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blanqua

in my head

blanqua

in my head
Rent a Friend japanese drama review
Completed
Rent a Friend
5 people found this review helpful
by blanqua
May 1, 2020
Completed
Overall 7.5
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 8.5
Rewatch Value 7.0
Rent a friend is actually the director’s first feature film which is impressive but the movie wasn’t anything extraordinary.

The characters were actually very likeable and real. I liked this realistic approach: no one is just black or white. Despite this, I would’ve loved to be able to get to know the characters more. Sometimes I felt like, especially with the male lead, that we didn’t know him that well.
The acting was so so good though! I loved all the characters because the actors portrayed them so well. Tokunaga Eri really makes Nasa a great female lead.

The plot itself is actually kinda slow, it’s more of a light watch. The second part of the movie was definitely more fast paced and the ending honestly left me confused. It had a semi-open ending so I think it’s up to the viewers to interpret it the way they want it to.

Rent a friend is supposed to be the story that questions whether a man and a woman can really be just friends? Some people wouldn’t actually really bother to ask this question, because “yes” seems so obvious. However I think this is a really thoughtful idea especially for the Asian public. I was surprised to know that in Japan or east asian countries people generally think that the opposite gender won’t meet with the idea of just friendship.

It’s ironic how the movie is taking up this theme but the leads still have romance between them. Actually more than this, it’s also about seeing one’s real self.. “I see the real you” is what Nasa is conveying in the story; she sees Sota as a person not just a rental friend or a experiment like her boss does.

Finally what I absolutely loved about the movie was the atmosphere. The cinematography had old-school and vintage vibes that bring out the rawness of the movie and put the focus on the characters emotions.

Overall, Rent A Friend’s strong point isn’t the extraordinaty storyline but its realness, simplicity, the meaning that it carries and the unique feeling that it has that makes us love jmovies.
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