With a running time of two hours and fifty-two minutes (it feels even longer!), you are in for a long haul.
It concerns a theatre director and his television screenplay writer wife. It transpires that she can only get inspiration for her writing during orgasm, so she has a lot of sex with multiple partners. One of her ideas for a drama is about a schoolgirl stalker who sneaks into a schoolboy's bedroom and masturbates on his bed and then leaves a tampon as a token of her having been there. This is wrong on so many levels... Oh, and in a previous life she was a lamprey. Just your regular TV drama...
The wife dies suddenly about one hour into the film, and oddly the cast credits appear at length. After the credits roll, the husband takes on a job of directing Chekov's Uncle Vanya. He has to accept a young woman driver provided by the theatre company. He uses the hour long commute in his car to recite Vanya's lines and listen to the play (seemingly endlessly) on cassette. We sit in on auditions and multiple long repetitive rehearsals of the play.
None of it is moving or engages the emotions; it is massively verbose, slow, long and ponderous, and full of self- importance.
FILM & REVIEW Had this on my watch pile for a while as it’s a slow burning character study…and 179 minutes long….and yes it is both but it’s also utterly hypnotic. In the pre- title sequence ( that’s the pre-title sequence that lasts 40 minutes) we meet Yusuki (Nishajimma) an actor and theatre director specialising in Beckett and Chekhov. He is married to Oto ( Krishima) a screen writer who tells him her ideas for stories during sex and gets him to re-tell them the next morning. She introduces him to Koji ( Okada)a handsome arrogant young actor that Yusiki discovers having sex with Oto but he leaves without them realising and nothing is said. Time passes and Oto tells him they need to talk but he delays coming home to find her dead from an anurysm. He is stricken with grief and retires from the stage. After the title sequence it’s 2 years later and he is directing Checkov’s Uncle Vanya is a small town outside Hiroshima . It’s a language blind version in that not all the actors speak Japanese - in fact one is mute and uses Korean sign language but they manage. One of the actors is Koji whose out of control behaviour has got him fired but Yusikzi hires him in the title role even though he is several decades too young. Yusiki is also assigned a young female driver Misaki (Muira) for his beloved Saab Turbo - he refuses but is told it’s part of the insurance. She is taciturn af first but over time the two form a bond as they have both lost someone and blame themselves for their inaction…. As I say it’s a real slow burner but each character fills an important role with some really touching scenes - one is when it’s discovered that the mute Korean actress is a actuality the wife of the theatre manager who didn’t want to prejudice her casting. Although it seems to be heading in a romantic direction it’s revealed that Yusiki and his wife lost a child and Misaki is the age the child would have been so it’s a much a surrogate Father /Daughter relationship with a real emotional pay-off. It looks beautiful with all the night driving with the lights gleaming off the red Saab and whilst not for everyone it’s well a watch as there is much to reward. It’s the kind of film where once all the kit is packed away you can imagine the characters just quietly getting on with their lives - quite remarkable - 5/5
In many ways it's a beautiful film, but it meanders so slowly that meaning is lost - actually it never arrived with us.
The central character of Kafuku finds his wife dead some time after discovering her in bed with another man. He never confronted her and this causes long suffering regrets throughout the film.
Halfway through the film the credits roll and the viewer realises nothing's been developed or dealt with.
It seems like it's the dead end of a dreary film.
Then...the film carries on with the second part set some years later where Kafuku is hired to direct a performance of Uncle Vanya, with his wife's lover as the eponymous character. Rehearsals are focussed on for some time, and the characters interact with each other, but it's all a bit baffling with no clear direction or plot.
Kafuku builds a small relationship as he bonds with the driver he has been allotted, but then the film ends.
I must admit to checking out the insides of my eyelids for a few moments in this film during the really slow scenes, but my wife stayed awake in these parts and we shared notes afterwards to no avail.
There are so many ways to find creativity in this world and communicate with it. These are two fascinating aspects of life that Drive My Car focuses on for its tale of drama and tragedy. It’s a masterful work of contemplation and sorrow, finding comforting pockets of catharsis while having a profound reflection on how art shapes life. This doesn’t feel completely unexpected from a director such as Ryusuke Hamaguchi, but it’s still a welcoming film from such an artist.
The elongated prologue of the picture tells the tale of Yusuke Kafuku, an actor and stage director. He finds the best way to prepare for a role in an upcoming stage production is to read lines while driving his car. His wife, Oto, records herself reading the lines and pauses just long enough for him to read his lines back. Oto is a screenwriter and also has her own means of conceiving stories. She finds that sex immediately generates story ideas within her. However, her sexual musings extend to other men, making sex more of a tool for creativity than an act of love. Considering that Yusuke’s relationship already felt strained with the death of his daughter, the love feels to be quietly leaving.
Things go from bad to worse when Yusuke finds out he is having eye issues and may not be able to drive anymore. Even worse, Yusuke comes home to find Oto dead. And all of this occurs before the opening credits roll.
Years later, Yusuke finds himself once more engage with stage production, this time directing the tale of Uncle Vanya instead of acting in it as the lead. He aims to put on a show in the languages of Japanese, Korean, and sign language for a multi-lingual show. The problem is that the producers would prefer if Yusuke did not drive his car. This puts a damper on his plans as he specifically requested living quarters for this show to be a few hours away so that he could run line with his tape of Oto. Instead, he has to rely on his driver Misaki to bring him to and from the production studio. Although Misaki doesn’t mind Yusuke running lines, both find themselves intrigued by each other, despite how professional they prefer to keep their relationship.
Yusuke’s production of Uncle Vanya ultimately becomes a meta-commentary for his own life. He needs to be more open about his past and also is discomfort with others. It’s what ultimately leads to him making the uncomfortable decision to once again play Uncle Vanya when the lead actor turns out to be a recluse on the wrong side of the law. It’s an intriguing aspect that takes aim at how the text of a play can be meaningless if we don’t take in what it says about our world. It’s why for all the line reading and meticulous attention to detail, there’s still something more to learn from it beyond getting the lines accurate or the delivery just right. There’s more than technicalities to life and it’s something that you’re never too old to grasp.
The acting here is top-notch. Hidetoshi Nishijima delivers such a nuanced performance of a reserved and quietly bitter person, unsure how to handle uncertain situations or attempt to approach his past beyond mere acknowledgments. Toko Miura gives an equally amazing performance for also harboring a tragic backstory that slowly reveals itself. She keeps her distance but lets her honesty flow when asked, making her just the dose of reality Yusuke requires to continue onward.
Even at three hours, Drive My Car is far from boring. There are many elongated scenes but I hung on every word considering what we learn about these characters. One of the longest sequences I can recall is when Yusuke is cornered by one of his actors on the car ride home. They speak for a long time but with a revelation about the past that reshapes everything he thought he knew about his wife and his ability to act and direct. There are so many profound scenes such as this that every minute of the picture is worth the trip.