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Vital

Original title: Vitâru
  • 2004
  • R
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3.6K
YOUR RATING
Tadanobu Asano, Kiki, and Nami Tsukamoto in Vital (2004)
DramaThriller

After a tragic car accident where his girlfriend Ryôko Ooyama (Nami Tsukamoto) died, Hiroshi Takagi (Tadanobu Asano) suffers amnesia with his memories completely blanked. When he sees a book... Read allAfter a tragic car accident where his girlfriend Ryôko Ooyama (Nami Tsukamoto) died, Hiroshi Takagi (Tadanobu Asano) suffers amnesia with his memories completely blanked. When he sees a book about dissection, he decides to join the medical school with the support of his parents. ... Read allAfter a tragic car accident where his girlfriend Ryôko Ooyama (Nami Tsukamoto) died, Hiroshi Takagi (Tadanobu Asano) suffers amnesia with his memories completely blanked. When he sees a book about dissection, he decides to join the medical school with the support of his parents. In the dissection class, his group participates of the autopsy of a young woman, and while... Read all

  • Director
    • Shin'ya Tsukamoto
  • Writer
    • Shin'ya Tsukamoto
  • Stars
    • Tadanobu Asano
    • Nami Tsukamoto
    • Kiki
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    3.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Shin'ya Tsukamoto
    • Writer
      • Shin'ya Tsukamoto
    • Stars
      • Tadanobu Asano
      • Nami Tsukamoto
      • Kiki
    • 24User reviews
    • 60Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 3 nominations total

    Photos2

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    View Poster

    Top cast67

    Edit
    Tadanobu Asano
    Tadanobu Asano
    • Hiroshi Takagi
    Nami Tsukamoto
    • Ryôko Ooyama
    Kiki
    • Ikumi
    Kazuyoshi Kushida
    • Hiroshi's father
    Lily
    • Hiroshi's mother
    Hana Kino
    • Mrs. Ooyama, Ryôko's mother
    Gô Rijû
    • Dr. Nakai
    Jun Kunimura
    Jun Kunimura
    • Mr. Ooyama, Ryôko's father
    Ittoku Kishibe
    • Dr. Kashiwabuchi
    Takashi Akiba
    Toshiki Ayata
    Kazuko Emura
    Asako Endô
    Kuniko Fukuda
    Takashi Furuya
    Masahiko Gunji
    Noboru Hara
    Tomoyuki Hashimoto
    • Director
      • Shin'ya Tsukamoto
    • Writer
      • Shin'ya Tsukamoto
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    6.73.5K
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    Featured reviews

    6therealmusashi

    Not quite there yet...

    I was mostly disappointed with this film. I'm a fan of Tsukamoto's other work, and while this film indicates his growth as a director, and has a strong cast, I felt it had issues with pacing, and a pretty dissatisfying ending.

    Asano Tadanobu, normally an engaging lead, seems to be coasting through this film, brooding, mainly. Of course, maybe that's how his character was written, but I found myself wondering when it would pick up in several places and unable to identify with him.

    Kunimura Jun is wonderfully powerful as Ryoko's father, and I wound up wishing he was more of a central character. I also felt Ittoku Kishibe, who can conjure a truly menacing screen presence, was rather wasted as Dr. Kashiwabuchi.

    There are some interesting philosophical questions raised, but they are never really addressed or explored fully. I guess I'm also getting tired of the "I don't know whether I'm dreaming or awake" cliché in many movies in this genre. Plus, it's a little ham-fisted to have a character just come out and say that.

    Vital contains a few interesting scenes involving a dance, and some of Tsukamoto's signature music video-style strangeness in a few places, but in summary, a slow, dark film with no real scares or thrills.
    7Supergrass

    not a date film

    as usual, tadanobu asano provides a subtly seizing performance as a medical student who returns to school from a car accident that killed his gf (an extremely attractive yet horrible dancer). the med student has lost some of his memory, but is searching for answers which arrives in the form of flashbacks. during an autopsy, he discovers that his cadaver is his former gf, and he mentally struggles to regain his composure during a surreal and trippy ride in his mind.

    unlike some of the director's earlier works, this film does not spazz out with an inordinate amount of guitar fuzz and headache inducing images (but there are still some bizarre images of smokestacks integrated with migraine inducing punk rock for a few fleeting moments). instead, the film focus on the medical student's more subtle descent into confusion and then enlightenment as he struggles to regain his memory and make peace with himself.

    in the midst of the med students flashbacks, another sexually bizarre med student (another extremely attractive woman) courts tadanobu.

    if you're squeamish and wouldn't watch HBO's "autopsy" program, then i would not suggest this movie to you.
    7claudio_carvalho

    Weird, Original and Fascinating

    After a tragic car accident where his girlfriend Ryôko Ooyama (Nami Tsukamoto) died, Hiroshi Takagi (Tadanobu Asano) suffers amnesia with his memories completely blanked. When he sees a book about dissection, he decides to join the medical school with the support of his parents. In the dissection class, his group participates of the autopsy of a young woman, and while cutting apart the tissue, he partially recalls his accident. Later, when he sees a tattoo in the arm of the corpse, he discloses that she was his girlfriend and becomes obsessed to go further in the examination of the body.

    This is the first work of director Shinya Tsukamoto that I have had the chance to watch, and I liked very much what I saw. This weird, original and fascinating story is disclosed in an adequate pace and supported by wonderful work of camera and lighting. The central lead cast trio, with Tadanobu Asano, Nami Tsukamoto and Kiki, together with the supportive cast, have also great performances. I intend to see this movie again in a near future, since I saw a DVD spoken in Japanese with English subtitles and therefore I may have missed details on the magnificent image. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "Not Available"
    8jzappa

    Unexpected Deep Feelings From Tsukamoto

    Vital contains a single scene of such true, deep, tearjerking, aching love that despite all of its sleepy subtleties, it is truly great cinema. This scene makes you cry and relate to it, and only one who's ever been in deep, heavy, painful love with someone can watch it and understand what I mean. It's such stirring drama in one shot lasting about 5 minutes between two people, and you want that scene to last forever. I haven't felt any kind of emotion like that from a movie in God knows how long.

    There isn't much else to say about this film. Somehow, Tsukamoto has made a film so powerful based on one scene that is more emotional and moving than any work I've seen in nearly a year from many much much less dry filmmakers.
    8mononoke1

    Brief review

    After the surrealness of the Tetsuo films and the blue filters and voyeurism of Snake of June, I was not sure where Tsukamoto would go with this film. I saw it as part of the London FIlm Festival and it was one of my favourite films.

    The story is of a Hiroshi (Asano Tadanobu) suffering from amnesia (as a result of a car crash in which his girlfriend dies) slowly regaining his memory through performing an autopsy on her. It raises questions on the nature of the self and how mutable it is.

    For example, Hiroshi was pressured in to becoming a medical student, but he rebelled and became a drifter. After the crash he loses his recent memory, but he is inexplicably drawn to study medicine. Is this the call of his nature or a way of healing? Once the trauma's of teenage years are stripped away and we return to the core of the self before social conditioning steps in, are we more innocent or closer to what we can become? All this may sound very deep, but this film is all about childhood/innocence and the self in my opinion.

    Pretty different from the other three films mentioned above, but still has lots of blue/grey filters and an extremely acute sense of sound. Some of the autopsy scenes have some wonderful slurping noises and tension that really set me on edge.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Soundtracks
      Blue Bird
      Written by Cocco

      Performed by Cocco

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    FAQ12

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 11, 2004 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • 死亡解剖
    • Production companies
      • Japanese Agency for Cultural Affairs
      • Kaijyu Theater
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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