Love Hotel (1985 film)

1985 Japanese film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Love Hotel (ラブホテル) is a 1985 Japanese pink film in Nikkatsu's Roman porno series, directed by Shinji Sōmai and starring Noriko Hayami.[1]

Directed byShinji Sōmai
Written byTakashi Ishii
Produced byYoshiyuki Kaino
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Love Hotel
ラブホテル
Directed byShinji Sōmai
Written byTakashi Ishii
Produced byYoshiyuki Kaino
StarringMinori Terada
Noriko Hayami
Cinematography
  • Tadashi Miura
  • Katsuji Oyamada
  • Noboru Shinoda
Edited byIsao Tomita
Production
companies
Release date
  • August 3, 1985 (1985-08-03)
Running time
88 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
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Synopsis

When businessman Tetsuro Muraki has his company go bankrupt and his wife Ryoko is raped by gangsters who use her body to pay off his debts, he succumbs to despair. He hires a prostitute, Nami, to go with him to a love hotel with sex and suicide in mind.[2]

Cast

  • Minori Terada (寺田農) as Tetsuro Muraki
  • Noriko Hayami as Nami Tsuchiya
  • Rie Nakagawa (中川梨絵) as Masayo Ohta
  • Kiriko Shimizu (志水季里子) as Ryoko Muraki
  • Nobutaka Masutomi (益富信孝) as Kiyoshi Ohta
  • Toshinori Omi (尾美としのり) as the Assistant Director
  • Kōichi Satō as the Taxi Driver

Background

Although director Shinji Sōmai had worked for Nikkatsu in the 1970s and served as an assistant director, this film marked his only work in the Roman porno genre for Nikkatsu. The film was produced by the Directors's Company (ディレクターズ カンパニー), an association of young directors formed in 1982.[3] The screenplay was the work of Takashi Ishii who would later rework the script for his directorial debut, the 1988 film Angel Guts: Red Vertigo.[2]

Reception

Jawni Han writing for Metrograph called the film a classic of the Roman Porno genre.[4] Beatrice Loayza of The New York Times said that the director's "[...] exquisite visual compositions (of lonely bedrooms, concrete piers, and nocturnal courtyards) infuse even the film’s racy images with a somber sense of longing and introspection, finding beauty and humanity in the midst of the macabre."[5]

Awards and nominations

7th Yokohama Film Festival[6]

The film also won the Nikkatsu in-house award for Best Film of the Year.[2]

References

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