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IMDbPro

After Life

Original title: Wandafuru raifu
  • 1998
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
15K
YOUR RATING
After Life (1998)
Home Video Trailer from New Yorker Films
Play trailer2:01
1 Video
47 Photos
DramaFantasy

After death, people have a week to choose only one memory to keep for eternity.After death, people have a week to choose only one memory to keep for eternity.After death, people have a week to choose only one memory to keep for eternity.

  • Director
    • Hirokazu Koreeda
  • Writer
    • Hirokazu Koreeda
  • Stars
    • Arata Iura
    • Erika Oda
    • Susumu Terajima
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Writer
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Stars
      • Arata Iura
      • Erika Oda
      • Susumu Terajima
    • 128User reviews
    • 58Critic reviews
    • 91Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos1

    After Life
    Trailer 2:01
    After Life

    Photos47

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Arata Iura
    • Takashi Mochizuki, counselor
    • (as Arata)
    Erika Oda
    • Shiori Satonaka, trainee counselor
    Susumu Terajima
    Susumu Terajima
    • Satoru Kawashima, counselor
    Takashi Naitô
    • Takuro Sugie, counselor
    Kyôko Kagawa
    Kyôko Kagawa
    • Kyoko Watanabe, Ichiro's Wife
    Kei Tani
    • Kennosuke Nakamura, boss
    Taketoshi Naitô
    Taketoshi Naitô
    • Ichiro Watanabe, who cannot choose his favourite experience
    Tôru Yuri
    • Gisuke Shoda, who talks about sex
    Yûsuke Iseya
    Yûsuke Iseya
    • Yusuke Iseya, who refuses to choose his experience
    Sayaka Yoshino
    • Kana Yoshino, talks about Disneyland
    Kazuko Shirakawa
    • Nobuko Amano, who talks about her affair with a married man
    Kôtarô Shiga
    • Kenji Yamamoto, who wants to forget his past
    Hisako Hara
    • Kiyo Nishimura, old lady who loves cherry blossoms
    Sadao Abe
    • Ichiro (as young man)
    Natsuo Ishidô
    • Kyoko Watanabe as a young woman
    Tomomi Hiraiwa
    • Receptionist
    Tae Kimura
    • Dining Hall Worker
    Yasuhiro Kasamatsu
    • Director
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • Writer
      • Hirokazu Koreeda
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews128

    7.614.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8lastliberal

    Can you pick your best memory?

    This was a perfect film for watching on a quiet Sunday morning. It made me reflect on my own life, and realize that I would probably be one of the counselors in the afterlife.

    It was brilliantly written and directed and one of the most innovative stories I have seen on screen. After death, you spend a week in a way-station to reflect on your life and take one memory with you. It is not an easy process as I discovered.

    I was interested in the fact that some people can remember all the way back to the womb. Picking a happy memory before I was an adult is almost impossible for me, so I cannot imagine going back that far. Most people remember only to age three or four.

    I was fascinated with the man who wanted to leave behind some evidence of his existence. One man could not remember any happy memories in his 70+ years, so he had to sit through video tapes, one for each year of his life, to help him. It seems that there was a connection with one of the counselors and this played out in an unusual way at the end. Choosing your best memory as the fact that you were someone else's best memory and that you made one person happy.

    Most of us fall into the category expressed by one man. "I had a so-so education, a so-so job, a so-so marriage, and a so-so retirement." How do you pick a happy or important memory from that? I also liked one man's response when he picked his memory after lamenting that most of the memories of his life were bad. After being told he would forget all the bad memories, he exclaimed, "That truly is heaven." An unusual film that will be in my memory for a long time.
    itateme

    why does my life suck

    this movie was lovely. i could relate to the people and what they chose as their memories. i wanted to find a memory but i couldn't find one i would want to spend eternity with. so this movie has actually made me want to create beautiful memories before it is too late. see this movie, it might make you evaluate your own life.
    10howard.schumann

    The quality of our life

    "When we come to the last moment of this lifetime and we look back across it, the only thing that's going to matter is 'What is the quality of our love?" - Richard Bach

    One of the most commonly reported aspects of near-death experiences is the life review, the seeing and re-experiencing of major and trivial events of one's life, sometimes from the perspective of the other people involved. Most say that the single most important lesson they learned is that the actions we think are trivial and unimportant turn out to be the most important, especially ones that involve spontaneous acts of love. While not exactly a life review, in After Life by Hirokazu Koreeda, a group of recently deceased people are asked to look back at their life and choose only one memory from their life that they want to take with them to eternity. The process compels people to look at their life in its entirety and see what worked and what was missing.

