Terrace House: Closing Door (Japanese: テラスハウス クロージング・ドア, Hepburn: Terasu Hausu Kurōjingu Doa) is a 2015 Japanese reality show theatrical film that acts as a continuation and ending to the Fuji Television show Terrace House: Boys × Girls Next Door.[1] It was released by Toho on February 14, 2015.[2] Tetsuya Sugaya and Seina Shimabukuro continue as residents from the show, with four new members joining them. One of whom is writing a book on Terrace House and briefly interviews previous members. Studio commentators You, Reina Triendl, Yoshimi Tokui, Azusa Babazono, Ryota Yamasato and Hiroomi Tosaka also return.
Terrace House: Closing Door | |
---|---|
テラスハウス クロージング・ドア | |
Directed by | Masato Maeda |
Production companies | Fuji Television, East Entertainment |
Distributed by | Toho |
Release date |
|
Running time | 128 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Box office | ¥1.3 billion |
Closing Door is the last installment in the Terrace House franchise before Netflix became a co-producer later in the year with Terrace House: Boys & Girls in the City.
Plot summary
editPicking up immediately from the final episode of Terrace House: Boys × Girls Next Door, Tetsuya Sugaya opens the door to move out of the house and sees Yuiko Matsukawa, who introduces herself and says she will be living there from today onward. Informing him that Terrace House is not over yet and is being turned into a movie, Yuiko convinces Tetsuya to stay a little longer. The next day Maya Izumi, a fashion design student, Jin Otabe, an editor for Quick Japan, and Keisuke Yoshino, a basketball coach, move in. Seina Shimabukuro tells her boyfriend and fellow former cast member Daiki Ito that she wants to move back into the house, and although he says he will be jealous she is living with other guys, he accepts her decision.
Jin plans to write a book on Terrace House and interviews previous former house members at various points throughout the film. First he visits Michiko Yamanaka at an exhibition for her bikini line, where he interviews her and her boyfriend Kenya Yasuda. He later interviews Chie Onuki, Masato Yukawa, who has become president of the clothing brand Alive, and Momoko Takeuchi, who has published a book. He also sees a comedy show by Ippei Shima.
Jin asks Yuiko out to eat, where they talk about what kind of guys she likes. Tetsuya also asks to meet up with Yuiko, where she feeds him. Former member Yosuke Imai visits the house and flirts with Maya, who flirts back. Tetsuya offers Yosuke the chance to stay in his place while he is away working in Bangladesh for two weeks. Tetsuya meets up with Hana Imai and Miwako Kakei to get advice on how to proceed with Yuiko. However, Yuiko reveals to Maya that she heard rumors that Tetsuya goes to hostess clubs, so her feelings have cooled off.
After he moves in, Maya asks Yosuke to take her with him on a photography trip to the ocean. Yosuke meets up with Dyki Miyagi, who got a main character acting role, and Masato Yukawa to tell them about Maya. Jin asks Yuiko out again, but she declines, before accepting when he tries again the following day. Yosuke and Maya go out to eat, and later hold hands on the beach. The day he moves out, Yosuke plays Maya a song he wrote for her. When Tetsuya returns, he asks Yuiko out, but she declines and explains it is because of his visits to hostess clubs. He later explains his actions and gives her time to reconsider. When Yuiko later accepts a date offer from Jin in front of Tetsuya, Tetsuya asks if she has reconsidered, and she agrees to go out with him again.
Tetsuya takes Yuiko to the beach and to eat ramen. She later admits to Maya that it was fun, but she was expecting a proper date and the beach ruined her new heels. Yuiko informs Jin that she is interested in going out again with Tetsuya, and therefore is not romantically interested in him. Masato goes surfing with Tetsuya with Seina tagging along to watch, after which Tetsuya says he wants to go on one last date with Yuiko as Terrace House is ending. Maya visits Yosuke at his photo exhibit before going to dinner where she tells him that while she has special feelings for him, she can not see him as a boyfriend because he was married before and has a child, which he accepts. Seina and Daiki go to dinner and then to the beach where they became a couple, which he lit with candles. There he gives her a necklace and asks her to marry him once he graduates and becomes successful, to which she says she will wait. Tetsuya takes Yuiko on a boat trip and to dinner at a fancy restaurant, where he gives her flowers and gloves. Afterwards, he confesses his love, but Yuiko tells him that she can only see Tetsuya as a boy and not a man.
Tetsuya surprises everyone by getting a buzz cut in the style he first arrived at the house with two years earlier. All the members move out of Terrace House, with Tetsuya the last to leave.
Cast
editName | Occupation | Date of birth | |
---|---|---|---|
English | Japanese | ||
Tetsuya Sugaya | 菅谷哲也 | aspiring actor | July 28, 1993 |
Yuiko Matsukawa | 松川佑依子 | office worker, gravure idol | May 6, 1990 |
Maya Izumi | 和泉真弥 | aspiring designer | September 17, 1994 |
Jin Otabe | 小田部仁 | magazine editor | November 20, 1989 |
Keisuke Yoshino | 吉野圭佑 | basketball coach | June 18, 1995 |
Seina Shimabukuro | 島袋聖南 | aspiring model | April 4, 1987 |
Soundtrack
editThe soundtrack to the film was released on February 11, 2015, by Universal Music.[3] It reached number 34 on the Oricon Albums Chart.[4]
No. | Title | Artist | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" | Taylor Swift | |
2. | "I Bet My Life" | Imagine Dragons | |
3. | "Geronimo" | Sheppard | |
4. | "Dream" | Priscilla Ahn | |
5. | "The Days" | Avicii | |
6. | "Ten Feet Tall (feat. Wrabel)" | Afrojack | |
7. | "It Don't Matter" | Donavon Frankenreiter | |
8. | "Lost in You" | Dirty Loops | |
9. | "Cleopatra" | Weezer | |
10. | "Seven Nights Seven Days" | The Fratellis | |
11. | "Santeria" | Sublime | |
12. | "Demise" | Wouter Hamel | |
13. | "Happy Christmas" | Colbie Caillat | |
14. | "Chasing Cars" | Snow Patrol |
Reception
editTerrace House: Closing Door opened at number one at the Japanese box office, grossing ¥251 million (about US$2.11 million) in two days.[1] Terrace House: Closing Door weekend advanced online ticket sales however fell by 52% from the previous weekend (160,000 ticket),[5] to disappoint 46,800 ticket in its second weekend and losing number one to American Sniper.[6] It later made ¥1.3 billion (about US$11.7 million) total.[7]
References
edit- ^ a b Kevin Ma (February 18, 2015). "Reality show dethrones Disney at Japan box office". Film Business Asia. Archived from the original on February 18, 2015. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
- ^ テラスハウス クロージング・ドア(2015). allcinema.net (in Japanese). Stingray. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
- ^ "TERRACE HOUSE TUNES - CLOSING DOOR[CD] - V.A. - UNIVERSAL MUSIC JAPAN".
- ^ "TERRACE HOUSE TUNES-CLOSING DOOR サントラ". Oricon (in Japanese). Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^ Mark Schilling (February 17, 2015). "Japan Box Office: 'Fifty Shades' Locked Out by 'Closing Door'". variety.com. Retrieved March 15, 2021.
- ^ Mark Schilling (2015-02-22). "Japan Box Office: 'Sniper' Hits Target With Top Spot". variety.com. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ "2015年(平成27年) 興行収入10億円以上番組" (PDF) (in Japanese). Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan. p. 1. Retrieved 2019-03-17.
External links
edit- Official website (in Japanese)
- Terrace House: Closing Door at IMDb