Japanese authorHaruki Murakamihas established himself as one of the world’s biggest literary giants in the past couple of decades. Murakami is a bestselling author globally, but some awards, like the Nobel Prize, have been considered his for the taking for years now — he has notmanaged to nabthe Nobel Prize for Literature yet. Regardless, he has helped bring Japanese literature to the forefront of mainstream literary publishing, helping pave the way for other contemporary authors such as Sayaka Murata and Mieko Kawakami.

Murakami’s work is a master look at surrealism, precise wording and imagery, and adeparture from traditional Japanese literary styles. He looks to Western literature for inspiration, weaving in jazz and pop culture references to create a specific ambiance that sucks the reader into its world even if Japanese society was completely unfamiliar to them beforehand. When translated into the film world, a movie based on Murakami seeps with his unique energy and modes of characterization.Books being turned into moviesmay draw a sigh of disappoint, but not with Murakami. In fact,director Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s latest movieDrive My Caris the most recent adaptation of Murakami’s work and, with itsmultiple Academy Award nominations, arguably the most successful. That being said, here are the best movie based on Haruki Murakami’s books.

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Related:Drive My Car to Premiere on HBO Max Before the Academy Awards

6A Girl, She is 100%

A Girl, She is 100%is a short film, but despite its run time, it still is captivating. The film is based on Murakami’s short story “On Seeing the 100% Perfect Girl One Beautiful April Morning,” which appeared in his collectionThe Elephant Vanishes. The story tells the perspective of a young man who walks past the 100% girl of his dreams, a girl that looks and seems perfect for him. This film was Yamakawa’s second adaption of a Murakami short story — previously, they had done a short film titledAttack on a Bakery— and it plays upon the theme of love at first glance. It is complete with the music, fashion, filmmaking decisions, and aesthetics used to draw out the story’s themes and motifs, makingA Girl, She is 100%a faithful adaptation to the original.

5Hear the Wind Sing

Released in 1981,Hear the Wind Singwas adapted from Murakami’s first novel to be published. Like the youthful sense its author had at publication, its characters embody the youths working and living in the city of Kobe. One could argue that Murakami’s novel lacks a sense of direction, that it tends to ramble on the page, but the film manages to lure in the viewers through the nostalgia seeping through its scenes and the playful nature of being young. The main character has returned to his hometown for summer break while studying at a university in Tokyo, and this feeling of being at home and a young adult adds a sense of charm.

4Tony Takitani

One of Murakami’s signature character traits is a deep loneliness that permeates every part of a character’s life.Tony Takitaniis one of the earlier adaptations of his work, one that brings one of these characters to life in a way pivotal to the movie’s story. Tony Takitani is ostracized by society due to his English name, leading him down a lonely lifestyle where he never truly fits into Japanese society. The story depicts a series of vignettes where he falls in love for the first time with his wife, and, despite how smitten he is, there is a massive fear inside him that one day she will disappear, and he will be lonely once more.

3Norwegian Wood

Norwegian Woodwas directed by Vietnamese director Tran Ahn Hung, who was making his first film in Japanese. Toru Watanabe is a young man studying at a university in Tokyo, mocks his roommate, and has just lost his best friend from home due to suicide. Watanabe then enters a love triangle between his dead best friend’s girlfriend (Rinko Kikuchi) and a classmate (Kiko Mizuhara).Norwegian Woodis a story of loss, sexuality, and redemption set in 1960s Tokyo, a period where students were beginning to rebel against the traditional, strict standards the older generation had imposed upon them.

South Korean director Lee Chang-dong is one of the most prolific filmmakers in South Korea. His 2018 filmBurning, adapted from Haruki Murakami’s short story “Barn Burning,” was the first Korean film to be named to the Oscar shortlist. This is a feat surpassed with the release ofBong Joon-ho’sParasite. Burningalso won the FIPRESCI International Critics’ Prize at Cannes Film Festival.Burningevokes the sensations and colors that one would imagine are associated with Murakami’s literary work. From a smoky sunset with a girl dancing in front of it to literal barns burning in the Korean countryside, this is a movie that morphs and mutates as its mystery slowly reveals itself.

Man and woman sit next to each other with sandwiches in their hands.

Related:Best South Korean Films of the 2000s, Ranked

1Drive My Car

Ryusuke Hamaguchi’sDrive My Carbecame the first Japanese film nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars. It had many other nominations too: Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, andBest International Feature Film. The movie was adapted from the short story of the same name, “Drive My Car,” which appeared in Murakami’s short story collectionMen Without Women. A theater director (Hidetoshi Nishijima) copes with the death of his wife as he directs a new play in Hiroshima. The theater assigns him a chauffeur, an unassuming woman that doesn’t speak much.Drive My Caris one of the finest Murakami pieces to be brought to life.

Man sits alone at desk.

Man and woman kiss while sitting in forest.

Topless woman dances in sunset, hands outstretched above her head.