Release CalendarTop 250 MoviesMost Popular MoviesBrowse Movies by GenreTop Box OfficeShowtimes & TicketsMovie NewsIndia Movie Spotlight
    What's on TV & StreamingTop 250 TV ShowsMost Popular TV ShowsBrowse TV Shows by GenreTV News
    What to WatchLatest TrailersIMDb OriginalsIMDb PicksIMDb SpotlightFamily Entertainment GuideIMDb Podcasts
    OscarsCannes Film FestivalStar WarsAsian Pacific American Heritage MonthSummer Watch GuideSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAll Events
    Born TodayMost Popular CelebsCelebrity News
    Help CenterContributor ZonePolls
For Industry Professionals
  • Language
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Sign In
Sign In
New Customer? Create account
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Use app
  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews
  • Trivia
  • FAQ
IMDbPro

Drive My Car

Original title: Doraibu mai kâ
  • 2021
  • Unrated
  • 2h 59m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
73K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,960
537
Hidetoshi Nishijima and Tôko Miura in Drive My Car (2021)
Nishijima Hidetoshi is a stage actor and director happily married to his playwright wife. Then one day she disappears.
Play trailer0:31
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Psychological DramaDrama

A renowned stage actor and director learns to cope with a big personal loss when he receives an offer to direct a production of Uncle Vanya in Hiroshima.A renowned stage actor and director learns to cope with a big personal loss when he receives an offer to direct a production of Uncle Vanya in Hiroshima.A renowned stage actor and director learns to cope with a big personal loss when he receives an offer to direct a production of Uncle Vanya in Hiroshima.

  • Director
    • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
  • Writers
    • Haruki Murakami
    • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
    • Takamasa Ôe
  • Stars
    • Hidetoshi Nishijima
    • Tôko Miura
    • Reika Kirishima
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    73K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,960
    537
    • Director
      • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
    • Writers
      • Haruki Murakami
      • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
      • Takamasa Ôe
    • Stars
      • Hidetoshi Nishijima
      • Tôko Miura
      • Reika Kirishima
    • 318User reviews
    • 269Critic reviews
    • 91Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 98 wins & 113 nominations total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 0:31
    Official Trailer
    Drive My Car
    Trailer 1:59
    Drive My Car
    Drive My Car
    Trailer 1:59
    Drive My Car

    Photos131

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    + 124
    View Poster

    Top cast35

    Edit
    Hidetoshi Nishijima
    Hidetoshi Nishijima
    • Yûsuke Kafuku
    Tôko Miura
    Tôko Miura
    • Misaki Watari
    Reika Kirishima
    Reika Kirishima
    • Oto Kafuku, Yûsuke's Wife
    Masaki Okada
    Masaki Okada
    • Koji Takatsuki
    Park Yu-rim
    Park Yu-rim
    • Lee Yoon-a
    Jin Dae-yeon
    Jin Dae-yeon
    • Kon Yoon-su
    Sonia Yuan
    Sonia Yuan
    • Janice Chang
    Ahn Hwitae
    Ahn Hwitae
    • Ryu Jeong-eui
    • (as An Fite)
    Perry Dizon
    Perry Dizon
    • Roy Lucelo
    • (as Perî Dizon)
    Satoko Abe
    Satoko Abe
    • Yuhara
    Hiroko Matsuda
    • Yumi Etô
    Toshiaki Inomata
    • Takashi Kimura
    Takako Yamamura
    • Kaoru Komagata
    Ryô Iwase
      Faisal Anwar
      Kamal Zharif
      Massimo Biondi
      Massimo Biondi
      Shôichirô Tanigawa
      • Director
        • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
      • Writers
        • Haruki Murakami
        • Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
        • Takamasa Ôe
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews318

