Review | Cannes 2025: A Pale View of Hills movie review โ€“ Suzu Hirose, Fumi Nikaido lead adaptation



3.5/5 stars

Towards the end of Kei Ishikawaโ€™s visually captivating new film A Pale View of Hills, Niki (Camilla Aiko) tells her mother, Etsuko (Yoh Yoshida), she shouldnโ€™t feel guilty about leaving Japan for Britain after the second world war. โ€œWe all need to change,โ€ she says.

For Etsuko, that comment rings very true: trapped by both the trauma of war and the tyranny of patriarchy, reinvention was perhaps Etsukoโ€™s only option to attain a more rewarding life.

But some of Ishikawaโ€™s changes to the 1982 novel on which his film is based, by Nobel Prize-winning author Kazuo Ishiguro โ€“ in which a middle-aged Japanese woman offers her daughter a montage of memories about her life as a meek homemaker in Japan in the 1950s โ€“ may come across as unnecessary.

By amplifying the bookโ€™s much more muted social commentary โ€“ a move encouraged by Ishiguro himself, who helped develop the screenplay and also serves as the executive producer of the film โ€“ Ishikawa somehow shifts the focus away from the protagonistโ€™s personal struggles.

He also waters down the intrigue which keeps Niki โ€“ and the audience โ€“ guessing about the truthfulness of Etsukoโ€™s recollections of her past.

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