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My Name Is Yours

君が世界のはじまり ‧ Movie ‧ 2020
My Name Is Yours poster
6.5
Your Rating: 0/10
Ratings: 6.5/10 from 39 users
# of Watchers: 300
Reviews: 1 user
Ranked #60899
Popularity #19536
Watchers 39

In a small town on the outskirts of Osaka, a high school student murders his father. A few weeks before that incident, in this town filled with boredom, a group of high school students were struggling with their own sense of emptiness, unsure of who they were or who they wanted to become. En skips class to spend time with her childhood friend, Kotoko. Kotoko, who frequently changes boyfriends, falls in love at first sight with Narihira, whom she sees crying alone in a corner of the auditorium. Okada, who secretly admires Kotoko, goes unnoticed by her. Jun, whose mother has left home, tries to numb his pain through a fleeting relationship with Io, a transfer student from Tokyo. And then, on a night when each of them is being crushed by their own loneliness, the incident happens. (Source: Japanese = kimiseka-movie.jp || Translation = kisskh) Edit Translation

  • English
  • magyar / magyar nyelv
  • dansk
  • Norsk
  • Country: Japan
  • Type: Movie
  • Release Date: Jul 31, 2020
  • Duration: 2 hr. 35 min.
  • Score: 6.5 (scored by 39 users)
  • Ranked: #60899
  • Popularity: #19536
  • Content Rating: G - All Ages

Cast & Credits

Photos

My Name Is Yours Japanese Movie photo
My Name Is Yours Japanese Movie photo
My Name Is Yours Japanese Movie photo
My Name Is Yours Japanese Movie photo
My Name Is Yours Japanese Movie photo
My Name Is Yours Japanese Movie photo

Reviews

Completed
strawberryeuphoria
0 people found this review helpful
Feb 28, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 5.0
Story 5.0
Acting/Cast 5.0
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 4.5
This review may contain spoilers

Chaos, Youth, and the Illusion of Depth

At first, My Name Is Yours opens like a dark thriller. The first few minutes set you up to expect something psychological, maybe even disturbing, a deep dive into trauma, violence, and consequence. But the movie quickly shifts direction. It’s not a thriller at all. It’s more of a coming-of-age story disguised as something darker.

Plot**
The story follows six high school students living in a small, sleepy town on the outskirts of Osaka. Each of them is quietly wrestling with loneliness, identity, and the fear of becoming nothing.
There’s Yukari, known as En, who seems to have the “perfect” life, good grades, stable image and yet hides her own secret struggles. Kotoko, her childhood friend, who skips class often, changes boyfriends constantly, and suddenly falls in love with Narihira. Narihira, however, has feelings for En.
Jun, who is angry at her father after her mother leaves home, and begins a relationship with Io. Io, a transfer student from Tokyo, moved to Osaka after his father remarried, and he’s secretly involved in a forbidden relationship with his stepmother while also seeing Jun. Then there’s Okada, admired by many girls at school, yet he only has eyes for Kotoko.
Their boring and quiet lives take a turn when a middle-aged man is murdered in a residential neighbourhood by a high school student. This shocking event hovers over them, not as a mystery to solve, but as a mirror forcing them to confront their own suppressed emotions.


The movie is based on two short stories by Momoko Fukuda: En and The Night We Listened to The Blue Hearts, Kissed, and Said Goodbye. Maybe the books offer more depth and clarity, but in film form, it felt like too many scattered pieces that never fully connected.
I went into this movie expecting it to centre on the murder, maybe a psychological exploration of who did it and why, digging into the trauma behind such an act. Instead, it becomes a portrait of six teenagers dealing with their own “problems”, loneliness, jealousy, heartbreak only to slowly realise that their lives aren’t as tragic as they imagine.

At times, the movie felt chaotic. There was a lot of information, but it didn’t always flow smoothly. The stories overlapped in ways that felt more confusing than intentional. Instead of building toward something powerful, it sometimes felt like watching six teenagers complain about their lives.

And yet… I can see what it was trying to do.

It tries to capture the fleeting, restless energy of youth, that fragile stage between adolescence and adulthood where everything feels dramatic, urgent, and unbearable. The murder becomes symbolic. It’s less about the crime itself and more about the shock that makes them realise how thin the line is between boredom and destruction. For a moment, they’re forced to confront the fact that their frustrations, if left unchecked, could spiral into something irreversible.

The final scenes, singing, shouting, and almost chanting together, feel like a rebellious celebration of youth. A desperate attempt to hold onto that chaos before adulthood arrives with real, heavier consequences.
Still, the execution didn’t fully land for me. The cinematography had it's moments, but most times it felt like a low-budget indie trying too hard to be profound. It wasn’t horrible, but it wasn’t revolutionary either. It felt more confusing than transformative.

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Details

  • Title: My Name Is Yours
  • Type: Movie
  • Format: Feature Film
  • Country: Japan
  • Release Date: Jul 31, 2020
  • Duration: 2 hr. 35 min.
  • Content Rating: G - All Ages

Statistics

  • Score: 6.5 (scored by 39 users)
  • Ranked: #60899
  • Popularity: #19536
  • Watchers: 300

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