    Set in a dreary barracks-like way station, civil servants meet with those just crossed over to help them choose the experience they want to hold on to. For some, the choice is easy, for others it is difficult. Those that will not or cannot choose are consigned to work in the substation with the newly deceased until they are ready to move on. The counselors work one on one with each individual telling them that they have three days to make their choice. Once a memory is selected, a film crew recreates the memory-- sets are built and the little touches of sights and sounds are selected until the deceased are satisfied that they are witnessing a perfect recreation of their experience. It is that film that they take with them, not the original memory.

    At first some choose things such as a trip to Disneyland, a sexual encounter, or a memorable bowl of rice but later gravitate toward experiences that are more meaningful. The center of the film revolves around those who are unable to choose. Ichiro Watanabe (Taketoshi Naito) is a 70-year old management consultant who has led an uneventful life and is challenged to find a memory he thinks is worth preserving for all time. To help him in this process, he is allowed to scan through piles of videotapes representing each year of his life. One young man wants to choose a dream instead of an actual event. Another wants to forget his past entirely, and an elderly woman is stuck in the mindset of a nine-year old girl.

    After Life is the story of the caseworkers as well. Takashi Mochizuki (Arata) has been stuck in limbo because he cannot find any happiness in his twenty-two years until he realizes how his short life deeply affected someone else. His perfect realization also affects a co-worker Shiori (Erika Oda) who has fallen in love with him. After Life is a beautiful and touching film that allows us to reflect on the things that brought us joy in our own life, and to recognize that true happiness lies, not in outward symbols of success, but in giving ourselves to others.
    8lingmeister

    Documentary like realism of people and their re-examination of their life

    The movie is told in such a way that the people coming in reveals themselves in such a way that they all realize that there is a part of themselves in which it is truly good, even if it is deeply buried. The way it is filmed, as if it is a documentary, provides the cunning realism that you would not ordinarily achieve in regular film. Even at the end, we discover the true reason one of the counselor stayed around instead of moving on. Truly a touching and thought provoking film. It will make you try to think for yourself which memory you would cherish forever, even if it is single one.
    7claudio_carvalho

    The Best Moment of Our Lives

    Every Monday morning, a team of advisors welcome in a facility a group of people that has just died with the mission of helping each one of them to select their best memory that will last for the eternity in the first three days. On Thursday, filmmakers begin to recreate the selected memory, and in the end of the week they screen it in a movie theater and he or she moves to Heaven.

    I bought "Wandâfuru Raifu", or "After Life" on DVD, since I was very intrigued with the summary on its cover. I saw this low budget movie spoken in Japanese with English subtitles and I found the story very original and provocative. The premise of rebuilding eternity along a week, like God created Earth, and Heaven be a projection of a movie of the best memory one could have, is fantastic. In spite of having unexplained points, like for example the need itself of lasting with only one single memory, and inconsistencies, like why the need of shooting the memory, if the staff can bring videotapes of the entire life, what matters is the originality of this unique movie. One point that has always impressed me in cinema is the fact the actors and actresses last forever in the eyes of the audiences along generations. In this movie, each one of us has the chance to be an actor or actress, and write our own screenplay. Further, I personally recalled many good moments of my life just because of the storyline of this movie, and I found how difficult it could be to select only one good moment of my life to last forever. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "Depois da Vida" ("After Life")

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Much of the action in After Life is shown as interviews conducted with the recently deceased regarding their lives. Some of these interviews were scripted, but many were done impromptu, with real people (not actors) reminiscing about their own lives.
    • Quotes

      Kenji Yamamoto, who wants to forget his past: Say I choose a memory, from when I was eight or ten years old. Then I'll only remember how I felt back then? I'll be able to forget everything else? Really? You can forget? Well, then that really is heaven.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Notting Hill/Besieged/Trekkies/Tea with Mussolini/After Life (1999)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is After Life?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 17, 1999 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Wonderful Life
    • Production companies
      • Engine Film
      • Sputnik Productions
      • TV Man Union
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $801,985
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,791
      • May 16, 1999
    • Gross worldwide
      • $801,985
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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

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