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Love & Pop (1998)

Love & Pop (1998)
Member Rating:  
Following up on his wildly successful 1997 feature-length anime Neo Genesis Evangelion, Hideaki Anno takes digital camcorder in hand and makes his live-action directorial debut with this day-in-the-life drama about a quartet of enjo kosai (school girls) who make big bucks selling their services to middle-aged perverts with money to burn. Though frequently weird and exotic, their dates rarely request anything close to plain old vanilla sex. One geezer takes the four to sing karaoke. After belting out a few, he reaches into his bag and pulls out a bag of grapes. He asks that each lass bite into the fruit just enough to break the skin. Once that's done, he puts each grape in its own individual baggie and labels it. Other patrons are just as pitiful if less bizarre. The film focuses particularly on Hiromi (Asumi Miwa), who is trying to make enough money to buy a topaz ring and hide her right hand, which she thinks is ugly. Hiromi comes from a normal -- if blithely obtuse -- family and is not your typical portrait of an enjo kosai. Yet she hustles with her more street-smart friends and learns about her newfound profession's dangers and degradations the hard way. This film was based on a book by Ryu Murakami. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Director(s):
Hideaki Anno
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Love & Pop

Following up on his wildly successful 1997 feature-length anime Neo Genesis Evangelion, Hideaki Anno takes digital camcorder in hand and makes his live-action directorial debut with this day-in-the-life drama about a quartet of enjo kosai (school girls) who make big bucks selling their services to middle-aged perverts with money to burn. Though frequently weird and exotic, their dates rarely request anything close to plain old vanilla sex. One geezer takes the four to sing karaoke. After belting out a few, he reaches into his bag and pulls out a bag of grapes. He asks that each lass bite into the fruit just enough to break the skin. Once that's done, he puts each grape in its own individual baggie and labels it. Other patrons are just as pitiful if less bizarre. The film focuses particularly on Hiromi (Asumi Miwa), who is trying to make enough money to buy a topaz ring and hide her right hand, which she thinks is ugly. Hiromi comes from a normal -- if blithely obtuse -- family and is not your typical portrait of an enjo kosai. Yet she hustles with her more street-smart friends and learns about her newfound profession's dangers and degradations the hard way. This film was based on a book by Ryu Murakami. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
110 mins

Complete Cast of Love & Pop


Director(s):
Hideaki Anno
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    Member Reviews
     
    Allen T.

    Slow-moving and somewhat pretentious. It's pretty easy to predict the few turns the plot takes long before they happen. Worse: at the end, the audience is subjected to a long, flowery monolouge explaining the director's take on the film. It's not hard to tell this is the director's first live-action film. Watch Bounce Ko Gals instead for a much better film dealing with the same subject matter.

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    Marc F.

    I'm not a big Neon Genesis fan. In fact, I can't stand it. But his live-action effort here is infinitely more interesting. Lots of neat camera experiments and French New Wave pretentions, but still a neat try. Tadanobu Asano in an early role was a treat. Maybe I'll check out more of Anno's stuff.

    Yes   |   No

     
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