Overview
Release Date:
17 April 1999 (Japan)
more
Tagline:
What is the one memory you would take with you?
Plot:
After people die, they spend a week with counselors, also dead, who help them pick one memory, the only memory they can take to eternity...
more
|
add synopsis
Awards:
7 wins
&
6 nominations
more
User Comments:
Beautiful.
more
 | Arata | ... | Takashi Mochizuki, counsellor |
 | Erika Oda | ... | Shiori Satonaka, trainee counsellor |
 | Susumu Terajima | ... | Satoru Kawashima, counsellor |
 | Takashi Naitô | ... | Takuro Sugie, counsellor |
 | Kyôko Kagawa | ... | Kyoko Watanabe, Ichiro's Wife |
 | Kei Tani | ... | Kennosuke Nakamura, boss |
 | Taketoshi Naitô | ... | Ichiro Watanabe, who cannot choose his favourite experience |
 | Toru Yuri | ... | Gisuke Shoda, who talks about sex |
 | Yusuke Iseya | ... | Yusuke Iseya, who refuses to choose his experience |
 | Sayaka Yoshino | ... | Kana Yoshino, talks about Disneyland |
 | Kazuko Shirakawa | ... | Nobuko Amano, who talks about her affair with a married man |
 | Kotaro Shiga | ... | Kenji Yamamoto, who wants to forget his past |
 | Hisako Hara | ... | Kiyo Nishimura, old lady who loves cherry blossoms |
 | Sadao Abe | ... | Ichiro (as young man) |
 | Natsuo Ishido | ... | Kyoko Watanabe as a young woman |
 | Tomomi Hiraiwa | ... | Receptionist |
 | Tae Kimura | ... | Dining Hall Worker |
 | Yasuhiro Kasamatsu | | |
 | Akio Yokoyama | ... | Security Guard |
 | Miyako Yamaguchi | ... | Dining Hall Worker |
 | Kazuji Araki | ... | Dead Man |
 | Kunio Endo | ... | Dead Man |
 | Michi Okuma | ... | Dead Woman |
 | Shinichiro Okuno | ... | Dead Man |
 | Yoshitaka Kaneko | ... | Dead Man |
 | Keigyoku Kane | ... | Dead Man |
 | Yone Kori | ... | Dead Woman |
 | Masaaki Kojima | ... | Dead Man |
 | Terumasa Takahashi | ... | Dead Man |
 | Chie Takamatsu | ... | Dead Woman |
 | Kimiko Tatara | ... | Dead Woman |
 | Toshio Nomoto | ... | Dead Man |
 | Nanae Hirakawa | ... | Dead Woman |
 | Taro Bundo | ... | Dead Man |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: |

| Reila Aphrodite | | |
 | Naruki Matsukawa | | |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
After Life (Canada: English title) (USA)
Afterlife (UK)
Wonderful Life (literal title)
more
Runtime:
Brazil:118 min | Argentina:118 min
Aspect Ratio:
1.66 : 1
more
Fun Stuff
FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
more
Message Boards
Discuss this movie with other users on
IMDb message board for Wandâfuru raifu (1998)
more
Recommendations
Related Links
Afterlife is another film offering an answer to the unanswerable question "What happens after you die? ". Although this has been asked many times through cinema in the past, few films have answered as elegantly as Afterlife.
Directly after dying the departed are received by a group of counsellors who assist them in finding what was, for them, the most beautiful and perfect, single experience of their lives. For some the choice is easy and they are instantly able to provide the moment, which, once recreated by technicians, they remain in forever but the majority of the film concentrates upon those who are unable to find their perfect moment, and need extra help to recall past loves and lost days of their youth. The institution has the perfect means to assist this choice, with the complete life of everyone on grainy home-video, perhaps a comment on the tehcnology and recording-obsessed Japanese.
Many of the scenes are visually exceptional, especially those in the snow and everything seems very real, and, ironically, down-to-earth, especially the school building being used throughout the film giving an institutional feeling, but the interaction between the staff is where the film holds its true strength. Especially interesting is the relationship between Shiori, a newly employed worker, and Mochizuki, her mentor, which develops throughout. The film is slow to start due to the documentary style often used, but proceeds in an enveloping manner holding your attention to the end. Along with "Heaven can wait" and "Beetlejuice" this film offers another novel look at life, death and the hereafter.
The Japanese title was "Wandafuru raifu" (wonderful life, after Frank Capra) and, even though the film is dealing with death, it is a statement of how wonderful life is.
I loved this film and it stuck me stunningly and reminded me of how good films can be when they try.