After Life | Telescope Film
After Life

After Life (ワンダフルライフ)

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A group of newly deceased souls find themselves about to embark into the next phase of the afterlife. However, they are only allowed one memory in the afterlife, and must each select which memory from their very different lives they would like to take with them before moving on.

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What are users saying?

Nikita Chinamanthur

I watched the remasted 2K version through Criterion. This is an unbelievably moving film and I feel as though I've found a wonderful new director to binge. Kore-eda has a lovely way of composing each frame simply yet evocatively. I loved all the performances and meandering bureaucratic ways of this "after-life" station.

What are critics saying?

100

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

After Life becomes a quiet, extraordinarily moving and sometimes funny meditation on the meaning and value of life. It intimates that whatever happiness we may find in life comes from within and is self-created.

100

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

Kore-eda, with this film and the 1997 masterpiece "Maborosi," has earned the right to be considered with Kurosawa, Bergman and other great humanists of the cinema. His films embrace the mystery of life, and encourage us to think about why we are here, and what makes us truly happy.

100

The Guardian by Philip French

Afterlife is an immensely suggestive picture about the role of memory, the function of cinema and the limits of our imagination.

100

Portland Oregonian by Shawn Levy

After Life is a thoroughly original, wholly realized work that leaves a profound and nagging bug in your brain for days after you've seen it: What in your life is worth holding on to? What one thing would you wish never to forget? It's a question as relevant to the lives we live each day as it is to our final moments. [24 Sept 1999, p.26]

100

Washington Post by Stephen Hunter

After Life is really a celebration of before-death: It's a complete rarity, for movies in general, for Washington in specific--pure sweetness of spirt. [8 Sept 1999, p.C9]

100

Chicago Tribune by Michael Wilmington

One of the most beautiful and profound films to emerge from Japan during the past decade.

100

Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan

In its examination of what is fleeting and what remains, "After Life" is not only perceptive, it leavens everything it touches with a surprisingly sly sense of humor. Few films about death, or about life for that matter, leave you feeling so affirmative about existence.

100

Boston Globe by Jay Carr

It isn't conventional drama or plot twists that make After Life moving. Rather, it's the exquisitely tender memories that come floating to the surface of this or that interviewee's mind. [11 June 1999, p.D6]

91

The A.V. Club

The film, and the films within the film, are like a dream with a message about savoring existence: Learn to love in life, or risk leaving it without leaving an impression.

91

The A.V. Club by Joshua Klein

The film, and the films within the film, are like a dream with a message about savoring existence: Learn to love in life, or risk leaving it without leaving an impression.

89

Austin Chronicle by Marjorie Baumgarten

Contemplative, though riddled with humor, After Life reveals itself gradually.

88

New York Post by Jonathan Foreman

At first, it seems stagy and slow and even to verge on the pretentious, but the film steadily accumulates dramatic power as its carefully sketched characters reveal their internal lives. By its end, After Life has developed into one of those haunting movies whose scenes can pop back into your consciousness hours or days after you have seen it. [12 May 1999, p.56]

88

New York Daily News by Jack Mathews

The memories recalled here aren't epic tales, just moments that make life worth living. Like seeing a good movie. [12 May 1999, p.44]

83

Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum

The simplicity and poignancy of the choices — riding a bus, swinging on a swing — and the great variety of interviewees result in a film of nonsticky freshness, as well as unforced profundity.

80

Chicago Reader by Jonathan Rosenbaum

Though it comes across as labored in spots, it also yields a good many beautiful and suggestive moments, and an overall film experience of striking originality.

75

San Francisco Chronicle by Edward Guthmann

He never indulges in schmaltz or melodrama, as most American filmmakers do when approaching this theme -- think of "It's a Wonderful Life" or the awful "When Dreams May Come" -- but delivers a delicate meditation rich with emotion.

75

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

Even had it possessed a less intelligent script, After Life would have been intriguing on the basis of its central conceit alone. However, with Kore-eda's skillful hand behind both the camera and the pen, the result is a rewarding cinematic experience.