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Emotion in ‘Rental Family’ no act
Los Angeles Times
|November 24, 2025
Brendan Fraser elevates this gentle comedy about compassion for hire.
YOSHIE (Misato Morita) has hired Philip (Brendan Fraser) to fake marrying her to appease her conservative parents in “Rental Family,” directed by Hikari.
(JAMES LISLE Searchlight Pictures)
Directed by Japan's monomonikered Hikari, “Rental Family” — a beautifully moving and affably humorous story of human connection — kicks off with one funeral and culminates with another, demonstrating the evolution that our protagonist, Philip (Brendan Fraser), goes through during his personal journey between these two events.
The first funeral is a shock. Philip is a struggling actor in Tokyo, with one massively successful commercial as a toothpaste superhero mascot under his belt. His agent has booked him a gig as “Sad American,” a role he can easily play with his looming height, doleful eyes and a heart he wears on his sleeve. Late as usual, he dashes to check in for work and is shocked to stumble into a somber funeral. He's even more shocked when the formally dressed corpse starts emotionally reacting to the tearful eulogies.
The scene is a marvel of revelation and reaction from Fraser and, in fact, much of the genius of his performance in “Rental Family” comes from his reactions, especially as he discovers the weird and wonderful new job he’s landed.
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