As for the title "100 Yen Love", don't let this title fool you, yes it sounds like a title for a cute romantic comedy film but it is nothing like that and you won't get that feeling here. Go watch it to know why the title is like that and see the transformation of main lead's character which will may inspire you.
The acting, what can I say Sakura Ando is indeed the greatest young japanese actress right today. I'm into contact sports myself and I can say that ando sakura put hard effort to look like a real boxer, her movements don't look fake unlike other sports dramas I've watched. Only a few actress can do or even think of doing roles ando sakura takes. Aside from Hirofumi Arai, I have not idea who the other actors are, but they act well especially her sister in the movie, watched out for that epic food fight.
WARNING!!!
it has both rape and nudity so stay away if you're a minor or a person who can't watch movies like this.
CONCLUSION
Go watch it because it was one of Sakura Ando's best performance and it was Japanese representative on the upcoming Oscars foreign movie category.
Check my Blog for other reviews & other JDramas stuffs. (。◕‿‿◕。)
https://thatjapanesedramaguy.blogspot.com/
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Breaking a Vicious cycle of Laziness
When you do nothing, nothing happens in life. you become Lazy and do nothing, its a vicious cycle.i remembered how this little movie left me inspired last time so i just rewatched it. it shows how sports can change a persons life. no it actually changes the person and life naturally changes around him or her. it was depicted beautifully here.
our FL is sluggish at the beginning and so is the movie. i never saw a FL portray such a character before. at mid point she picks up boxing and her energy levels increase and she becomes more lively and so does the movie. many ridiculous and unfortunate things happen to people in this movie and it was depicted as comedy on surface because they have nothing going on in life and have lost grip on life and themselves. at first female lead is like that too but when she finds something to do, she starts to focus and becomes a better person. By the end her Circumstance didnt change much but she has..... and the people around her starts to look at her differently and her broken relationships starts to improve....
Music complimented the mood of the FL through out the movie.
Beware there is one Sexual assault.
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This review may contain spoilers
I really wish I had watched this movie before seeing its Chinese adaptation, because this version carries so much more depth and cinematic power.Plot
100 Yen Love tells the story of Ichiko, a young woman who is unmotivated, unkempt, and stuck in a cycle of sleeping all day, playing video games, and buying her meals from a 100-yen store. She lives without direction, almost invisible in her own life. After a huge fight with her younger sister, Ichiko storms out of the house with all her belongings crammed into two large bags and is forced to start over.
To survive, she takes a part-time job at a 100-yen store, where she meets a strange regular customer everyone calls “Banana Man” because of the absurd amount of bananas he buys. After a series of painful and uncomfortable experiences—and after starting a relationship with him—Ichiko slowly begins to change. What starts as survival eventually turns into something unexpected: she finds her way into boxing, and with it, a path toward transformation.
Sakura Ando is one of those actresses you don’t come across often. After seeing her in Shoplifters, I knew I would always look for her name when choosing a movie. Shee is raw, unfiltered, and incredibly honest. As Ichiko, she gives us a journey to transformation that feels real, authentic and not just cinematic.
When Ichiko joins the boxing gym, nothing changes right away. Her head is still lowered, her shoulders slouched, and she looks completely out of place among the boxers. For a long time, there is no visible progress. And that’s exactly what makes this performance so powerful. The change doesn’t arrive through a dramatic montage but it arrives quietly. Only during her first real match do we finally see how much Ichiko has grown. Just because we don’t see obvious change doesn’t mean nothing is happening. I’d honestly say Ichiko’s transformation is one of the most powerful portrayals of a female character’s growth I’ve seen in cinema in a long time.
One of the reasons boxing becomes so important to Ichiko is respect. In boxing, opponents fight fiercely, but at the end of the match, they embrace. There is sportsmanship. When Ichiko sees this, she is clearly fascinated. For a woman who has been psychologically and sexually abused, discarded, and punished for not fitting social expectations, that final hug may represent something she has never truly had: acknowledgment. Respect. Being seen. In that sense, 100 Yen Love isn’t just about Ichiko’s journey toward self-respect but it becomes our own. And by the time the movie ends, you realize just how deep and quietly powerful this story truly is.
At the same time, the film is also brutally honest about the raw reality of being a woman in a closed, patriarchal society. At every stage of the movie, Ichiko is treated poorly, by her family, by society, and by men. When she experiences sexual assault, she doesn’t react dramatically; she simply moves on, almost as if she already knows nothing will be done. What makes this even heavier is that the world around her doesn’t even know what she has endured. We carry this knowledge with us throughout the entire movie a secret only we know about Ichiko and maybe that’s what makes her journey feel so personal and deeply sentimental.
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