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Ryuki, a Japanese trans man who works at a Kabukichō host club, standing next to his girlfriend and looking at a fish tank. Ryuki is wearing a white jacket over a collared white shirt, has dyed blond hair, and is wearing make-up. His girlfriend is wearing a fur jacket and has long, black hair. The pair are in a dark room, lit by blue and purple and yellow lights.

The Floating World

Documentary, Interview, Short Film
2022
Japan
Ryuki, a Japanese trans man who works at a Kabukichō host club, discusses the impact of the industry on his mental health, and the mental health of his female clients.

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Available Summary:

The host clubs of Tokyo’s red-light district are a slice of the city’s entertainment industry self-described as “selling dreams”. And yet, with access to attention guaranteed behind their walls, the dreams being sold are as much part of the allure for the devoted actors keeping up the facade, as those drawn to the feelings of desirability they bring.

In immersive short The Floating World, co-directors Pablo Curto and Fernando Souza follow protagonist Ryuki as he searches to establish his identity within the realm of Tokyo’s host clubs. As a transgender man who entered the scene on a journey of self-realization – driven by the unwillingness of his family to accept his gender identity – Ryuki finds the role he is prepared to play to satiate the needs of his parents serves as training for the persona he must inhabit in his role as host...

Through personal retellings and shimmering visuals, The Floating World captures the fragile intersection between empowerment and complicit exploitation, as Ryuki’s efforts to find himself send him down a path of self-destruction. Once veiled by the promise of validation and success, the illusion that led him to find solace in the host industry fades away, and unresolved wounds and the pressure to perform force Ryuki to acknowledge the harsh realities that accompany his immersion in a world that unfolds after dark.

-Official website.


WARNINGS: Discussion of suicide, substance use, depression, sex work to pay debts, and parental transphobia.

Entry last updated:

12 Mar 2026

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