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Kamikaze Girls, 2004

Kamikaze Girls

Japanese

Japan

Rating:7.3
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Profile of Kamikaze Girls

Kamikaze Girls can be described as offbeat, humorous, and feel good. The plot revolves around coming of age, teenage life, and friendship. Its comic aspect comes from irreverent humor. Kamikaze Girls's main genres are foreign, comedy, and adventure. In terms of style, it is surreal and has a road movie structure. It is set, at least in part, in a store. Kamikaze Girls is located in France. It is based on a book.

Summary of Kamikaze Girls

Based on the hit Japanese novel SHIMOTSUMA STORY by Novala Takemoto, KAMIKAZE GIRLS is a charming, unique, and very funny film. Pop star Kyoko Fukada stars as Momoko, a 17-year-old girl so obsessed with everything rococo that she wears old-fashioned frilly white clothing and carries a parasol. After her mother (Ryoko Shinohara) leaves and her would-be yakuza father (Hiroyuki Miyasako) gets kicked out of the big city for selling the wrong kind of designer knock-offs, Momoko and her dad move to the country, living with Momoko's somewhat offbeat grandmother (Kirin Kiki). Desperate for money, Momoko starts selling the remainder of her father's counterfeit clothing, but her only customer is a tough-talking young biker chick, Ichigo (Anna Tsuchiya), who belongs to an all-girl gang. Against all probability, the two very different teenagers become best friends, even though neither will admit it. And when Ichigo faces serious danger, Momoko must decide whether she can save the day. Writer-director Tetsuya Nakashima infuses the delightful KAMIKAZE GIRLS with fast-paced scenes, goofy flashbacks, playful sets, bright colors, and an endearing and infectious sense of fun in every shot.

Details

Language: Japanese
Country: Japan
Release date: 18 June 2005
Runtime: 102 min

Cast and Crew

Anna Tsuchiya

as Ichigo Shirayuri

Hiroyuki Miyasako

as Momoko's Father

Photos

Kamikaze Girls (2004)
Kamikaze Girls (2004)

Critics Reviews

Los Angeles Times
A glorious blend of kitsch, grit, humor and uplift.
The New York Times
The yummy Japanese confection Kamikaze Girls deserves both a better title and an audience to go with it.

Users Reviews

Kyoko Fukada as fashion-obsessed Momoko isn't enough to salvage this farce. Abundant narration ensures little time is "wasted" on anything that Momoko hasn't already developed facile explanations for. There's a "sideways" mode to fill...
Likely to see
Not for me

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