Oh Lucy!

Directed by Atsuko Hirayanagi
Film Movement
2017
96 Minutes
USA, Japan
English, Japanese
Drama, Comedy, Asian
Asian Studies, Women Directors
Not Rated
DVD $29.95
Buy DVD
PPR $200.00
Buy PPR+DVD
DRL $499.00
Buy DRL+DVD
PPR+DRL $599.00
Buy PPR+DRL+DVD
Blu-ray $39.95
Buy Blu-ray
PPR $200.00
Buy PPR+Blu-ray
DRL $499.00
Buy DRL+Blu-ray
PPR+DRL $599.00
Buy PPR+DRL+Blu-ray
Educational streaming also available via:
In-home viewers shop here.
Shop Home Video

To submit an order, request a preview screener, or ask a question contact Erin Farrell

Bored Tokyo lady Setsuko (Independent Spirit Award-nominee Shinobu Terajima) breaks free of her monotonous life when her niece, Mika (Shioli Kutsuna) convinces her to enroll in an unorthodox English class. There, she adopts a blonde-haired alter ego name "Lucy" and develops romantic feelings for her American instructor, John (Josh Hartnett).But after his sudden disappearance, Setsuko follows his trail halfway around the world to Southern California, where family ties and past lives are tested as she struggles to fulfill the promise of "Lucy."

"Recommended" - Video Librarian

Cast

  • Shinobu Terajima
  • Josh Hartnett
  • Kaho Minami
  • Shioli Kutsuna
  • Megan Mullally
DVD Features

Deleted Scenes
New York Asian Film Festival interview with director Atsuko Hirayanagi.

Sound: 2.0 Stereo and 5.1 Surround

Discs: 1

Blu-ray Features

Deleted Scenes
New York Asian Film Festival interview with director Atsuko Hirayanagi.

Sound: 2.0 Stereo and 5.1 Surround

Discs: 1

  • Highest Rating
    "... a chocolate trifle with an arsenic center."
    Andrew Barker, Variety
  • Highest Rating
    "... has an idiosyncratic charm that pays off in an unexpectedly touching ending."
    David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter
  • Highest Rating
    "... seems to play like a standard culture clash comedy but reveals itself to run significantly deeper...[It] has moments of genuine emotional poignancy."
    Nikki Baughn, Screen International
  • Highest Rating
    "CRITIC'S PICK. The writer-director Atsuko Hirayanagi isn’t selling a packaged idea about what it means to be human; she does something trickier and more honest here, merely by tracing the ordinary absurdities and agonies of one woman’s life."
    Manohla Dargis, The New York Times

Gallery

Awards & Recognition

You May Also Like...