The Contestant (2024 – Documentary) | REVIEW

Title card for THE CONTESTANT — PHOTO: Hulu / Disney (Still image from trailers).

Clair Titley’s The Contestant tells the astonishing and disturbing true story about how one man, known as Nasubi (whose real name is Tomoaki Hamatsu), was fooled into appearing on a Japanese reality television show in which he was asked to live entirely on magazine competition prizes inside of a tiny apartment after having been stripped of his clothes. He had signed no contract, didn’t know the footage was being shown to the public weekly (or that he was eventually live-streamed), and he didn’t know when (or if) it would ever end. It’s a true story that you have to see to believe as it is equal parts Peter Weir’s The Truman Show and Park Chan-wook’s Oldboy, and the doc also prominently features the infamous television producer, Toshio Tsuchiya, who essentially was a devilish or sadistic taskmaster to Nasubi. As the film laid out the story, I was again and again shocked by what happened to Nasubi and horrified by how people reacted to it. It was essentially a social experiment writ large. 

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