      7.572.6K
      1
      2
      3
      4
      5
      6
      7
      8
      9
      10

      Featured reviews

      6JoBloTheMovieCritic

      Drive My Car

      6/10 - if you are able to stick out the three hours, you might find some true wisdom, but I found myself more bored than anything else and felt like we could have cut out at least an hour of rehearsal scenes and not really have lost anything.
      gortx

      A mystery box which is worth the journey to open

      Ryûsuke Hamaguchi's adaptation of a short-story of the same name by Haruki Murakami is an extraordinary three-hour experience. Hamaguchi and co-writer Takamasa Oe not only expand upon the brief source material, but also dare to take on one of the great works of literature in Chekhov's Uncle Vanya, weaving it into the very fabric of their screenplay.

      Kafuku (Hidetoshi Nishijima in a beautifully modulated performance) is a Tokyo Theater Director and Actor who travels to Hiroshima to be in residency at a local theater group putting on a performance of Uncle Vanya. The production is to be multi-lingual including Korean, Mandarin, Tagalog and even a sign language performer playing the role of Sonja (an angelic Yoo-rim Park). A dashing young actor from Kafuku's past, Koji (a suitably arrogant Masaki Okada), appears for the auditions to the Director's surprise.

      One of the stipulations of the residency is that Kafuku is to have a driver at all times. She arrives in the form of the quiet and introspective Misaki (Toko Miura; guilelessly effective). Reluctant at first, Kafuku accepts her. Part of his method is that he likes to take long drives in his car while listening to a specially recorded audiotape of Uncle Vanya. It's during these trips where both the title comes from, but, also provides a basis for their relationship even though few words are exchanged between them.

      While some knowledge of Chekhov's play may be helpful, Hamachuchi and Oe provide ample quotations and re-enactments of the crucial portions of the text for the uninitiated. Further, the film is far more than a clever parallel to the play. It takes its time to develop all of the relationships, developments and entanglements. The movie begins with a long prologue from two years prior with Kafuku and his wife Oto (a luminous, mysterious Reika Kirishima) - also a writer. It's over a half an hour before the credits roll, but the prelude's resonances reverberate throughout. The opening scene is scored by Eiko Ishibashi with a foreboding wail which is later echoed in a crucial sequence. The details always matter in Hamaguchi's direction - many of them unspoken.

      Like a fine play, the earlier acts create the necessary build-up for the climax and resolution. The structure is like a mystery box, opening its secrets stage by stage. Even the last act is never rushed. Each scene, each nuance, carefully weighed and delivered. It's all brilliantly balanced by Director Hamachuchi and his cast. DRIVE MY CAR is well worth the journey.
      7PedroPires90

      Good, but that's it

      Hamaguchi is an expert on dialogue: it feels vivid, provocative and thoughtful. He wants to make us think in life choices, relationships and how do we show what we really feel. "If" is the question mark always present that make us think about all the different ways and possibilities in life. How we treat the others. They way they see us and our actions. How do we want to be seen.

      I would like to have love Drive My Car as much as most people. I think it is a good film, but just that. I think is way overlong - and you feel it -, I think that some plots are probably unnecessary and that it develops in a very predictable way. I also think it's not the best film of the director this year, even if it will stay with me for some time.
      8dromasca

      love, pain and Chekhov

      'Drive my Car' by Japanese director Ryusuke Hamaguchi is a complex and elegiac film about love and mourning, about art as a means of relieving personal trauma, about responsibility and about the persistence of pain. Well-written and fine acted, it has won several respectable awards at major international film festivals, and has been nominated for four Academy Awards. Paradoxically, however, Hamaguchi seems to have contracted a disease that is widespread among filmmakers in major American studios - the length of the film is almost three hours. In addition, to understand the psychology and behavior of the characters, it is good to have read Chekhov. The story of the film revolves around two performances with 'Uncle Vania', and without knowing the psychology of the characters in the play, viewers risk omitting facets of the film's heroes. It is a technique often used by Haruki Murakami (whose short story inspired the film) for whom quoting works of art is a way to build a suitable setting for the characters and to amplify their feelings. Viewers should therefore be advised: 'Drive My Car' is a film that offers a lot but requires active intellectual participation.

