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Kamikaze Girls (2004)
Momoko is an ordinary girl, living an ordinary life. Ordinary, that is, if you define ordinary as wearing elaborate lolita dresses from the Rococo period in 18th Century France. However, when punk girl and self-styled 'Yanki' Ichiko comes calling, her days as 'ordinary' are most certainly numbered...
Momoko is an ordinary girl, living an ordinary life. Ordinary, that is, if you define ordinary as wearing elaborate lolita dresses from the Rococo period in 18th Century France. However, when punk girl and self-styled 'Yanki' Ichiko comes calling, her days as 'ordinary' are most certainly numbered...
The film's central themes revolve around personal identity, friendship, and subcultural expression, with the narrative's solution being individual connection rather than any form of political or systemic change, leading to a neutral rating.
The film features casting that is traditional for its Japanese cultural setting, without intentional race or gender swaps of roles. Its narrative primarily explores themes of individuality and friendship within Japanese subcultures, rather than engaging in explicit critiques of traditional identities or central DEI themes.
Kamikaze Girls includes Akemi, whose intense, possessive attachment to Ichigo is open to queer interpretation. This aspect is incidental to the main narrative, serving as a comedic and dramatic element without explicitly affirming or denigrating LGBTQ+ themes. The film's primary focus remains on the unique friendship between Momoko and Ichigo.
Kamikaze Girls does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The story centers on the unique friendship between two young women from different subcultures, with no narrative elements related to transgender identity or experiences.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Kamikaze Girls is a direct adaptation of Novala Takemoto's novel. All main and supporting characters maintain the same gender as established in the original source material, with no instances of a character's gender being altered for the film.
The film "Kamikaze Girls" is a Japanese production based on a Japanese novel, featuring Japanese characters portrayed by Japanese actors. There are no instances where a character canonically established as one race in the source material is portrayed on screen as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources






















