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To Each His Own (2017 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

To Each His Own
Directed byIzuru Narushima
Produced byMorio Amagi
Starring
  • Sôta Fukushi
  • Shin'ya Hamada
  • Narushi Ikeda
Release date
  • 27 May 2017 (2017-05-27)
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

To Each His Own (Japanese: ちょっと今から仕事やめてくる, Hepburn: Chotto Imakara Shigoto Yametekuru) is a Japanese drama film, released in 2017. It was directed by Izuru Narushima with a screenplay by Emi Kitagawa, Izuru Narushima, Kumi Tawada, and Hiroyuki Ikeda. It is based on the novel by Emi Kitagawa "Chotto Ima Kara Shigoto Yamete Kuru" published in 2015, the novel was the Winner of the "Media Works Bunko Prize": 21st Dengeki Novel Prize.

Plot

A young Japanese salaryman, Takashi (Asuka Kodo) is suffering abuse and difficulty in a high pressured sales position. Eventually succumbing to the stress, he tries to end his own life by throwing himself on to the railway tracks.[1] At the last minute, he is saved by an old friend from school, Yamamoto. He befriends the man, who has a carefree, happy life, however as he grows to know him he realises all is not what it seems.[2] [3] Yamamoto ends up not being his old friend, through a case of mistaken identity. Takashi's work life gets worse, and he becomes distant from his parents as he takes his stress out on them. His only friend at work is Miki. He manages, though a change in attitude to get a major account, but the loses it because of a mistake in an order form that he is sure he didn't make. Finally he decides to quit his job, as he learns from Yamamoto there is more to life, and he reconciles with his parents. Miki apologises to him, and he learns she had sabotaged his efforts to get new major account, as she was under extreme pressure, and him getting it would have meant more work for her.

In the end he finds out that Yamamoto has befriended him because his twin brother was also a salaryman who had committed suicide. After leaving his job, he travels to Vanuatu where Yamamoto works on an orphanage.

Cast

References

  1. ^ "Review: To Each His Own – work and suicide in Japan reconsidered". South China Morning Post. 10 October 2017. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
  2. ^ Schilling, Mark (7 June 2017). "'To Each His Own': Every wage slave needs a friend like this, but who is he?". The Japan Times. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
  3. ^ To Each His Own/ Chotto imakara shigoto yametekuru, retrieved 13 September 2021
This page was last edited on 25 March 2024, at 17:47
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