Mitsuko Delivers (2011) Poster

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7/10
An offbeat & agreeable enough Japanese comedic drama.
cremea9 January 2013
Mitsuko Delivers is a story about the life of a young & single woman who's very pregnant. It's a slowly unfolding, and slightly quirky, Japanese tale that stars Naka Riisa in the lead role as the titular title character who's about to deliver her baby.

SPOILERS AHEAD!

Mitsuko is also broke with nowhere to live, and she doesn't have much to rely or fall back on, other than her indomitable spirit. Despite her current predicament, she's determined to have her child and live her life on her own terms. She declines to tell her parents she's pregnant, or that she's even living in Tokyo, instead of half way across the world where they think she resides. Mitsuko's also a bit of an ass and a tad abrasive, but not so much so that's she really unlikable. She also has a habit of barging in wherever she sees fit, and seems perfectly willing to base her life decisions on "which way the wind & clouds are blowing at any given moment". Her actions throughout would not be recommend to anyone in real life, but this is a movie, and, it all seems to work for her well enough.

Fortunately, Mitsuko also has a strange magnetic quality to her, and she's basically a kind & decent person who wants to help those around her. With nowhere to go, she abruptly shows up at the old housing projects where she once briefly lived as a child. While there, she reunites with the elderly landlord of the aging tenement, along with a few of the other people she previously knew there that made an impression on her long ago.

Along the way, she reconnects with everyone from the past, and begins new connections with those new people who filter in along the way. Ultimately, she helps all these parties overcome their various issues over time, while she continues to go about her life. Mitsuko never asks for any help from any of these people, but they all eventually come to realize they should be helping this woman asap in exchange for all she has done for them. And, if the stars (and winds & clouds) can align, perhaps she can find some peace (and perhaps some love).

This a typical slow paced Japanese slice of life movie. Not a whole lot "happens" in these types of films, and, rarely are they completely wrapped up with "a big bow on top" at their conclusion. So, if you're expecting a lot of "big" moments to occur throughout, or some clear finality to every story arc, you're watching the wrong movie. These are unhurried character studies where you simply observe a period or moment in the life of an individual & the persons around them. However, these types of movies often have at least one or more significantly wacky events or meaningful scenes that jump out at you once you're no longer expecting as much.

This movie is very similar in feel and structure to Sawako Decides (also helmed by the same writer/director a year earlier). If you liked that film, you'll probably enjoy this one too. However, I feel Sawako Decides is the better & more approachable of the two, if you only have time to watch one of them.

Naka Riisa is rock solid throughout as the main protagonist. Many of the side characters/roles are suitably acceptable as well. The old crippled tenement landlord almost steals the show with her performance though. Overall, all primary actors/actresses got the job done well enough.

I did like this movie for the most part, and the ending was particularly enjoyable (to me anyway). The inevitable madcap buildup to the climax of many of the plot lines is amusing in many ways. And, with a child on the way, and various stories still somewhat in a state of flux, it does ultimately leave you with its intended impression that life will & does inevitably go on (no matter what).

Some people will like this method of film making, and some won't; the pacing and style of these types of films are not going to be to everyone's tastes. Nevertheless, I feel Mitsuko Delivers is decently recommended (if you're agreeable to this approach to storytelling). It does require patience though.

Bottom Line: 6.5-ish out of 10 stars or so. I'll give it a 7.
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7/10
Delightful Film from Japan
alisonc-123 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Young Mitsuko (Riisa Naka) is 9 months pregnant, alone and broke. Her parents think she's happily living in California, but really she's in Tokyo, where she spends her days following clouds and hearing sad stories, as everybody is struggling in the poor economy. One day she leaves her small apartment and returns to the forgotten tenements where she had lived for a time as a small child; the landlady is still there, bedridden and waiting for death, so Mitsuko moves in with her. Also still there are Jiro (Ryo Ishibashi), owner of a small struggling restaurant, and his nephew Yoichi (Aoi Nakamura), who loved Mitsuko as a child and who has waited 15 years for her to return. Everybody's life is on a downhill slide, but Mitsuko refuses to allow people to just fade away and instead she insists that they do something, anything to better their lives. And of course, in turn they all come to depend on her and to want to help her with her own struggles in life....

This description suggests that Mitsuko is a sweet young woman who brings joy to everybody she meets, and while indeed she does bring joy, she does so by being horrifically bad-tempered, frowning and shouting at people all the time. Somehow, this tough kid has a positive effect on people, perhaps because of her quirky ways of looking at life. For example, when presented with a problem, she insists that the first thing to do is to take a nap, and wait for the wind to change; once the wind changes, one should just "go with it." Riisa Naka is excellent in the title role, and the rest of the cast members are equally endearing and charismatic. When all the main characters end up in post-nuclear Fukushima, unrequited loves are finally sorted out and the world moves on, as it always does. Gently whimsical in tone, this film still delivers a great sense of humanity and connectedness, reminding us that when times are hard, we all need each other to get through.
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10/10
Sensation in this world of individualism
tonor-1039124 January 2016
At first sight, what a quick break in a motion film! There's a pregnant woman letting out shortly by herself like a poet, but leaves its remains to those of others, and so-called to this world with echoes.

I couldn't sleep while watching this like other films when fatigued with daily lives. Cause there's actually something to rethink & rewind my ordinary expectations as it was.

What is those? I asked myself and made me write this review for me and others not yet experienced like me. She, Mitsuko is somewhat far away from the etiquette built by our system to maintain it in peace. Nevertheless, she doesn't throw a stone onto the system, only talks herself and replies with compassion to the encounters and neighbors in her world.

Our lives aren't often 'those', in which maybe you and I want to be painted with our touch and colors. If so, watch this film for you to realize yours by her language, gesture, and co-existence with neighbors for the time being
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