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Asian cinema: Japanese films
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ReviewNetflix movie review: Love Like the Falling Petals – frustrating Japanese romance weepie offers lame exploration of life

  • Honoka Matsumoto plays a hairstylist who has a romance with a would-be photographer (Kento Nakajima) but walks out on him – she suffers from premature ageing
  • The film’s focus shifts to her brother and his fiancée, left to pay for her care, but the director doesn’t have much to say about Japan’s rapidly ageing society

2-MIN READ2-MIN
Kento Nakajima in a still from Love Like the Falling Petals.
James Marsh

2/5 stars

Muddled and frustrating almost from the outset, Yoshihiro Fukagawa’s achingly sentimental weepie Love Like the Falling Petals struggles to tell its story with coherent clarity.

It offers a lament for the fleeting nature of existence while simultaneously bemoaning the financial and emotional burden the elderly impose upon their families.

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Honoka Matsumoto plays a disarmingly youthful hairstylist who is stricken by a rare condition that causes her body to age rapidly, leaving her first love, played by Kento Nakajima, reeling.

Fukagawa resists the temptation to turn Keisuke Uyama’s novel into a Japanese version of M. Night Shyamalan’s Old, and instead presents a cautionary tale about the dangers of dragging one’s heels.
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