Drugstore Girl
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Drugstore Girl | |
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Directed by | Katsuhide Motoki |
Written by | Kankuro Kudo |
Produced by | Nobuyuki Tohya |
Starring | |
Release date |
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Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Drugstore Girl (ドラッグストアガール, Doraggu sutoa gaaru) is a 2004 Japanese comedy film directed by the Japanese filmmaker Katsuhide Motoki about a young student who works in a convenience store, and five middle-aged men who develop crushes on her.
The film is set in a rural town and features lacrosse prominently. The cast includes Rena Tanaka as Keiko Obayashi (the student) and Akira Emoto as Nabe-yan (the leader of the five men).
Plot
[edit]Keiko Obayashi is a third year chemistry student in Tokyo. After finding her boyfriend in the bathtub with another student, she takes a train out of Tokyo. She wakes up in rural Masao, where she soon finds a job working in a newly opened convenience store.
Meanwhile, five middle-aged men who run local shops are worried about the competition from the new store, and plan to disrupt it. However, they all fall in love with Keiko as soon as they see her inside the store.
After following her one-day, Nabe discovers that she plays lacrosse at the university. The men decide to take up lacrosse in an effort to get a date with her. The film follows them as they practice in secret, are found out by Keiko who agrees to coach them, and finally play a match against a lacrosse team from America who are attracted by the Native American nickname (Geronimo) of one of their players.
The men are heavily defeated, but Geronimo becomes a hero when he scores the team's only point, and the film ends with him flying to America with the Americans.
External links
[edit]
- 2004 films
- Films directed by Katsuhide Motoki
- 2003 films
- 2000s sports comedy films
- Films with screenplays by Kankurō Kudō
- Japanese sports comedy films
- Lacrosse films
- Films set in universities and colleges
- Films set in Tokyo
- 2003 comedy films
- 2004 comedy films
- 2000s Japanese films
- 2000s Japanese-language films
- Films scored by Yoshikazu Suo
- 2000s Japanese film stubs
- 2000s comedy film stubs