Swapping the elderly protagonist of Plan 75 for a riveting 11-year-old lead this time around, Renoir demonstrates Hayakawa’s formidable control, a fine grip over slipping, cracked emotional reality. Unfurling over the summer of 1987 in Tokyo, it trails Fuki (a revelatory Yui Suzuki, the film’s enigmatic heartbeat) as she wrestles with impending loss, grief and mortality. While her father is untethered by terminal cancer and her exhausted mother barely holding on, Fuki’s inner, imaginative world drives Renoir’s tenuous, drifting textures. Fuki is in denial over the ensuing heartbreak, retreating into all sorts of odd hobbies. Hayakawa fuses the quotidian and the slightly elevated in a riff on mourning from a child’s point of view. Renoir quietly ambushes you.