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View Full Version : JAPAN CUTS July 10- 21, 2023. REVIEWS



Chris Knipp
06-16-2024, 08:50 PM
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JAPAN CUTS July 10-21, 2024. REVIEWS

GENERAL FILM FORUM (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5482-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10%9721-2024&p=41897#post41897)

LINKS TO THE REVIEWS
All the Long Nights (Shô Miyake 2024) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-[B] ]REVIEWS&p=41899#post41899)
August in the Water (Gakuryü Ishii 1995) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41915#post41915)
The Box Man (Gakuryü Ishii 2024) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41902#post41902)
CHa-Cha (Mai Sakai 2024) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41921#post41921)
Choke (Gen Nagao 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41919#post41919)
Following the Sound (Kiyoshi Sugita 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41908#post41908)
Great Absence (Kei Chika-ura 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41929#post41929)
Kubi (Takeshi Kitano 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41905#post41905)
Kyrie (Shunji Iwai 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41917#post41917)
Look Back (Kyotaka Oshiyama 2024) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41931#post41931)
Mermaid Legend (Toshiharu Idede 1984) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41904#post41904)
Moving (Shinji Sômai 1993) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41910#post41910)
Performing Kaoru's Funeral (Noriko Yuasa 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41909#post41909)
Rei (Toshihiko Tanaka 2024) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41912#post41912)
Retake (Kota Nakano 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41918#post41918)
Sayonara, Girls. (Shun Nakagawa 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41913#post41913)
Shadow of Fire (Shin'ya Tsukamoto 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41926#post41926)
Six Singing Girls (Yoshimasa Ishibashi 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41901#post41901)
Whale Bones (Takamasa Oe 2023) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41900#post41900)

Chris Knipp
06-17-2024, 10:17 AM
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HOKUTO MATSUMURA, MONE KAMISHIRAISHI IN ALL THE LONG NIGHTS

SHÔ MIYAKE: ALL THE LONG NIGHTS (2024)

Faulty earthlings look to the stars

One thing this film is is kind and gentle, and sui generis. Based on Maiko Seo’s novel of the same name, it focuses on two young people who both have problems, and both wind up working at the same little business, Kurita Science Corp., with a team in the Japanese style like a family almost, that produces and packages scientific tools for young people, especially microscopes. She, Misa Fujisawa (Mone Kamishiraishi) comes first, and suffers from bad PMS, Pre-Mensrual Syndrome, that causes her to break out in violent angry outbursts, one of which so much embarrasses her, she quits her fancy corporate job (which looks horribly boring anyway). He, Takatoshi Yamazoe, known throughout simply as Yamazoe (Hokuto Matsumura) has left his previous job for a similar reason: for the past two years he has had panic attacks, and he has had one at work that lost him his job.

He now cannot take a subway or bus or get a haircut or do a number of other things, and his attacks are terrifying, unpredictable, and have left this young, attractive man feeling generally angry and hopeless. He does not want to die, but he sees no pleasure in living.

These two actors, Matsumura and Kamishiraishi, have already played a couple in a TV series, and she is cute and winsome and he is handsome and they might look good together, but Miyake doesn't have romance in mind for them this time. Mark Schilling in his admiring Japan Times review (https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2024/02/22/film/all-the-long-nights/) says Miyake's film avoids the "usual medical melodrama stereotypes" and "creates a mood of radiant warmth and, finally, joy." Rory O'Connor in The Film Stage (https://thefilmstage.com/all-the-long-nights-review-with-stargazing-melodrama-sho-miyake-confirms-his-hushed-unhurried-style/) commends Miyake's "hushed unhurried stye" in the film. At times it felt a little too hushed and unhurried for me.

But it has its redeeming moments. It's interesting how Fujisawa's angry outbursts are handled. Yamazoe only has one big panic attack, indeed horrifying, but it is almost as impressive and interesting to see him just try to board a subway train. This comes after a trip with his (very pretty) girlfriend to the rather obnoxious and self-important woman specialist he consults with for his problem (she says, not very encouragingly, that it may take ten years for him to grow out of it). He says he will board the train, but he just stands there and then collapses in a heap by a wall afterwards, hopeless.

But there are also moments, both brief and extended, of pure charm. One is the occasion when Fujisawa comes to Yamazoe's apartment to give him a haircut. The Kurita Science Corp. annually gives a planetarium presentation and this approach to the stars and the universe provides both a climax and an activity that joins Fujisawa and Yamazoe. He does most of the writing of the program and she performs it, but the content relies a lot on notes and papers left by the dead brother of the company boss. He figures earlier in attending a grief circle - yet another strand Miyake takes up, and incidentally the ever-present Japanese issue of suicide is gently touched on.

Schilling writes that the film "ambles along without dramatic romantic declarations or floods of tears, while deepening our affection for the central characters." It goes in those other directions, too, and winds up being indefinable and so ambling and low-key there are times when seems to totally lack a pulse. But it has something to teach us, certainly, and in a gentle way.

All the Long Nights 夜明けのすべて /Yoake_no_Subete, 119 mins. debuted at the Berlinale Feb. 21, 2024, also showing at Hong Kong, Vienna, Beijing, and several other festivals. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 edition of Japan Cuts (New York, July 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-18-2024, 12:01 AM
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MOTOKO OCHIAI IN WHALE BONES

TAKEMASA OE: WHALE BONES (2023)

Down the rabbit hole of social apps in search of a beautiful teenage temptress

It marks the first project from the Japanese filmmaker since Drive My Car, which he wrote alongside director Ryusuke Hamaguchi. Oe also served as chief assistant director on Drive My Car, which won best screenplay at Cannes in 2021 and best international feature film at the Academy Awards. The success of that film, Oe has said, gave him the chance, with his cowriter Kaito Kikuchi, to make Whale Bones, a project he had been trying to get off the ground for a decade - and to do it in his own way, without trying to make a popular film. Apropos of modern technology, Oe says that the film’s eerie soundtrack, composed by Takuma Watanabe, features motifs written by AI that were then refined by Watanabe.

