The best Takashi Sasano’s movies on Google Play Movies

Takashi Sasano

Takashi Sasano

22/06/1948 (75 años)
Today we present the best Takashi Sasano’s movies. If you are a great movie fan, you will surely know most of them, but we hope to discover a movie that you have not yet seen … and that you love! Let’s go there with the best Takashi Sasano’s movies.

Departures

Departures
8/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 13/09/2008
  • Character: Shokichi Hirata
Daigo, a cellist, is laid off from his orchestra and moves with his wife back to his small hometown where the living is cheaper. Thinking he’s applying for a job at a travel agency he finds he’s being interviewed for work with departures of a more permanent nature – as an undertaker’s assistant.

Adrift in Tokyo

Adrift in Tokyo
7.2/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 10/11/2007
  • Character: Middle-aged Matmaker
Leading a lazy life, Fumiya has been a university student for 8 years and owes money to loan sharks. One day, a man named Fukuhara comes to collect the loan, which Fumiya cannot pay. So Fukuhara makes a proposition: He will cancel the debt as long as Fumiya agrees to walk with him across Tokyo to the police station of Kasumigaseki, where he intends to turn himself in for a crime he deeply regrets. Not having much choice, Fumiya accepts the deal. Thus begins their journey which will lead them to various unusual encounters, most of all with themselves.

Before We Vanish

Before We Vanish
6.2/10
Narumi is on bad terms with her husband, Shinji, when, one day, Shinji goes missing. He comes back a couple of days later, but he seems like a totally different person, and he is now gentle and tender. He goes for a walk every day. Meanwhile, journalist Sakurai covers the story of a family that was brutally murdered, when an unexplained phenomenon takes place. Shinji Kase tells his wife that he came to Earth to invade.

A Hardest Night!!

A Hardest Night!!
6.9/10
  • Genre: ComedyDrama
  • Release: 22/10/2005
  • Character: Kyoji
A celebration of the ancient art of Japanese rakugo, roughly translated as “comic storytelling”. The film is interspersed with numerous funerals and wakes, songs, dances, and often disgustingly crude jokes.

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