
Marriage 2017
In Shinichi Nishitani's slick 2017 crime drama *Marriage*, smooth-talking con artist Urumi Kenji specializes in spinning golden webs around unsuspecting women, seducing them with a dazzling smile and lavish promises before draining their savings.
Director: Shinichi Nishitani
Cast








Frequently Asked Questions
What is Marriage (2017) about?
*Marriage (2017)* follows Urumi Kenji, a charming fraud who targets women with promises of a fairy-tale wedding and a life of luxury. Behind the deception, he partners with Sengoku Ruriko to orchestrate elaborate swindles, turning romantic gestures into financial traps.
Who directed Marriage?
The film was directed by Shinichi Nishitani, known for blending crime thrillers with urban noir aesthetics.
Who stars in Marriage?
The main cast includes Dean Fujioka as Urumi Kenji, Shûko, Wakana Matsumoto, Tamae Ando, and Kanji Furutachi.
Is Marriage (2017) worth watching?
While *Marriage (2017)* delivers a slick, entertaining ride through Tokyo's underbelly, its lack of IMDb rating suggests mixed critical reception. Fans of stylish crime dramas with morally gray protagonists may find it engaging, though it leans heavily on deception and dark humor.
How long is Marriage?
The film runs for 118 minutes.
About Marriage (2017) — A Stylish Tokyo Con-Artist Thriller
In Shinichi Nishitani's slick 2017 crime drama *Marriage*, smooth-talking con artist Urumi Kenji specializes in spinning golden webs around unsuspecting women, seducing them with a dazzling smile and lavish promises before draining their savings. Teaming up with the cunning Sengoku Ruriko, Kenji weaves elaborate schemes that blend romance, fine dining, and manipulation into a high-stakes game of deception. The film blends dark humor with a gritty Tokyo underworld vibe, turning luxury trappings and intimate betrayals into tools of the trade.
Set against neon-lit backdrops and dimly lit cafes, *Marriage (2017)* explores themes of trust and exploitation, where every engagement ring and candlelit dinner is a calculated move. With sharp dialogue and a morally ambiguous lead, director Nishitani crafts a stylish cat-and-mouse thriller about love turned into a lucrative illusion.