriage is a Crazy Thing." That aspect of a "grass is greener" approach to romance; the power of the flirt/affair/infatuation vs a day-to-day reliable relationship.

    Recently I've also been making my way through director Hamaguchi-san's catalog. I enjoy his lingering on scenes, one man battling against the ADD urging of our consumer society. He often leaves the camera fixed absent of characters, inviting introspection. He also likes the ironic juxtaposition of a character in some mode of transportation, but not really moving personally.

    Anyways, I did not find this movie slow at all and disagree with those who did.

    Perhaps an ongoing observation from Hamaguchi, or maybe on Japan, is the role of the small community in individual lives. I'm thinking in particular of the friends of Asako and Ryohei, and how their relationship is woven into and seen through that larger circle. Some deeply personal moments happen in public settings, contrast this with the Korean covert relationship in "Marriage is a Crazy Thing" or the USA "Meet Cute" where the community surrounding our eternal lovers is comprised almost entirely of service workers: bartender, nail salon worker and a maitre d.

    In the US, others are inherently extras? Hmmmm....

    Anyways, if Asako is Cinderella here, it is almost surprising that she has to choose between comfy sneakers and stylish but not so functional glass slippers. There is a sort of urban fairy tale concocted via a doppelganger (meanwhile Hamaguchi saves on acting costs with a 2-for-1 deal on leading men;>).

    Ultimately the film is a gentle study in trying to grow up, but especially when balanced against that power of the first love/flirtation/etc. I know the title of the film alludes to the two faces of Asako, but the title of my review refers to what happens to Ryohei after the credits roll. I find that interesting to think about and appreciate those who forgive even if forgetting is not an option.

    Another askew interpretation (my favorite kind!) for the film might be the importance of raising a kitten. I was curious to look up the name of their pet cat and found

    "The name Jintan combines the Confucian term jin ( humaneness, benevolence), with the Daoist term tan (cinnabar, pills containing cinnabar, pills (the Elixir of life)) evoking the notion of longevity and health."
    8lasttimeisaw

    an auspicious discovery of a new Japanese auteur in the vein of Hirokazu Koreeda and Naomi Kawase

    Emergent Japanese filmmaker Ryûsuke Hamaguchi, after his international breakthrough HAPPY HOUR (2015), is welcomed to Cannes' main competition for its follow up ASAKO I & II, an adaptation of Tomoka Shibasaki's 2010 novel.

    The story traces a threadbare template of a young woman Asako's (newcomer Karata in her first film) internal struggle between two men Bako and Ryohei (both played by Higashide), who look just like each other but equipped with polarized personalities. After a prologue setting in Osaka, delineates the evanescent passion between Asako and Bako, the meat of the story relocates Asako to Tokyo, two years after Bako vanishes from her life apropos of nothing, she works in a coffee shop and bumps into Ryohei, a sake company salaryman with an uncanny resemblance of Bako, only, Ryohei turns out to be a gregarious, straight-arrow type that is nothing similar to Bako's enigmatic, ethereal insouciance.

    Initially shocked to her core, Asako is gradually won over by many virtues Ryohei exhibits and after a tentative consent of his courtship, their wavering commitment is significantly cemented by the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011, 6 years later, the present day, they are still together and Asako truly grows into a deeper affection to Ryohei, but a reunion with Hayuro (Itô), her best friend in Osaka, augurs the ineluctable re-entry of Bako, now a celebrated heartthrob, into her life, just after she comes clean her relationship with Bako to Ryohei (who confesses that he has divined a thing or two in the past years) and gallantly waves adieu to that seemingly closed chapter in the life, when the crunch comes, her impulsive reaction betrays the complexity of her id, after a dreamlike nocturnal driving on the highway with her knight in shining armor, she comes to a sudden awakening, and has a daunting job to win over Ryohei's heart again, or maybe not, Hamaguchi imbues a realistic spin in their final shot, both looking right into the camera to their indeterminate future.

    Conceptually and thematically evoking Ozon's DOUBLE LOVER (2017), plus as its English title reveals, ASAKO I & II, Hamaguchi's conceit actually zooms in on Asako's dual oscillation (the idealized versus the realistic version of her affection) rather than on his literally doubled male protagonists, but through Karata's passive gaze, quiet performance and greenness, that oscillation is all to well buried underneath whereas Higashide lights up the screen with his compassionate incarnation of an ultimate good guy unfairly taking the short end of the stick in their lopsided relationship, thus the twofold revelations come off as a shade over-dramatic albeit Hamaguchi proves to be a superlative raconteur, it is not an easy job to weave a banal love triangle into an organic entity of compelling watching, and somehow, he manages that with great distinction, especially by conducting a tooth-comb of the narrative arc through supporting characters.

    Apart from his gazing-at-the-lens MO (Asako, first meets Bako, then with Royhei in two Shigeo Gocho's SELF AND OTHERS exhibitions, tacitly carries off the parallels), Hamaguchi also struts his stuff with an aptitude with lights and scenic composition, betokened by the gradation of sunlight shadowing the rain-dappled field in the aerial shot near the end. All in all, ASAKO I & II is an auspicious discovery of a new Japanese auteur in the vein of Hirokazu Koreeda and Naomi Kawase, that is something every cineaste should extol!
    3suchalad

    trash for the masses and pretentiously long

    The story certaintly has an interesting premise in concept, but the execution is shallow. Theres nothing to this movie, read the description and you've pretty much got the movie, her first boyfriend disappears, she gets together with "Asako" 2-----thats it. Actually watching the movie will not take you much further than that. Its also painfully cringe with the dumb/childish women trope.

    Nothing is ever explained, people in the movie just act weird for no reason, leading to "dramatic" moments.

    'Undine' 2020 has similarities with the 1 girl/ 2 guys and is better than this, if you're going to give something a go, watch that instead.
    6gbill-74877

    Falls short

    Interesting premise, but flat characters making infuriating decisions made this one tough to fully appreciate. It's a film that had its moments in the interplay between the friends, but felt too simplistic at the core of its love triangle, and dragged on too long. I liked the idea of exploring the compromises usually necessary in a stable relationship vs. The wild ride our hearts might lead us on, but this didn't feel much like an exploration, perhaps because the central character (Erika Karata) is so weakly drawn.

    Maybe if you've been left in the past by a partner you truly loved, someone who if they showed up out of the blue might cause you to throw everything that's good in your life away, it may resonate more for you, but for me I couldn't buy it. Solid performance from Masahiro Higashide in the dual role, and I liked the character of Maya (Rio Yamashita) here - if only her fate had been a little more intertwined with that of Ryohei's.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The first commercially produced film directed by Ryûsuke Hamaguchi.
    • Connections
      Featured in Fandor: Cannes You Dig It? | Fandor Spotlight (2022)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 2, 2019 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Japan
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Art House Films (France)
      • Bitters End (Japan)
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Asako 1 & 2
    • Filming locations
      • Osaka, Japan
    • Production companies
      • C&I Entertainment
      • Bitters End
      • Comme des Cinémas
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $25,559
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,690
      • May 19, 2019
    • Gross worldwide
      • $645,313
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 59m(119 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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