Plan 75 review Japanese euthanasia drama grapples with tough questions | World cinema

April 2024 · 1 minute read
The ObserverWorld cinema This article is more than 9 months oldReview

Plan 75 review – Japanese euthanasia drama grapples with tough questions

This article is more than 9 months old

Japan’s over-75s are offered a painless death in exchange for a modest payment in Chie Hayakawa’s slow-burning film

In a near-future Japan, the economic burden of an ageing population has become untenable. In response, the government has introduced Plan 75, a system of voluntary euthanasia offering a painless death to those over the age of 75 in exchange for a modest “preparatory grant” of $1,000.

When 75 is time to die: the horrifically plausible film imagining state-run euthanasia in JapanRead more

Chie Hayakawa’s thoughtful, slow-burning philosophical study focuses on former cleaner Michi (Chieko Baishô), 78, who is forced by poverty to consider Plan 75, and lonely widower Yukio (Taka Takao), who reconnects with his nephew, a Plan 75 salesman, by chance. This is subdued storytelling that, while it drags a little in its pacing, asks tough questions about society’s relationship with elderly people.

Watch a trailer for Plan 75.
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