Call Boy
Japan
1071 people rated University student Ryo Morinaka begins working at a host bar owned by Shizuka Mido. Initially embarrassed, he finds fulfillment in catering to female customers' desires, giving him a sense of purpose in life.
Drama
Romance
Cast (13)
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User Reviews
Romeo Rambuyon
11/12/2025 14:29
nice movie
WAQKq6
23/11/2025 18:17
h
Hoimonti Yasmin
13/09/2025 15:29
I couldn't find any point of the movie! all I saw was sex and the pathetic stories of old women; even at last the bar lady got out of the jail then the same thing was gonna happen! this movie left me clueless, I'm still wondering why everyone's leaving such good comments! like I couldn't even see anything else? did my taste got so bad? I've watched countless dramas & movies & I know how and what to judge. then why others r making so fuss?
kla cla
11/08/2025 22:06
highly recommend 😍
Iamyoudxddy🤭👿❤️
20/10/2024 03:21
Call Boy_360P
Dre lovie Sleek
09/07/2024 06:56
k
316_D3MY
08/07/2024 23:18
...
Arf Yldrım
10/04/2024 09:30
Such a lovely movie, with wonderful characters and an intrigueing story. Great work in making this movie. Good acting, producing, directing. All good.
Aaron Soprano Ehumbo
10/04/2024 09:30
The strength of the film, and what makes this an excellent watch, is its unique elegant style.
How can you make a depressing and sexually intense film stand out? Throw in a superb jazz soundtrack!
user4043635168939
10/04/2024 09:30
Ryo finds women to be dull and his life to be pointless. He has boring encounters with girls, refuses to engage with them, then stalks off to his part time job at a bar. One night, his colleague brings in a mysterious middle-aged woman who is as taken with him as he is intrigued by her. Mido-san runs a prestigious male escort club and wants Ryo to try out. Almost failing the first test, she takes him on and he begins his work as a male escort.
"Call Boy" is a fascinating look at sex and gender roles in a country where sex mostly caters to men. Women, so often overlooked in Japan, are rarely allowed to say their desire aloud, lest they appear to be loose. Sex in the media for women is often traumatic or sees many women sharing one man. Here, director Daisuke Mimura gives respect and wonder to women of all ages and desires. Ryo, a blank canvass of immature ignorance and apprehension, is our gorgeous, dreamy pair of eyes and our own escort through this unexplored part of femininity. Each scene so explicitly laid out, taking time from the first kiss to the final throes, the mess and the beauty. Each female autonomous and self-realised, making demands to increase their pleasure in the moment, or educate Ryo to be a better lover.
The movie is shocking. Frank in its depiction of sex in a country where fantasy is favoured over realism, the roots of the movie (a novel from 2001 and stage play in 2016) are on show throughout. The hazy, dreamlike hues of darkened bedrooms where light slips in just a crack, or the stuffy, dim banality of a love hotel in Shinjuku beautifully bounce light off of bodies while various fevered jazz and instrumental music riffs in the background. Mimura refuses to turn away from desire and why should he? His cast give their all to bring the sexual desires of women legitimacy.
Tori Matsuzaka, who plays Ryo, is undeniably beautiful. His blank stares giving way to eager understanding, his body lithe and vibrant. As he learns about the women who pay him, he learns about his own wants. The cold, indifferent mask slipping to show warmth and kindness. Sei Matobu, as the leader of the agency, gives a good, conflicted performance of refrained desire and mothering love. The various women Ryo encounters each offering different facets of modern Japanese women.
While the film is erotic, steamy and made me blush throughout, it also deserves to be seen for its efforts to bring light to something so long ignored in Japan. It is also a heady mix of subdued colour palettes, bold cinematography and fine acting from its multigenerational cast. Definitely recommend.