Memories Of Matsuko In-all Categ... — Searching For-

Yet when the industry changes (the arrival of HIV, economic decline), Matsuko is discarded. The category of “worker” does not protect her. The film’s critique is sharp: in Japan’s “lost decade,” categories of legitimate labor exclude those like Matsuko, whose only commodity is a body seeking love. The final third of the film belongs to no neat category. After killing her abusive boyfriend (a moment rendered as a bloody, operatic fantasy), Matsuko attempts suicide, fails, and descends into a lonely, obese, hoarding existence. Sho finds her apartment filled with garbage and one recurring inscription on the wall: “I’ll be dead soon.”

Below is a complete, original academic-style paper. Abstract Tetsuya Nakashima’s Memories of Matsuko (2006) resists linear biography, presenting its protagonist’s tragic life as a fragmented, kaleidoscopic investigation. This paper argues that the film’s structure mirrors a digital or archival “search” across multiple categories—family, romance, labor, mental health, and art—to construct a posthumous identity. By analyzing the film’s genre hybridity (musical, melodrama, horror, detective story) and its visual logic of indexing, we find that Matsuko’s tragedy lies not in a single failure but in the impossibility of any single category containing her. The paper concludes that the act of searching, rather than the destination of meaning, becomes the film’s ethical core. Searching for- Memories of Matsuko in-All Categ...

The film explicitly categorizes these men: the artist, the conman, the gangster. But Matsuko’s famous line—“I don’t care, as long as I’m not alone”—reveals that the search across romantic categories is really a search for ontological security. The tragedy is that each new category fails identically. After leaving home, Matsuko cycles through jobs: waitress, hairdresser, stripper, and finally, sex worker. The film treats labor as another search category. Significantly, her most stable period is as a “Turkish bath” prostitute (soapland), where she becomes a top earner. The visual style here is garish, neon-lit, carnivalesque—a parody of capitalist categorization. Yet when the industry changes (the arrival of