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Renoir

Play trailer 1:57 Poster for Renoir May 2026 2h 2m Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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91% Tomatometer 43 Reviews Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings
Suburban Tokyo, 1987. Imaginative eleven-year-old Fuki begins her summer break lonely and adrift -- her kind, terminally ill father has landed once again in the hospital and her mother, distracted by the inevitability of his diagnosis, hasn't much time for her daughter. Fuki responds to the situation not with tears but with placid curiosity about the prospect of death -- becoming fascinated by the occult and experimenting with hypnotism. As the summer passes, Fuki encounters a string of lonely, imperfect adults, all of whom nudge her closer to an emotional truth she isn't quite ready to name yet. Chie Hayakawa's sophomore feature is a tender, often unsettling portrait of childhood grief and the sinuous imagination of an inquisitive young girl. Led by transfixing newcomer Yui Suzuki, RENOIR "delicately articulates the girl's inner child in a way that allows us to feel it expand across the season," (IndieWire) and "steps to a delicate rhythm whose echo isn't heard until the very end" (RogerEbert.com).

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Renoir

Renoir

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Critics Consensus

A restrained meditation on grief, Renoir gradually accumulates a big emotional wallop thanks in large part to Yui Susuzki's guileless performance.

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Critics Reviews

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Carlos Aguilar RogerEbert.com 2d
It's bold and admirable to make a film centered around a complicated child protagonist that doesn’t strive to appease what audiences have come to expect from these types of stories. Go to Full Review
David Ehrlich IndieWire 3d
B-
Renoir” -- with its faint traces of sentiment, and complete absence of sentimentality -- delicately articulates the girl’s inner child in a way that allows us to feel it expand across the season. Go to Full Review
Namrata Joshi The New Indian Express Jul 31
Hayakawa wins the day by casting the amazing Yui Suzuki as Fuki. She has just the perfect mix of the idiosyncratic and imaginative, innocent and vulnerable to make the inner struggles of the character strongly resonant. Go to Full Review
Brian Eggert Deep Focus Review 18h
3/4
A quiet, haunting film Go to Full Review
Al Alexander Movies Thru the Spectrum 1d
B+
It’s not a conventional watch, but it’s assuredly a rewarding one in which Hayakawa leads us into dark places, not to exploit, but to underscore the remarkable resilience of children. Go to Full Review
Jared Mobarak Hey, Have You Seen ...? 2d
7/10
So, while Renoir can feel a bit detached and confounding in parts, that’s kind of the point. It’s forcing us to feel what the characters feel. The guilt of just wanting it all to end. But also the hope that Fuki and Utako can move forward once it does. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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Stephen C @bob25009 2d Success in 2 hours and 2 minutes. See more Russell J. T @Mnbear3 Apr 17 My biggest and probably only gripe with this movie is titling it "Renoir " when in fact the only Renoir reference in this movie is a small framed portrait of Renoir that hangs in the young girl’s room. It’s quite a misleading title as it stands…. (I should explain that the local theater did not use the tile you see here with the young girl’s face …. Instead they used an impressionist wash background of blues and greens w simply " Renoir" on it….. So we thought we were going to a film about Renoir!! Took a bit of adjusting to settle into a different mindset but we did. Lesson learned: Read summaries/ reviews before booking! :) See more Read all reviews
Renoir

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Movie Info

Synopsis Suburban Tokyo, 1987. Imaginative eleven-year-old Fuki begins her summer break lonely and adrift -- her kind, terminally ill father has landed once again in the hospital and her mother, distracted by the inevitability of his diagnosis, hasn't much time for her daughter. Fuki responds to the situation not with tears but with placid curiosity about the prospect of death -- becoming fascinated by the occult and experimenting with hypnotism. As the summer passes, Fuki encounters a string of lonely, imperfect adults, all of whom nudge her closer to an emotional truth she isn't quite ready to name yet. Chie Hayakawa's sophomore feature is a tender, often unsettling portrait of childhood grief and the sinuous imagination of an inquisitive young girl. Led by transfixing newcomer Yui Suzuki, RENOIR "delicately articulates the girl's inner child in a way that allows us to feel it expand across the season," (IndieWire) and "steps to a delicate rhythm whose echo isn't heard until the very end" (RogerEbert.com).
Director
Chie Hayakawa
Producer
Eiko Mizuno Gray, Jason Gray
Screenwriter
Chie Hayakawa
Distributor
Film Movement
Production Co
Loaded Films
Genre
Drama
Original Language
Japanese
Release Date (Theaters)
May 29, 2026, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Jul 31, 2026
Runtime
2h 2m