Description
$8.99
Alternate Title: Figyua na anata
Genre: Drama, Fantasy, Romance
Plot Synopsis:
Kentaro, a lonely and introverted office worker, is unjustly fired from his job and faces personal humiliation. In a state of despair, he stumbles upon a life-sized mannequin dressed in a sailor suit within an abandoned building. To his astonishment, the mannequin comes to life, and they begin an unconventional and surreal relationship, blurring the lines between reality and fantasy.
Cast and Crew:
YouTube Trailer:
Hello, My Dolly Girlfriend | Trailer
IMDb Link:
Hello, My Dolly Girlfriend (2013)
pratt360 –
Absolute trash. Ornamental filth that puts all sorts of perversions into full view. Excessive, putrid, unredeemable exploitation.
Lencho of the Apes –
Sad, grotesque satire about a geek/fanboy type who finds his ideal partner — depending on his needs of the moment, she can be a s&x-doll, a robot assassin or a piece of furniture… and whenever he gets confused about her ontological status, he takes a long break to examine her crotchparts in detail to get a more grounded sense of her reality. I know Takashi Ishii is capable of kino-writing sensitively about adult s&xual functions and dysfunctions, but there was no room for that here; the meet-cute where fanboy acts out a r@pe fantasy on her inert doll-body made my skin crawl with the arrested-dev. incel creeperness of it all, and I was as close to rejecting the whole movie in disgust as I was to any other response. Visually, it’s aces, though; takes from Argento, and adds to that a unique personal sense of Tokyo landscapes as giant neon junksculptures (seen also in A Night In Nude I/II.) (which I much preferred to this.) oh yeah, LIVE-ACTION MANGA ADAPTATION. Somebody was listing those, weren’t they?
Meta Description:
“Hello, My Dolly Girlfriend” (2013), directed by Takashi Ishii, is a Japanese drama-fantasy film that explores the surreal relationship between a disheartened office worker and a life-sized mannequin that comes to life, delving into themes of loneliness and escapism.