(2003)

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Sometimes the answer is right under our nose....
DrSgtPepper7 August 2006
A very warm film that is not only entertaining, but it reminds us about simple morals and lessons that we can all use in life. It reminds us that no matter what happens, we can always learn from our elders and how even if we fail, we can always try. This is already an achievement in itself. Things will work out somehow. Sometimes when we don't have the answers, we learn from those who have lived through them.

I enjoyed watching "Fukumimi" or "Lucky Ears" as the English title. Does anyone here know how I can buy DVDs of these movies and do they make ones with English subtitles (such as for international releases?)

TO ANYONE WHO HAS WATCHED FUKUMIMI/LUCKY EARS, what is the quote and saying that the lead characters mentioned towards the end of the movie while they were on the sea, something inspiring like "Listen to the wind and you will hear...something like that, very close. I think it was the advice from the old man.
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Mawkish comedy
lexdevil27 August 2004
Lucky Ears is an initially engaging but ultimately frustrating romantic comedy. Starring Kankuro Kudo as the lad with the lucky lobes, a newly hired kitchen worker at a retirement home, Fukumimi also features the great Kunie Tanaka as a restless spirit who inhabits Kudo's body during the hapless youngster's first day on the job. The reason? Tanaka claims he has unfinished business to complete with a beautiful fellow retiree (Yoko Tsukasa from Samurai Rebellion and 70s disaster flick The Last Days of Planet Earth). Standing in his way are other elderly residents, including nutty naval vet Jiro Sakagami and an impossibly effeminate tranny played by kaiju eiga star Akira Takarada. Sounds wacky, right? Well, unfortunately, Lucky Ears is actually an overlong, awkward, and mawkish meditation on love and death that outlives its welcome after barely half an hour. The split personality scenes between Kudo and Tanaka are badly staged, and Kudo simply doesn't have the skills to portray two characters at the same time, though he's reasonably engaging in the film's early scenes. Tanaka brings undeserved gravitas to his role, but is burdened by a bad screenplay filled with platitudes and pious pronouncements on fate and life. Tsukasa is decent in a thankless role as the object of affection, and Shiho Takano serves as attractive love interest for Kudo (when his body ISN'T inhabited by Tanaka's spirit). In the final analysis, Fukumimi plays like an overlong made for television movie (and though the film apparently had a theatrical release, it WAS produced by Fuji TV)and will send most occidental viewers into a diabetic coma.
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