Asako is a dreamy 17-year-old schoolgirl who is disillusioned with the mendacity of study and her impending exams. Gradually she retreats from school and the world around her and begins to hide out at home, unbeknownst to her divorced mother. Then, one day, in an effort to make a fresh start, she shifts all her personal belongings from her room to the garbage disposal area of her apartment building. There she meets Kazuyoshi, a preternaturally intelligent 10-year-old boy who politely asks if he may have her obsolete computer. Soon he makes Asako an offer she can't refuse - "why not join forces with me and work together?" Much to her surprise, she discovers that, tucked away from prying eyes in a closet in his bedroom, Kazuyoshi has been running an erotic internet chat business on behalf of a married siren named "Miyabi." At first, Asako proves as inexperienced at operating a computer as she is at dealing with the lascivious advances of the opposite sex, but her curiosity propels her ever onward into an exhilarating adult world that she never knew existed. The strange new sensations Asako experiences open her to a realm of unforeseen possibilities, but just how far is she willing to go? Edit Translation
- English
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- dansk
- Norsk
- Native Title: インストール
- Also Known As: 竞赛迪纳员
- Screenwriter: Omori Mika
- Genres: Youth, Drama
Cast & Credits
- Ueto Aya Main Role
- Kamiki Ryunosuke Main Role
- Kikukawa ReiMomoko-senseiSupport Role
- Tanaka YoshikoNozawa MarieSupport Role
- Morishita Yoshiyuki[Computer user]Support Role
- Hashimoto TenkaNozawa Asako [Young]Support Role
Reviews
Scripted by prodigious TV screenwriter Mika Omori, Install is an adaptation from the novel of the same name by Risa Wataya, which earned its author the distinction of being the youngest ever recipient of the Bungei Prize for literature at the age of 17. Featuring frankly sexual discussions between its youthful protagonists, though never prurient or explicit, its unaffectedly innocent approach to the subject, as with Shin Togashi’s Gomen (2002), would probably raise more than a few eyebrows from overseas viewers.
Seventeen-year-old high school girl Asako (Ueto from Ryuhei Kitamura’s Azumi), feeling her individuality being crushed by the dull daily grind of her studies, takes to skipping class, sealing herself in her bedroom after her mother goes to work and lying spread-eagled on the floor staring at the ceiling. An attempt to rid herself of all material possessions brings her into contact with Kazuyoshi (Kamiki), a sexually precocious 10-year-old living in the same building as her. Kazuyoshi takes charge of Asako’s computer, and starts lurking around sex chatrooms where he meets a young bored housewife Miyabi who works in fuzoku hostess clubs while her husband is at work. With Asako at a loose end, Kazuyoshi drafts her in to help him set up paid dates for Miyabi, leaving her hidden in his closet sitting in front of the screen and talking dirty to anonymous strangers while he attends elementary school. Internet sex-talk indeed proves a lucrative business for all parties concerned, but in the world of the internet no one is really who they seem, and with neither of them having ever "done it", Asako soon finds herself needing more than just a vivid imagination to maintain the pretence.
With its gracefully gliding cameras and bright vibrant colours, the story cracks off at a bouncy energetic pace within a squeaky clean format honed to perfection by TV director Kataoka, making his feature debut. Though pitched at the teen market, Install rises above the level of a diverting curiosity and turns out to be a pretty fun ride that doesn’t outstay its welcome, and has some interesting things to say about role-playing and the socialisation / sexualisation of youngsters in the early years of the twenty-first century.
the story unravels slowly but the actors are so good that you still would watch what will happen next.