Drive My Car (Japanese; 2021)
Director: Ryusuke Hamaguchi
Based on Short Story by Haruki Murakami
Director: Ryusuke Hamaguchi
Based on Short Story by Haruki Murakami
As in all good movies, the viewers are clueless for a good one hour into the film. I was wondering where the story was going. Why was the protagonist, Kafuku, a theatre actor, who was acting in 'Waiting for Godot', keeps driving around? Why did he not react when he caught his wife, Oto, sleeping with another man? What is this about Oto and telling stories? Then there is the history of a dead child. And then the wife dies too.
Two years on, Kafuku is on a directing stint in Hiroshima. The company insists that they hire a chauffeur for him to drive his 1987 Saab Turbo. The chauffeur, Misaki, a young 20 something woman, seems to carry a massive burden upon her shoulders. She had lost her mother in a landslide. There is more to that.
The man who was seen in bed with Oto earlier, Kōji, auditions for the play and is selected. The play is Chekov's 'Uncle Vanya'. The crux of the story is how all these characters resolve their respective deep-seated unresolved issues by their actions or inactions. Just like the pandemic that jolts us from the lull of comfort, at the end of the film, the reboot button is set.
We think we have an explanation for everything. Yet, many things do not make sense. We seek clarity but still, the answers elude us. Peace of mind is disrupted by carrying these unresolved matters in our psyche. Maybe, we should let it be. Move on.
(P.S. Another introduction to another of Russia's many talented writers, and considered to be one of the world's greatest writers of the world, Anton Pavlovich Chekov. A doctor by profession, he wrote stories to support his family. Famously is quoted to have said,
"Medicine is my lawful wife, literature, my mistress."
.)This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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