Director : Hikari
Cinematographer : Takuro Ishizaka
Genre : Drama
Country : USA
Duration : 110 Minutes
🔸 Rental Family is a beautiful and quietly emotional film about loneliness, connection, and the strange ways people try to feel less alone. The story follows a man who becomes part of a business that rents people to act as family members for those who need emotional support. The plot is simple and unfolds gently, focusing on everyday interactions rather than big dramatic moments. It slowly shows how pretend relationships can begin to feel real, and how emotional needs are often hidden behind polite smiles.
🔸 The treatment of characters is one of the film’s greatest strengths. Every character is handled with care and respect. No one is judged or mocked for their loneliness. The film takes time to understand why people seek comfort in unusual ways. Small conversations and quiet moments carry a lot of emotional weight. The writing allows characters to feel human, fragile, and sincere. Even side characters feel meaningful, adding warmth and depth to the story.
🔸 Brendan Fraser gives a deeply moving and restrained performance. He brings kindness, sadness, and gentle humor to his role, making the character easy to care about. His performance feels honest and lived in, relying on silence and expression more than dialogue. The emotional payoff is strong without being manipulative. Rental Family is a tender and thoughtful film that reminds us how powerful simple human connection can be, even when it begins as something artificial.
Verdict: Very Good
DC Rating: 4.25/5

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