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The Most Terrible Time in My Life

Play trailer Poster for The Most Terrible Time in My Life Released Mar 5, 1994 1h 32m Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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Tomatometer 4 Reviews 82% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
Intrepid Japanese detective Maiku Hama is on the case in this adventure. Hama is suave, macho, and cold but he is a total klutz. His attempts at machismo always fall flat. When he's out on a case he spends more time getting beaten up than he does solving the case.

Critics Reviews

View All (4) Critics Reviews
Sean Axmaker St@tic Multimedia ... a lively, witty tribute to American private eye films with a serious core. Oct 6, 2005 Full Review MaryAnn Johanson Flick Filosopher [A] timeless comedy punk noir that could be taking place anytime from the 1950s onward... Apr 24, 2004 Full Review Max Messier Filmcritic.com Rated: 4/5 Apr 24, 2004 Full Review TV Guide Rated: 4/5 Apr 24, 2004 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member The first part of a trilogy (which I now regret not buy the rest of), this introduces us to a modern day neo noir hero Maiku Hama, who operates out of an office above a cinema showing classic films in Japan. He finds himself involved in a case searching for a missing Taiwanese immigrant, whose brother he saves in a brawl in a restaurant. Hama is an interesting character, as he appears cool, but is very accident prone and finds himself getting his ass handed to him more often than not. It makes for an interesting take on the genre, that's for sure. Worth a look, give it a rental. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/07/23 Full Review Audience Member A 1990's Japanese detective film lovingly and respectfully shot in black and white in the style of a 1950's American detective film, complete with fallable PI , twists and turns and a bitter-sweet denouement. Fun. Starring Masatoshi Nagase of Mystery Train / Cold Fever / Suicide Club etc etc fame. <img src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_ZAECHDaEk4g/RuG3JH5GiZI/AAAAAAAABGM/8mmXEZ6pxTA/s400/MaikuHama_videodvd-1.jpg"> Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member Would like to rewatch some time with increased focus. Feels like it might generate an increase in score. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/04/23 Full Review Audience Member I like it cause Masatoshi Nagase, which if there is a more underrated and underloved Japanese actor it's him, plays a guy named Maiku Hama and if you know anything about Mike Hammer you will understand why this is all genius. It's also a pretty decent movie. Too bad the rest of it isn't up to the same level as Nagase. He's freaking brilliant. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/20/23 Full Review Audience Member I saw the write up on this in Shock Cinema Magazine (Issue 6) If I remember right. So when it arrived by mail I put it on the shelf saying when I get to it, little did I know that it was a Kino Video Release. And little did I know that it was a 5 star great film, 6 stars if I could. Its a Japanese film shot in Black & White (Shot in 1993) to give it that film noir look. Its suppose to be a spoof n the American Crime films of 1950-19660 time frame, and after all with a detective named Maiku Hama, how could it not be nothing but funny and interesting at the same time. Its not really a comedy and Director Kazio Hayashi has done a excellent job with this one. This is the first of a trilogy the other two being Stairway to a distant past and the Trap, which I will now order and review as soon as possible. This is a good film, not only for the comedy part but also for overall story. One other thing it has English Subtitles. Enjoy, and if you haven't seen a Kino Video yet you need to try them out and get there catalog, use a search engine just type Kino Video for some excellent world films. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/23/23 Full Review Audience Member (80/100) Goofy but stylish and enjoyable crime tale that plays on New Wave, film noir, and hard-boiled gangster movies. Although the backgrounds are obviously early 1990s Yokohama, there is a pleasant temporal ambiguity to the film from the black and white cinematography, to the 70s cop music theme, to the retro cars and locales. Doesn't take itself too seriously but seriously enough to compose each frame and set up some nice shots. On a personal note, I enjoyed the number of foreigners speaking Japanese in the movie. Easier to understand and amusing. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/27/23 Full Review Read all reviews
The Most Terrible Time in My Life

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis Intrepid Japanese detective Maiku Hama is on the case in this adventure. Hama is suave, macho, and cold but he is a total klutz. His attempts at machismo always fall flat. When he's out on a case he spends more time getting beaten up than he does solving the case.
Director
Kaizô Hayashi
Producer
Kaizô Hayashi, Shunsuke Koga, Yu Wei Yen
Screenwriter
Kaizô Hayashi, Daisuke Tengan
Distributor
Tidepoint Pictures LLC
Production Co
Film Detective Office, Shutter Pictures, For Life Records
Genre
Drama
Original Language
Japanese
Release Date (Theaters)
Mar 5, 1994, Original
Runtime
1h 32m
Sound Mix
Dolby