

A businessman kills his adulterous wife and is sent to prison. After his release, he opens a barbershop and meets new people, talking to almost no one except for an eel he befriended while in prison.
Direction
Imamura finds poetry in the grotesque and redemption in mud.
Acting
Koji Yakusho's face does more than most scripts.

Director
Shōhei Imamura
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Won the Palme d'Or at Cannes 1997, though Imamura famously said he didn't understand why audiences found it funny.
The eel symbolizes masculine emotional inaccessibility in Japanese culture — Takuro literally cannot speak without its proxy presence.
No ratings yet
Reactions from the web
とにかく冒頭のシーンが衝撃的でしたね。 親がレンタルで借りてきて観ていた記憶があります。
@Forgiveandforget-s8h 11
役所広司はすげぇ
@df_5565 12
よかった。パーフェクトデイズ観る前に観たかったかな
@sesamiokojo705 5
Sign in to join the discussion — comments are spoiler-gated to your watch progress.
Discussion starters