The fictional British royal Prince George travels to Japan and falls in love with a local female tour guide named Sumi. He considers breaking the rules and staying with her there, but a Japa... Read allThe fictional British royal Prince George travels to Japan and falls in love with a local female tour guide named Sumi. He considers breaking the rules and staying with her there, but a Japanese gangster wants him dead.The fictional British royal Prince George travels to Japan and falls in love with a local female tour guide named Sumi. He considers breaking the rules and staying with her there, but a Japanese gangster wants him dead.
Anne Lonnberg
- Jane Hollander
- (as Ann Lönnberg)
Eléonore Hirt
- Mrs. Blanche Hollander
- (as Eleonore Hirt)
Penelope Keith
- Mrs. Hollander
- (voice)
Tetsurô Tanba
- Terrorist Leader
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Allegedly based on another Prince, "Seven Nights in Japan", the story of Prince George should not disappoint fans of romantic cinema. The actress that plays the Princes love interest (Sumi) is sweet and beautiful and Michael York is in his prime. Highlights include Sumi singing Japanese love songs as a bus tour guide and the beautiful country locales. A gentle, elegant film.
I Happened to see this movie in my class 3.I watched this movie in an open air theater at pune air force station. A very remarkable movie that even today i could remember some glimpses of it. A good movie to remember. The Hero is a British Prince who escapes and lands in japan meets a guide and falls in love with her.The song the heroine sings in the bus is very very good.Our hero daily gets into the bus to see her finally persuades her to love him. The seventh day he is traced and is taken back. The love dies.The Actors have done a pretty good job and I would suggest every one has to keep a collection in their movie library.
Seven Nights in Japan... the boredom was unbearable after the first night.
I had to give this film 1 star... not because it is utterly dreadful ( which it is), but because it has an unrealistically high rating from other reviewers who are either being extremely kind, they were extras in the film, or Michael York has numerous troll accounts..!?
No spoilers in my review, if there were, it would be like admitting there is a plot worth spoiling... and there is'nt !
The beloved and greatly admired British director, Lewis 'Alfie' Gilbert's manifestly curious, somewhat obscure, demonstratively middle of the road, doomed 'odd-couple' romance, 'Seven Nights in Japan' (1976) even with all its torpid trivialities, remains quite a distracting, perhaps even genuinely touching, albeit terrifically twee love story about a bored, dashingly debonair Prince (Michael York) and his erstwhile beau, a disarmingly pretty tour guide (Hidemi Ioki) he meets while gleefully shirking his seemingly unexciting Royal duties; and, quite frankly, as cute, 'meet-cutes' go, it's pretty goddamn cute! While blatantly old fashioned in style and tone, almost absurdly sentimental, Lewis Gilbert's seemingly forgotten, 'Seven Nights in Japan' nonetheless has some considerable cinematic merit as a richly fascinating view/travelogue of 1970s Japan, with legendary French DP, Henri Decaë's tastefully roving camera giving us poor proles a rather Princely view of all the myriad exquisite, breathtakingly beautiful vistas that our handsome pair of magisterially mismatched movie lovers enjoy during their playful, picture book, romantic journey towards the inevitably soft-focus consummation! This unsophisticated, sweetly glutinous tale is pure narrative candyfloss, but not cloyingly so, and I was more than happy to wallow unthinkingly in its stupefying, reality-numbing, excessively sugary sentimentality until its somewhat underwhelming conclusion! I should also like to note that the film's acclaimed cinematographer, Henri Decaë, also shot Truffaut's landmark, '400 Blows' and Jean-Pierre Melville's hard-boiled Gallic-crime classic, 'Le Samouraï'!
Obviously based on the exploits of Prince Charles when he was in the Royal Navy.This is a pleasant sightseeing tour of Japan with a slight romantic plot and a rather silly sub plot involving attempted assassination. It was good to see such stalwart character actors as Peter Jones and Charles Grey.Lewis Gilbert had a long and successful career but this was not one of his better films.
Did you know
- TriviaThe character of Prince George (Michael York) has been said to represent King Charles III. Time Out said that the character was "obviously Charles, though called George."
- GoofsWhen Prince George calls Hollander (Charles Gray) from the train station, the prince is calling during daylight hours, whereas Hollander and his wife were woken up in bed implying night time - unless they either went to bed early or were very late risers.
- ConnectionsReferences Vacances romaines (1953)
- How long is Seven Nights in Japan?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Siete noches en Japón
- Filming locations
- Kogashima-so, Mikata-gun, Japan(filmed entirrly on location in Japan)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Sound mix
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