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Gaijin: Ama-me Como Sou

  • 2005
  • 2h 11m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
92
YOUR RATING
Gaijin: Ama-me Como Sou (2005)
DramaRomance

In 1908, Titoe leaves her country, Japan, to try her luck in Brazil. Her intention is just to get rich and return in five years. But life has other plans for her.In 1908, Titoe leaves her country, Japan, to try her luck in Brazil. Her intention is just to get rich and return in five years. But life has other plans for her.In 1908, Titoe leaves her country, Japan, to try her luck in Brazil. Her intention is just to get rich and return in five years. But life has other plans for her.

  • Director
    • Tizuka Yamasaki
  • Writer
    • Tizuka Yamasaki
  • Stars
    • Tamlyn Tomita
    • Jorge Perugorría
    • Aya Ono
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    92
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tizuka Yamasaki
    • Writer
      • Tizuka Yamasaki
    • Stars
      • Tamlyn Tomita
      • Jorge Perugorría
      • Aya Ono
    • 3User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 7 nominations total

    Photos

    Top cast51

    Edit
    Tamlyn Tomita
    Tamlyn Tomita
    • Maria Yamashita Salinas
    Jorge Perugorría
    Jorge Perugorría
    • Gabriel Salinas
    Aya Ono
    • Titoe (old)
    Louise Cardoso
    Louise Cardoso
    • Sofia Salinas
    Zezé Polessa
    Zezé Polessa
    • Gina Salinas
    Luís Melo
    Luís Melo
    • Ramon Salinas
    Mariana Ximenes
    Mariana Ximenes
    • Weronika Muller
    Eijiro Ozaki
    Eijiro Ozaki
    • Kunihiro
    Kassia Lumi Abe
    • Young Shinobu
    Ilya Akiyoshi
    Ilya Akiyoshi
    • Young Pedro
    Aparecido
    • Xetá
    Apollo
    • Priest
    Isadora Barion
    • Gina Salinas (child)
    Paulo Castro
    • Guará
    Lissa Diniz
    • Yoko Salinas
    Pedro Diniz
    • Young Pedro
    Pedro Diniz
    • Pedro (Child)
    Thaís do Carmo
    • Blonde girl
    • Director
      • Tizuka Yamasaki
    • Writer
      • Tizuka Yamasaki
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews3

    6.692
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    Featured reviews

    10BevS-2

    Stranger in a Strange Land

    This is one of the most beautifully filmed movies I have seen. We learn a lot about coffee plantations in Brasil and how Brasil came to have the largest population of Japanese outside of Japan (more than even the U.S.).

    The actors in this movie speak the language of whatever country they represent, so it is filmed in Japanese, Portuguese, Italian and English and the SUBTITLES are critical to the plot. Anyone who watches this movie dubbed will miss the whole point of it at the end.

    I cannot recommend this movie too highly. It is one of the best foreign films I've seen.
    9GMeleJr

    Saga of descendants of Japanese immigrants to Brazil

    This, the second Brazilian "Gaijin" film, now appears 25 years after the first drama. It shares a lot of common ground with the earlier film, including the same director, and a couple of the same characters; one Nipo-Brazilian is played by the same actor as in the 1980 Film. It's also another saga about the descendants of Japanese immigrants to Brazil, who now face the same difficulties as all Brazilians, the difficulties resulting from the country's history.

    Within Brazil's history, the Japanese immigration is among the most remarkable, and unusual highlights; amazing not only as the sole massive Japanese immigration movement, but emerging as Brazil's most successful group of immigrants, all the more surprising for being the most unlikely of any other immigrant or ethnic group, originally having absolutely no tie whatsoever to any other group, and thus facing the worse hardships of any group since the African slaves.

    This new film recently won top prizes, including best film, director, and supporting actress, at Brazil's most traditional and prestigious film "event": the Gramado Festival. The critics in Brazil have nevertheless not been nearly as kind, and have pretty much denounced the film, mostly for its plot holes. The public here has been less than receptive. The film lasted only two weeks at Sao Paulo's most prestigious and popular "arteplex" which is also located in the heart of the city and close to old and new Braz-Japanese neighborhoods.

    In its third week of commercial exhibition, the film is now playing at a second run cinema, where I just saw it, though it is still playing at a few shopping centers. I can't help but think if this film doesn't make it here, where would it make it? I saw it nevertheless, and was pleasantly surprised. It is a bit too long, and the plot is indeed full of holes, but overall it's worth seeing. Particularly for the excellent mixed cast, including the Cuban Jorge Perugorria and the American Tamlyn Tomita in two of the main roles, blending into a mix of some of the most famous veteran Brazilian actors, and local teenage heartthrobs now, like Dado Dolabella, and Mariana Ximenes - two current huge soap opera idols.

    If that says nothing to you (and it won't to most of the world), maybe the unusual and true Japanese-Brazilian story line, and the plot will. This is what happens during 131 minutes in a nut shell. In 1908, Titoe, a Japanese woman comes to Brazil intent on making some money here, then eventually return to Japan. But in 1935, with her Brazil born daughter Shinobu, and with insufficient means to return to Japan, Titoe decides to buy her first plot of land in Londrina, an agricultural area (now a big city) where many Japanese were put to work in Brazil.

    The 2nd World War and its consequences put Titoe's plans to return "home" on endless hold. Titoe not only bore her daughter Shinobu in this new land, but Shinobu has given her mother more reasons to postpone her dream - two grandchildren: Kazumi and Maria, Both are second generation Brazilians, confirming the definition of "home" as arguable at best.

    The East-West conflicts of course predominate. But they are somewhat different from the usual clichés. The back-lands of Brazil in the mid 20th Century are NOT the "West" portrayed in similarly themed films. Herein lie many differences, and the main reason why you will probably either become involved in this film's story, or terribly bored.
    YNOT_at_the_Movies

    An unforgettable story

    I didn't see the first Brazilian film "Gaijin, a Brazilian Odyssey," nor did I know what Gaijin means before I went to this screening. I was pleasantly surprised by this Brazilian sequel "Gaijin 2: Love Me As I Am" (Gaijin - Ama-me Como Sou).

    "Gaijin" means foreigners in Japanese. "Gaijin 2: Love Me As I Am" tells an unforgettable story about Japanese immigrants in Brazil, covering several decades and four generations.

    In 1908, Titoe came to Brazil from Japan, but she never thought that she would not return to Japan until she already has her great grand children. Over the years, they struggled to survive the war and the environment, to gain acceptance, to hold on to the community and Japanese heritage, to cope with the culture clash, and to overcome the prejudice toward "Gaijin." By the third generation, Titoe 's granddaughter Maria crossed the racial line and married to a Brazilian man Gabriel. The landscape begins to change because now Gabriel becomes the one who is trying to gain acceptance by the Japanese family and becomes a "gaijin." What makes this film's theme is so universal is that the story is not just about Japanese immigrants in Brazil, every ethnic group of immigrants can relate to those character's experiences with their own journey in a foreign land. I really enjoy Titoe's character and the performance of that 83 years old actress who is incredibly funny and moving.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This is the final film of actress Nobu McCarthy who died of an aneurysm at age 67 while making this film in Brazil.
    • Connections
      Follows Gaijin, les chemins de la liberté (1980)
    • Soundtracks
      Ama-me como sou
      Written by Pablo Milanés

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 2, 2005 (Brazil)
    • Country of origin
      • Brazil
    • Language
      • Portuguese
    • Also known as
      • Gaijin - Ama-me Como Sou
    • Production companies
      • Ponto Filmes
      • Scena Filmes
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $184,676
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 11 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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