A slow-burning epic chronicling the emotional journey of four thirty something women in the misty seaside city of Kobe.A slow-burning epic chronicling the emotional journey of four thirty something women in the misty seaside city of Kobe.A slow-burning epic chronicling the emotional journey of four thirty something women in the misty seaside city of Kobe.
- Awards
- 6 wins & 5 nominations
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe longest Japanese film ever made.
Featured review
A poignant 5hr journey
The longest Japanese marathon is 'Happy Hour', a movie that runs for 5hrs and 10min. Small budget, no frills, non-professional actors, shot as basic as a soapie but with less make-up and without being a soapie despite the topic being 4 female friends, in their late 30s, navigating their male relationships.
That it was so basic, and that I had patience, equated to it feeling as real life as a fiction could be. No tricks, no action, no melodramatics, just people going through life like we all do.
The only time I felt tested was when there was a boring book reading which was rammed home as boring by it being approx 10 minutes long with longer praise for the author. However, that tedium had purpose, resulting in an important pivot of realisation in the characters.
Life is messy. Love is hard to define and few have it. Marriage mostly sucks. People cheat when they mean to and when they don't, for good and bad reasons. Life rolls on. If anything, the aim of the movie was for it to be a lesson in learning to roll with it and be open to learning about who we are, and how we relate to others.
Highlights for me was seeing real Japan, daily life and its cultural politeness (which, like cheating, can be both good and bad). It was a beautiful and slow unwinding of pain.
Freedom is hard for adults. The unrelated-to-the-movie catch-22 is that it was impossible for any of us, as kids or teens, to imagine it as anything other than wonderful flight.
I can't recall watching a Japanese or Korean movie without rice being mentioned. They always make me hungry.
That it was so basic, and that I had patience, equated to it feeling as real life as a fiction could be. No tricks, no action, no melodramatics, just people going through life like we all do.
The only time I felt tested was when there was a boring book reading which was rammed home as boring by it being approx 10 minutes long with longer praise for the author. However, that tedium had purpose, resulting in an important pivot of realisation in the characters.
Life is messy. Love is hard to define and few have it. Marriage mostly sucks. People cheat when they mean to and when they don't, for good and bad reasons. Life rolls on. If anything, the aim of the movie was for it to be a lesson in learning to roll with it and be open to learning about who we are, and how we relate to others.
Highlights for me was seeing real Japan, daily life and its cultural politeness (which, like cheating, can be both good and bad). It was a beautiful and slow unwinding of pain.
Freedom is hard for adults. The unrelated-to-the-movie catch-22 is that it was impossible for any of us, as kids or teens, to imagine it as anything other than wonderful flight.
I can't recall watching a Japanese or Korean movie without rice being mentioned. They always make me hungry.
helpful•3024
- wickedmikehampton
- Dec 15, 2020
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- 歡樂時光
- Filming locations
- Kobe, Hyogo, Japan(main setting)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $337,256
- Runtime5 hours 17 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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