Screened as part of NZIFF 2007

The Great Happiness Space 2006

Tale of an Osaka Love Thief

Directed by Jake Clennell

Riveting doco focuses on symbiotic (and often delusional) relationships between boy-toy hosts and adoring, champagne-swilling female clients in Osaka's most popular host bar.

UK / USA In Japanese with English subtitles
76 minutes DigiBeta

Director, Photography

Editor

Hisayo Kushida

Sound

Evan Benjamin

Music

Robert Coyne

Festivals

Slamdance, Edinburgh 2006

Elsewhere

This intriguing documentary offers a rare insight into the world of Japan’s host clubs, bars in which the lonely find companionship over expensive cocktails and karaoke. The film focuses on a young male host, Issei, who runs the wildly successful and stylish Café Rakkyo in Osaka, and his clients, who are not the middle-aged businessmen (or women) of popular cliché, but young girls. These girls pay through the nose to socialise with their favourite hosts, who look like they’ve just stepped out of a New Romantic music video, circa 1984. Director Jake Clennell penetrates the superficial glamour of the milieu in a series of astonishingly candid interviews with hosts and clients, expertly juxtaposed to explore the complicated psychology of their emotional and financial transactions. The bravado with which Issei expresses himself at the beginning of the film – “once she’s in love, she’s hooked” – is steadily undercut by his own increasingly personal confessions, and by the ambivalent testimonials of his supposed love victims. From beneath the glitz, a wealth of moving personal stories emerge. — Andrew Langridge