Film festivals London Film Festival 2021

Drive My Car

London Film Festival 2021: Drive My Car | Review

Upon first glance, Kafuku (Hidetoshi Nishijima) and Oto (Reika Kirishima) are living the artist couple’s dream. He is a stage actor whose particular style of experimenting with different languages has earned him industry-wide acclaim. She is a successful screenwriter for a TV station. They continue to inspire each other’s work. To help her husband rehearse for his plays, Oto speaks the other character’s lines onto an audio cassette. Driving his car, he listens to the tape and responds with his part of the dialogue. Two years after his wife’s sudden death, this ritual is threatened when Kafuku learns that the theatre who hired him to direct an international production of Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya has a policy of assigned drivers.

Based on the short story by Haruki Murakami, Drive My Car is a multi-layered relationship drama, even in spite of the fact that only one half of the central couple remains with us for the entire film.

The meticulous use of the spoken word is fundamental to this adaptation. Besides Japanese, the feature has characters communicating in Mandarin, Korean, English, or non-verbally. In post-coital bliss, Oto spins a story about a young girl who breaks into her crush’s house. Despite the fact that this latest idea for one of her scripts never plays out before us visually, it is the most compelling part of the narrative. We are fed pieces of it in instalments and remain hungry for its conclusion – evoking just the faintest memory of the tale of Scheherazade. As counterpoise, director Ryusuke Hamaguchi also allows for silence to permeate, whether it’s an awkward lull in conversation or a powerful stage monologue delivered in Korean sign language.

Drive My Car is not afraid to take its time to let the events unfold. With a runtime of 180 minutes, the film takes viewers on an emotional journey, as they witness not only the different stages of play rehearsals, but also of Kafuku’s grief.

Selina Sondermann

Drive My Car does not have a UK release date yet.

Read more reviews and interviews from our London Film Festival 2021 coverage here.

For further information about the festival visit the official BFI website here.

Watch the trailer for Drive My Car here:

More in Film festivals

Departures

Jan Tracz

A Night Like This: On the red carpet with Alexander Lincoln, Jack Brett Anderson, Jimmy Ericson, Diego Sceratti and Liam Calvert at BFI Flare 2025

Jan Tracz

Four Mothers: On the red carpet with Darren Thornton and James McArdle at BFI Flare 2025

Mae Trumata

A Night Like This

Andrew Murray

Four Mothers

Sunny Morgan

Hot Milk

Christina Yang

Outerlands

Andrew Murray

A Mother Apart: On the red carpet with Staceyann Chin and Laurie Townshend at BFI Flare 2025

Jan Tracz

Departures: On the red carpet with Jake Haymes, Jacob Partali, Tyler Conti and Ali Afzal at BFI Flare 2025

Jan Tracz