
Drive My Car
Go on living.
Yusuke Kafuku, a stage actor and director, still unable, after two years, to cope with the loss of his beloved wife, accepts to direct Uncle Vanya at a theater festival in Hiroshima. There he meets Misaki, an introverted young woman, appointed to drive his car. In between rides, secrets from the past and heartfelt confessions will be unveiled.
- 7.4
- 2021
- Released
- 2h 59m

Hidetoshi Nishijima
Yūsuke Kafuku
Toko Miura
Misaki Watari
Masaki Okada
Kōshi Takatsuki
Reika Kirishima
Oto Kafuku
Park Yu-rim
Lee Yoo-na
Jin Dae-yeon
Gong Yoon-su
Sonia Yuan
Janice Chang
Ahn Hwi-tae
Ryu Jong-ui
Perry Dizon
Roy Rossello
Satoko Abe
Yuzuhara
Hiroko Matsuda
Yumi Etô
Toshiaki Inomata
Takashi Kimura
Takako Yamamura
Kaoru Komagata
Ryo Iwase

Kamal Zharif

Massimo Biondi

Shoichiro Tanigawa

Yoshinori Miyata

Keiko Nishi

Saki Suzuki















Released
ja
$1,300,000.00
$15,356,046.00
- #infidelity
- #japan
- #loss of loved one
- #theater play
- #theater director
- #road trip
- #hiroshima, japan
- #grief
- #rehearsal
- #audition
- #sensuality
- #old car
- #driver
- #artistic sex
- #based on short story
- #sign languages
- #reflective
- #slow cinema
- #bilingual
- #loss of child
Reviews
I find this film to be a near perfect drama. I understand that most Americans and perhaps younger viewers everywhere will not appreciate the pacing of the movie. There are two things about this movie that make it an actor's movie. First is the play within the play: the play within is Chekhov's Uncle Vanya, and, like most Russian classics, it's about the human condition and the response to suffe

"Kafuku" (Hidetoshi Nishijima) is an accomplished stage actor who is directing a performance of Chekhov's "Uncle Vanya" with a group of young actors. He arrives at the venue in his red Saab motor car, determined that only he will drive himself. That's not the policy of the theatre, though, and soon he is placed in the capable hands of the somewhat laconic "Misaki" (Tôko Miura) and as the two start