      The long prologue introduces us to three of the four heroes of the film. Yusuke and Oto Kafuku are a couple of theater artists. He is an actor and stage director, she was once an actress but the tragedy of losing a little girl many years ago determined her to leave the stage and the screen. Becoming a screenwriter, she finds inspiration during the couple's sex parties, when, as if in a trance, she invents strange and romantic stories, which she reconstitutes with her husband the next day. Maybe to break the routine, maybe to complete her inspiration, Oto cheats on Yusuke with the young actor Koji Taaktsuki. A possible explanation between the two is prevented by the sudden death of the woman. Two years later (and after the late film's opening credits), Yusuke and Koji meet in Hiroshima, where the director puts on stage 'Uncle Vania' in a bold style with an international cast, and chooses his former rival for the lead role. It's a counter-casting, but not the only one. The two share the longing for the woman they loved, each holds a part of her in his memory and tries to overcome the pain and loss by understanding what is missing. A fourth character, Misaki Watari, appears, a young woman the age that Yusuke and Oto's daughter would have had if she had lived. Misaki will drive Yusuke's exotic red Saab car, as festival rules prohibit the director from driving it during his contract. There is a long process of mutual acquaintance between the mature man and the young woman. It is not just a coincidence that they could be father and daughter, and perhaps both are unconsciously looking surrogates. In each of their biographies there is a death for which they feel they have a share of responsibility, and only by helping each other will they be able to overcome.

      The association with Chekhov is not accidental. Murakami is a complex writer, the characters he builds live dramas from which the writer, the reader and the viewer can extract thoughts about the meaning of life. The biographies intersect and influence each other, but in the end only the strongest characters manage to break through. The lead hero chooses to stage 'Uncle Vania' because the play requires actors to get involved and brings to the surface through the characters their inner feelings. The entire section of the movie dedicated to the selection of actors, rehearsals and the three shows (one with 'Waiting for Godot' and two with 'Uncle Vania') demonstrate deep understanding and passion for theater and an organic integration in the main story, in the good tradition of the films of Ingmar Bergman or Istvan Szabo. The team of actors who play many roles of actors is perfectly chosen and directed.

      The film has a fifth hero, and this is a collector's car, a red Saab. It is a precious object, obsolete but loved by the married couple of theater people, kept with care and nostalgia by the widowed man. It is also a car a bit unadapted to local conditions, with the steering wheel on the left side in a country where you drive on the left side of the road. But aren't the characters similarly misfit to the environment, with their fascination with European culture, and isn't that true even for Haruki Murakami, perhaps the most European of the great writers of Japan today? Film lovers can't help but notice that 'Drive My Car' becomes by the end a road movie and that the film is part of a series of recent productions in which cars play a significant role, including the French film 'Titane', another of the outstanding productions of 2021.

      'Drive My Car' is a complex and interesting film, but it is not easy to watch. The three hours (without a minute) of projection are difficult to justify and do not pass easily. Maybe this is intentional and the director Ryusuke Hamaguchi wanted the audience to share the feeling of the difficult passage of time that the heroes live. And yet, many of the scenes give the feeling of repetition or unjustified lengthening of the frames, in almost each of them I had the feeling that one third could have been cut and the film would have been more focused and its essence easier to assimilate. With two quality films that have captured the screens of the most important international film festivals of 2021, Hamaguchi becomes one of the Japanese directors whose films I will watch with great interest in the coming years.
      8cherold

      Fascinating and original movie that gives you something to think about

      Drive My Car is the sort of movie that, were I to describe it to myself, I'd be wary of it. It's leisurely paced - the first hour is essentially prologue - not a lot happens, and and takes time to get into its rhythm.

