

A 'family club' where innocence meets exploitation — and the bill comes due.
Oh cute show. A sign drawn with crayons, a room in an apartment. When you open the door, the little sisters who want to be happy welcome you with a smile. What are your parents? Yeah, no. Oh, it's a trip. Shikoku. How nice. This show, the fee system is 30 yen for bath, 15 yen for doctor pretend, etc. are also conscientious. Naughty ... I mean, you're just showing your pet turtle, but the sisters are overjoyed to touch it, so this is ... an all-you-can-eat start.
Direction
Rakuda's unflinching vérité style refuses comfort.
Production
Crayon-sign mundanity masks institutional horror.
Acting
Performances blur victim and participant devastatingly.
Director
Rakuda
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The 'JK business' phenomenon in Japan — compensated dating disguised as legitimate services — informs the film's queasy realism.
The 160-minute runtime deliberately mirrors the slog of complicity; Rakuda wants you tired of looking away.
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