Rental Family review – Brendan Fraser shines in this culture-clash heartwarmer
Movies

Rental Family review – Brendan Fraser shines in this culture-clash heartwarmer


Since playing atoothpaste superhero in an advertisement, down-on-his-luck actor Phillip Vanderploeg (Brendan Fraser) has been living in Tokyo for several years and further opportunities have been thin on the ground. Accepting aday-long gig as Sad American” at afuneral, where the dedicatee turns out to be alive in the coffin, he enters awhole world of for-hire make-believe for everyday people.

Echoing asimilar dynamic seen in Lulu Wang’s The Farewell, our American protagonist is thrown by the idea of lying to and for real people. Phillip initially refuses an invitation by the Rental Family company, but after afake wedding he starts to see how these elaborate deceptions can be atool for good: Sometimes all we need is someone to look us in the eye and remind us we exist,” his co-worker Aiko (Mari Yamamoto) explains. But aserious test comes along, the role of alifetime – to be afather to alittle girl.

Get more Little WhiteLies

With ashiny and bright vision of Tokyo, the director Hikari smooths over any moral qualms through endearing montages of happy customers and fun costumes, exploring this thorny topic within asafe and comfortable sandbox. Fraser plays abumbling, affable outsider, eager to please and predictably getting too emotionally involved in the lives of his clients, making promises he cannot keep. The story centres on Mia (Shannon Mahina Gorman), whose mother wants Phillip to pretend to be her father so that they can pass aprivate-school parents interview. Mia is aboisterous, opinionated and creative child, and Phillip gets ahealing insight into fatherhood when it transpires that his own father wasn’t present in hislife.

There is an evolution within the score, by Alex Somers and Jónsi, which goes from quite abubbly use of bells akin to Disney’s Inside Out down to pared-back piano as the story goes beyond the superficial and gets deeper. But while directors like Hirokazu Kore-eda could have gone more off the rails and psychologically untangled this web of ethics, apromisingly challenging concept is kept on the track of story beats you can see coming amile away.

One sub-plot involves Aiko playing mistresses that apologise for affairs, which does more accurately identify and vilify aflaw in the system but, for example, Phillip’s casual use of afriendly sex worker for company goes unscrutinised, as does his boss Shinji’s own use of the Rental Family service. In only covering ashort period of time, there’s aperhaps unearned sense of resolution, when these journeys towards self-discovery and social fulfilment take much more work than these plasters.

An American impulse for neat endings and recognisable stories gets in the way, but Rental Family is still beautifully written and gives little windows into Japanese life, from aMonster Cat festival to arural diversion with breathtaking scenery, with Fraser’s endearing everyman as an emotional linchpin that viewers willlove.

View Original Article Here

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Beef Season 2 Can Preserve The Spirit of Season 1 — Heres How
The MCUs Biggest Box Office Failure Gets Surprising Reaction From Director 2 Years Later
Band of Horses Announce Everything All the Time 20th Anniversary Tour and Reissue
Pathologic 3 Out Now on PC, PlayStation 5; Xbox Series Version Coming January 23 [Trailer]
Theres a New Heated Rivalry Book Coming Out This Year