My Secret Cache
My Secret Cache | |
---|---|
Directed by | Shinobu Yaguchi |
Written by |
Takuji Suzuki Shinobu Yaguchi |
Starring |
Naomi Nishida Gô Rijû |
Cinematography | Masahiro Kishimoto |
Edited by | Miho Yoneda |
Distributed by |
Toho Company (Japan) Geneon Entertainment (USA) |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 83 min |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
My Secret Cache is a 1997 award - winning Japanese film. Its original Japanese title is Himitsu no hanazono (『ひみつの花園』). It was directed by Shinobu Yaguchi.
Plot
The film begins with a prologue that quickly sketches the backstory of the protagonist: since childhood, Sakiko Suzuki was obsessed with cash. She scared off potential friends by constantly talking about her savings account, and potential suitors by demanding that they give her up front the money they would have spent taking her out on a date. After college, her family suggests she get a job as a bank teller. She's promptly hired, but soon grows disillusioned by the job, because she's counting other people's cash. Then, bank robbers kidnap her and stuff her in a trunk with a bright yellow suitcase filled with stolen money. The thieves take a wrong turn in the woods and crash their car. Sakiko escapes with the briefcase but falls into a river and winds up in an underground pool, where she tries to kill herself by drowning after letting go of the suitcase. Instead, she washes up downstream and is given medical leave by the bank.
The rest of the film traces Sakiko's quest to retrieve the money. One Sunday, she convinces her family to take her to the woods, but they give up as soon as it rains. Undeterred, Sakiko goes on without them but suffers an accident and winds up in the hospital again. So she resolves to prepare more carefully. Moving out of her family's house, she returns to college to study geology, and also takes lessons in swimming, scuba diving, mountain climbing and driving, and buys lots of surveying equipment. Along the way, she wins swimming and mountain climbing competitions. But she's uninterested in pursuing fame in either as a swimmer or mountain climber, wanting only to earn money to fund her quest. After her apartment's floor collapses under the weight of too much equipment and another stint at the hospital, Sakiko escapes, steals from her family and frames a research assistant at the college for stealing a bag of money from the bank; she steals his truck and goes to the woods and retrieves the suitcase. She formally apologizes to her family for stealing from them. On the radio, Sakiko hears about hidden treasures in the Bermuda triangle and decides to get a sailing license. The movie ends with Sakiko hiding the yellow briefcase in the woods.
Reception
My Secret Cache does not yet have a rating from Rotten Tomatoes.
In the United States, the film has been released to DVD (region 1) by Geneon Entertainment. The average Netflix custormer rates the film 2.9 stars out of five.
Awards
Naomi Nishida won an award at the Japanese Academy Awards for Best Newcomer, and at the Japanese Professional Movie Awards for Best Actress.[1]
See also
- Swing Girls (2004)
Further reading
- Johnston, Chris (September 2006). "The Secret Cache". Newtype USA. 5 (9). p. 149. ISSN 1541-4817.
- Dong, Bamboo (28 August 2006). "My Anime Cache - SL". Anime News Network.
Notes
- ↑ "Awards for Shall We Dansu?". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2009-01-06.
External links
- My Secret Cache at Rotten Tomatoes
- My Secret Cache at the Internet Movie Database
- My Secret Cache at AllMovie