      But ultimately it's kind of amazing. There's a remarkable subtlety to the characters, the focus on acting as a process is intriguing, and the movie doesn't offer answers but does offer ways to reconsider things you thought you know that are surprisingly compelling. It is also one of these movies you can't imagine being made in America; it just couldn't happen.

      This is a movie that sticks with me in a way most movies don't. You should check it out.

      More like this

      Perfect Days
      7.9
      Perfect Days
      Evil Does Not Exist
      7.0
      Evil Does Not Exist
      Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy
      7.5
      Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy
      Shoplifters
      7.9
      Shoplifters
      Happy Hour
      7.6
      Happy Hour
      Minari
      7.4
      Minari
      Decision to Leave
      7.3
      Decision to Leave
      The Worst Person in the World
      7.7
      The Worst Person in the World
      Burning
      7.4
      Burning
      Past Lives
      7.8
      Past Lives
      Monster
      7.8
      Monster
      The Power of the Dog
      6.8
      The Power of the Dog

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        The film was originally set in Busan, South Korea, but was changed to Hiroshima, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
      • Goofs
        When the cast are walking to the park for their outdoor rehearsal, Yoon-a and Janice appear to be having a conversation without the use of sign language on which one of them is dependent.
      • Quotes

        Kôshi Takatsuki: But even if you think you know someone well, even if you love that person deeply, you can't completely look into that person's heart. You'll just feel hurt. But if you put in enough effort, you should be able to look into your own heart pretty well. So in the end, what we should be doing is to be true to our hearts and come to terms with it in a capable way. If you really want to look at someone, then your only option is to look at yourself squarely and deeply.

      • Crazy credits
        Opening credits start from the 41st minute.
      • Connections
        Edited into Amanda the Jedi Show: Faster than your First Time Reviews 2 - Best and Worst of TIFF 2021 (2021)
      • Soundtracks
        Rondo K. 485 in D Major
        Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

        Performed by Atsushi Abe

      Top picks

      Sign in to rate and Watchlist for personalized recommendations
      Sign in

      FAQ19

      • How long is Drive My Car?Powered by Alexa

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • August 20, 2021 (Japan)
      • Country of origin
        • Japan
      • Official sites
        • Official site
        • Official site (Japan)
      • Languages
        • Japanese
        • English
        • Korean Sign Language
        • Korean
        • Mandarin
        • Tagalog
        • Indonesian
        • German
        • Malay
      • Also known as
        • Керуй моїм авто
      • Filming locations
        • Akinada Bridge, Kure, Hiroshima, Japan(suspended bridge to the island)
      • Production companies
        • Bitters End
        • Bungeishunju
        • C&I Entertainment
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $2,352,240
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $13,775
        • Nov 28, 2021
      • Gross worldwide
        • $15,357,339
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        2 hours 59 minutes
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Dolby Digital
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

      Related news

      Contribute to this page

      Suggest an edit or add missing content
      Hidetoshi Nishijima and Tôko Miura in Drive My Car (2021)
      Top Gap
      What is the streaming release date of Drive My Car (2021) in Canada?
      Answer
      • See more gaps
      • Learn more about contributing
      Edit page

      More to explore

      Production art
      Photos
      Hollywood Power Couples
      See the gallery
      Production art
      Photos
      The Greatest Character Actors of All Time
      See the gallery
      Production art
      List
      30+ Stand-Up Specials by Asian Comedians
      See the full gallery

      Recently viewed

      Please enable browser cookies to use this feature. Learn more.
      Get the IMDb app
      Sign in for more accessSign in for more access
      Follow IMDb on social
      Get the IMDb app
      For Android and iOS
      Get the IMDb app
      • Help
      • Site Index
      • IMDbPro
      • Box Office Mojo
      • License IMDb Data
      • Press Room
      • Advertising
      • Jobs
      • Conditions of Use
      • Privacy Policy
      • Your Ads Privacy Choices
      IMDb, an Amazon company

      © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.