When Shall We Dance? came out in 1996, it offered something rare — a quiet kind of revolution shaped not by spectacle but by restraint. The romantic drama directed by Suô Masayuki is a film about movement, but not just the kind you can see. It is a study in emotional stillness, in rhythm beneath the surface, and in the quiet courage it takes to change your life one small step at a time.
Nearly 30 years after its release, Shall We Dance? remains a film that speaks softly but insists on being heard. It follows Sugiyama (Kōji Yakusho), a middle-aged salaryman who, caught in the rhythms of routine, secretly joins a ballroom dance class on a whim. There, he encounters Mai (Tamiyo Kusakari), a former competitive dancer haunted by a past injury. In taking lessons from her, he risks embarrassment, misunderstanding, and even shame — all in pursuit of something as intangible as joy. The film’s modest premise belies its emotional depth. What begins as a discreet rebellion against monotony becomes a journey of self-expression, vulnerability, and human connection.
The film resonated deeply upon its release, inspiring a 2004 Hollywood remake starring Richard Gere and Jennifer Lopez. But the original has a different pulse entirely — slower, quieter, more reflective. The newly restored version now returning to screens offers an opportunity to revisit what made it endure in the first place: its patience, honesty, and belief in the small, significant moments that shape a life.
Shall We Dance? was produced by Altamira Pictures, an independent company known for nurturing director-driven projects during a time when Japan’s commercial film industry was shifting toward more marketable fare. The film’s quiet success proved there still existed an audience for emotionally resonant, character-driven storytelling — and helped cement Suô’s reputation as a director with a singular voice.

Ahead of the theatrical release of their film’s restoration courtesy of Film Movement, speaking with Suô and Kusakari over Zoom, with Kennedy Taylor as their interpreter, I’m struck by how reflective — and even surprised — they seemed by the film’s continued life. “It’s a total surprise,” Suô says. “I only found out recently.”
After the original production company folded, the rights to Shall We Dance? became unclear. “When a company disappears,” he adds, “so does the clarity about who owns what.” The news of the restoration, he says, “floored” him.
And yet, in retrospect, there is something inevitable about the film’s endurance. From the beginning, Suô had a clear vision — one shaped not by trends but by emotional truth. When casting the female lead, he ignores Japan’s prevailing star model at the time: the girl next door.
“In those days, female stars were chosen for how relatable they were,” he says. But Suô is drawn to someone altogether different, someone removed from everyday life.”
When he meets Kusakari, a former principal ballerina, he feels an immediate sense of distance, not detachment, but presence. “There was a 15-foot force field around her,” he recalls. “In every direction.” She seems unapproachable, untouchable. Only later does he learn she is also a dancer. But even before that, he says, “I could tell.”
Their collaboration was more than artistic. Kusakari, who later became Suô’s wife, served not only as the film’s lead actress but also as its choreographer — a dual role that shaped both the emotional and physical rhythms of the story. Her performance is tightly controlled, full of silences that say more than dialogue, while her choreography reinforces the idea that dance, like emotion, builds slowly from the inside out.

Even now, decades later and speaking across a digital divide, that presence remains unmistakable. Over Zoom, Kusakari carries herself with the same stillness and steel grace that defined her performance: measured, composed, and unmistakably poised. She possesses a quiet assurance in how she speaks and a continued trust between her and Suô that’s almost palpable. When one answers, the other listens — not just politely, but attentively. The kind of trust built from creating something together and never quite letting go of it.
Kusakari, for her part, recalls being surprised by the amount of care that had gone into the film’s world. As a ballerina, she was used to seeing her art misunderstood or overly romanticized on screen. But this was different.
“Just reading the synopsis, I felt the writer must have some real knowledge,” she says. “It wasn’t the usual glamorous image — it showed discipline and structure.”
That alone told her everything she needed: this was someone who understood the world she came from. She trusted Suô immediately. On set, she says, “there was always a reason for every decision.”
Nothing felt arbitrary. She adds, “There was a clear answer behind each choice — a consistent vision.”
That vision didn’t just shape the film’s atmosphere, it carried weight in the cultural moment it was stepping into. In 1990s Japan, Suô explains, self-expression was still viewed as suspect. A cultural expectation to suffer, to endure, to overcome permeated the country. But to enjoy life without justification was seen as a kind of weakness. In that context, Shall We Dance? proved to be a revelation, offering the idea that joy was not only possible but necessary.

The film became more than an idea; it was Suô’s plea to viewers to enjoy themselves. Not recklessly, not indulgently, but fully. Gently. Choose joy as a way of honouring your humanity. And that message, he believes, still resonates, especially now. On social media, he sees the same quiet yearning: See me. Hear me. Let me feel connected to something.
Even through an interpreter, Suô’s warmth and whimsy came through clearly. He laughs often and expresses himself with his hands — open, animated gestures that give shape to his thoughts. You get the sense, listening to him, that his sensitivity is not performative. It’s foundational. He is someone who notices. Someone who listens. And he embeds that quality in every frame of his film.
There’s nothing loud about Shall We Dance?, and yet its tenderness has prevailed. It lives in scenes where movement begins haltingly, where bodies stumble before they glide. It lives in Kusakari’s poise, her stillness, and the way she holds space without saying a word. It lives in Suô’s framing — tight, thoughtful, and unflashy. Every gesture weighted with restraint but never cold. The restraint makes room for emotion to unfold.
When asked what lies at the heart of the film, Suô responds with quiet certainty: “The courage to take the first step.”
Not the leap. Not the transformation. Just the beginning. Kusakari adds, “just beyond that first step is where your dream waits.”
Shall We Dance? doesn’t rush toward a grand resolution. There’s no final flourish, no neat emotional crescendo. It moves carefully, gently, toward its heart, and stays there. It believes in quiet triumphs, in the slow kind of change that stirs just under the skin, and in the simple, radical act of choosing joy, even when it makes you look a little foolish.