Just saw the 2021 Japanese film "
Drive My Car" in a local arthouse theater. [
trailer link (spoiler)]. It clocked in at just under 3 hours long, but it definitely used that time wisely, to make us feel the full weight of the protagonist's experience. This is not a fast paced movie. There were scenes with long soliloquies but no action. And scenes with long periods of driving with little dialog. A really interesting play-within-a-play conceit which gave a layered meaning to certain lines of dialog. Overall it was very thought provoking and highly recommended.
My companion drifted off a couple of times even though she picked the film. She did enjoy it overall, it's just that it was easy to be lulled because there were many scenes where little was happening on the surface. There were very few loud or jarring moments, period, although the few that existed were used quite effectively.
I went in completely blind to this film, not having viewed the trailer or read any reviews. So the direction the film ended up taking really surprised me. There was a long setup which seemed very conventional, even cliché. From then I was expecting nothing unusual to take place. But after getting past the prologue, at every juncture where a less-skilled script would've proceeded down a well-travelled road, this film made different choices that proved to be deeply rewarding.
I highly recommend it. It may cause you to reflect upon your own life, even.
The soundtrack by composer Eiko Ishibashi was sparse but effective.