Rental Family: Movie Review
Cast: Brendan Fraser, Takehiro Hara, Mari Yamamoto
Director: Hikari
Rental Family has potential - an idea inspired by a side of Japanese life barely seen on screen and a story that could have teetered on exceptional.
Unfortunately, it falls into the mawkish side of things, and led by a Brendan Fraser who just falls back on looking glum in parts when the story demands it.
Fraser plays lost American actor Philip Vanderploueg, who broke through with a toothpaste commercial seven years ago and failed to reach any further heights. When his agent calls the jobbing actor, offering him a role that requires a sad American and pays well, he finds himself thrust unexpectedly into a funeral.
Afterwards, offered more work because the agency needs "a token white guy", Philip signs up, unsure of what he can give to the job and soon finds a connection he'd been missing in Japan. However, when he's asked to be the absent father of a young girl, whose mother wants to get him into a prestigious school, he finds himself in the toughest role he's ever had.
As an idea, Rental Family makes great fist of the need for connection in a world that sometimes shuns it. From plenty of interstitial shots of a busy Japan, swarming with people to scenes of Philip in his lonely apartment watching the lives of others, there's plenty of moments which mark out his inability to be accepted into life there.
Yet Hikari's story becomes one that dwells on its sentiment and makes its improbability stand out because of its narrative weaknesses. It's obvious that Philip is ill-equipped to be part of this world and the naivete that turns things around later on almost feels like an unabashed white saviour story.
Fraser is fine in the role, but the character development does evolve past a walking sad emoji in parts and as such, it holds back the film from excelling where it should. A more subtle approach and a building on the idea that he'll never fit in or understand (as one character tells him at one point) would have made this a more compelling and less mawkish watch.
As it is, Rental Family is a disappointment - it has its heart in the right place, but its execution leaves too much to be desired. And what could have been truly unmissable simply ends up feeling a syrupy mess that sadly sticks in the throat.


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