Skip to main content
Tickets Added to basket!

Tickets have been added to your basket and will be held in a basket for 10 minutes.

A family sit together at a dinner table looking to camera.
Ⓒ Moving Images Studio Zou-shima 2023

JFTFP26: What Should We Have Done?

Age Rating: tbc
Duration
1 hour 41 minutes
Language
Japanese (English subtitles)
Date
Sun 1 Mar 2026 5pm
Venue
Cinema
Accessible performances available
Grabbing available dates and times
Need to know

Tickets:

  • Peak Screenings (after 6pm) £11. Concessions £9.50.
  • Off-Peak Screenings (before 6pm) £10.50. Concessions £9.
  • Under 26s £7.50 all screenings.
  • Wednesday matinees (before 4pm) £7.50.

 

Viewer discretion is advised for all trailers 

Recommended Age:
Cert TBC

In 1983, at the age of 24, director FUJINO Tomoaki’s older sister Masako, a kind and caring person, began showing symptoms of schizophrenia. Having excelled academically, she was set to follow in her parents’ footsteps as a medical student. But her sudden outbursts — disconnected from reality and increasingly erratic — derailed those plans. 

Despite the severity of her symptoms, Masako’s parents — both highly-trained doctors and researchers — refused to acknowledge her condition. They dismissed the signs of illness, declined psychiatric treatment, and insisted that everything was normal. Troubled by their denial, Tomoaki pleaded with them to seek help, but to no avail. As the emotional strain deepened and tensions remained unresolved, he eventually left the family home, burdened by a deep and lasting inner turmoil. 

In 2001, nearly two decades later, Tomoaki, now a trained film director, decided to turn the camera on everyday moments of his family, grappling with unanswered questions and unresolved pain. Over time, as Masako’s condition worsened, Tomoaki witnessed their parents choose to lock her inside the house, securing the front door with multiple padlocks — effectively erasing her presence from public view. 

In this deeply personal and emotionally charged documentary, director FUJINO Tomoaki presents a haunting examination of family taboos, human dignity, as well as self-destruction through illness, while posing a question for which there is no correct answer.

This film is presented as part of the Japan Foundation Touring Film Programme 2026: Knowing Me, Knowing You: The True Self in Japanese Cinema. 

 

Co-presented by the Japan Foundation.

Supported by The Great Britain Sasakawa Foundation.

Sponsors in Kind: Athletia, Calbee, Clearspring, Pentel and SUQQU.

 

Accessible Performances

Sun 1 Mar 2026 5:00 pm - Subtitled
A close up of the red cinema chairs and steps

Join our Film Club!

Choose from a range of Film Club memberships for the best ticket deals and benefits and enjoy even more films and screenings.

More on Screen

Timothée Chalamet as Marty Mauser. He smiles as he talks on the phone.
Duration: 2 hours 30 minutes

Oscar nominee Timothée Chalamet (A Complete Unknown) gives a terrific performance in Josh Safdie’s (Good Time, Uncut Gems) first solo outing as director. Marty…

A father and daughter talk outside.
Duration: 2 hours 13 minutes

Following the global success of The Worst Person in the World, Oscar nominee Joachim Trier reunites with BAFTA nominee Renate Reinsve for this rich, graceful…

A woman stands at the front of a crowd at the Globe theatre.
Duration: 2 hours 6 minutes

Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley give phenomenal performances in Chloé Zhao’s overwhelmingly moving adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s acclaimed novel. Oscar-winning…