A Saloon Wet with Beautiful Women (美女濡れ酒場, Bijo nure sakaba) is a 2002 Japanese pink film directed by Tatsurō Kashihara. It was chosen as Best Film of the year at the Pink Grand Prix ceremony. Screenwriter Tatsurō Kashihara's directorial debut, he was awarded at the Pink Grand Prix for his screenplay and as Best New Director. The film also earned Koharu Yamazaki the Best Actress award.
Suggestions of similar film to A Saloon Wet with Beautiful Women
There are 545 with the same cinematographic genres, 13610 films with the same themes (including 287 films with the same 4 themes than A Saloon Wet with Beautiful Women), to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.
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The story follows the lives of the Kazama family in Tokyo in the 30th year of the Shōwa period: 1955. The father, Ichirō, is a salaryman. His wife, Eiko, is a housewife. The daughter, Akiko, works as a clerk in a factory, and Shigeru, the son, is a college student.
A married couple enjoy engaging in S&M sexual behavior, and the wife, Yuri, asserts, "The ultimate SM play is death." After her husband dies, supposedly accidentally, Yuri is left alone, grieving and self-destructive. Her mental state deteriorates as she watches and masturbates joylessly to the home-made SM videos she made with her husband. In the film's climax, Yuri goes to a public square, nude and bound, and pleads with passing strangers to aid her masturbation.
, 55minutes Directed byToshiya Ueno GenresDrama, Pornographic ThemesSeafaring films, Films about sexuality, Transport films, Erotic films ActorsShirō Shimomoto, Hotaru Hazuki, Kazuhiro Sano Rating60% A man with a troubled past including incest with a younger sister and the murder of a woman travels to an isolated countryside town in Nagano. There a local who mistakes him for a famous television actor shows him the town's sites, including a strip bar in which the performers remove Heian era costumes. The film's narrative is in an allegorical and disjointed manner with references to Buddhist concepts. The title bears no relation to the story, and there are no masturbation scenes in the film. Loosely based on Kenji Nakagami's short story Aragami.
, 59minutes Directed byToshiki Satō GenresDrama, Pornographic ThemesSeafaring films, Films about sexuality, Transport films, Erotic films, Rail transport films ActorsHotaru Hazuki Rating56% Two men drink at a coffee shop late at night as the film recalls their recent sexual activities. The middle-aged man has just committed his first groping of a woman on a train, and the man in his mid-twenties has just broken up with his unfaithful girlfriend after forcing sex on her. The two speak to each other and the older man gradually becomes a nuisance to the younger man, intent on revealing more and more of his past. Unable to get rid of him, the younger man takes the older man on a late night motorcycle ride through Tokyo. Through a series of flashbacks, it becomes apparent to the audience that the younger man's girlfriend is having an affair with the older man.
A man travels to a countryside town seeking employment. He becomes romantically involved with a woman who cannot smile, and works for her parents' printing company. When he learns that his girlfriend in Tokyo has disappeared he returns to look for her. Screenwriter Kenji Fukuma based the script on his poetry.