"It created an indescribably strange feeling," says Oe. "To me, it felt like a combination of digital and analogue, something that sounded like it came from the depths of the sea. It added a lot to the film."

Whale Bones explores the world of social apps as it enters into unhealthy, deeply involving night time gatherings where lonely people hover in the limbo of collective isolation, standing motionless or rushing around in groups draped in blue plastic capes. The effect is like a Japanese version of a Black Mirror episode, part sci-fi horror, part social study.

Mamiya (Motoki Ochiai) gets dumped by his girlfriend, and a male friend suggests he try a social app to find compensation. This leads him to meet Aska (Ano - Oshi no Ko), a beautiful, and mature looking high school girl, dressed to the nines. He takes her to bed but then emerging from the bathroom finds her unconscious, apparently dead, with a creepy note beside her to enjoy her body while it is still warm.

He is obviously screwed. Japanese justice is not forgiving. He has no recourse but to get rid of the body. But while he's trying to do so, the body disappears.

Why should this lead to a lot more involvement in social apps? Because Oe's and Kikuchi's story requires it, of course. The lead actor Motoko Ochiai, is interesting. In rumpled clothes, with a cowl of hair, he looks like an aging, scruffy boy, perpetually troubled, yet remote. We study his face looking for secrets. Oe has said his character is "simultaneously a perpetrator, a victim, and a witness." The several immaculate, beautiful young women he encounters (another is played by Ayaka Ônishi) are sirens, temptresses. This is today's version of the mad lover, the Majnun Layla, wandering hopelessly in search of his inaccessible Beatrice, his Laura, his Hind.

Oe has said in an interview that he had three hours or more of material but realized this was "genre" and therefore should be eighty minutes, and came up with eighty-eight. Fair enough; but the trim run-time does not keep the action from seeming long, because it is both dreary and confusing. Nonetheless there is probably material for a good Black Mirror episode in here somewhere. Not personally a big fan of Drive My Car, I'm under the impression that Oe and Hamaguchi could both use more stringent editing, despite the international accolades for their undeniable originality. But Oe knows his social/dating apps and then some, and knows how to go down the rabbit hole of obsession and desire with them.

Whale Bones 鯨の骨), 88 mins., debuted Jul. 3, 2023 at Bucheon (Fantastic Film Festival, S. Korea). It was screened for this review as part of the 2024 edition of New York's Japan Cuts (Jul.10-21).

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ANO AND MOTOKO OCHIAI IN WHALE BONES

Chris Knipp
06-18-2024, 06:07 PM
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TAKAYUKI YAMADA, YUTAKA TAKENOUCHI IN SIX SINGING GIRLS

YOSHIMASA ISHIBASHI: SIX SINGING GIRLS (2023)

Two city men trapped by female woodland sprites

Moriichiro Kayashima (Yutaka Takenouchi) is currently working as a photographer in Tokyo, but he returnls to his family home deep in the mountains to sell and organize the mountain and family home that his father, whom he has not seen since the age of four, has left him upon dying.

After the car Uwajima is driving gets into an accident, he ends up lost in a village inhabited by strange women. Ryo Uwajima (Takayuki Yamada) is a subcontractor for a Tokyo developer who is trying to take over Kayashima's father's land formerly belonging to the father of Shin Kayashima (Yutaka Taknouchi) by forceful means. Uwaijima and Kayashima get lost in the village after Uwajima 's car crashes while giving Kayishima a ride back to Tokyo.

The main action midway is a prolonged sequence in which the six attractive women, who appear wild and mute, torment the two men in various ways, ritually, sometimes helped by small boys. It may help to know that Ishibashi is known, according to Wikipedia, as a "Japanese video, experimental film and performance artist." The women's activities and rituals are performances.

Initially the two men are frightened, horrified, and seek to escape, but they seem gradually drawn to the pure beauty of the women, who are at one with nature, or at least Kawashima is. Uwajima is attracted to one attractive girl and steps into forbidden territory. The six girls are seem as incarnations of catfish, pit vipers, owls, dormice, bees, plants, and other creatures of nature disguised as humans.They serve food made from bugs and worms. What they want from the men other than to tease or torment them may be unclear.

This film is unlisted on IMDb, but Japanese Wikipedia's article (https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%94%84%E3%81%86%E5%85%AD%E4%BA%BA%E3%81%AE%E5%A 5%B3) on it actually lists the six women:
"Six Women," the "beautiful and strange women who imprison Kayashima and Uwajima." They are: (1) Stinging woman/the bee (Asami Mizukawa), "a woman with a cool vibe"; (2) Wet Woman/Catfish (Aoi Yamada), "a woman with a bewitching aura"; (3) Scattering Woman/Fern (Kisaki Hattori), "a woman with a mysterious aura"; (4) Woman Baring Her Fangs/Mamushi (Minori Hagiwara), "a woman with a combative vibe"; (5) Gazing Woman/Owl (Momoka), "a woman with a quiet demeanor"; and (6) Enveloping Woman/Doormouse (Rena Takeda), "a woman with a gentle personality."

In her Screen Anarchy review (https://screenanarchy.com/2023/10/montreal-nouveau-2023-review-the-six-singing-women.html), Shelagh Rowan-Legg offers an interpretation of Ishibashi's film that may be obvious, though the filmmaker's embodiment of these ideas may not be as convincing as it sounds: he is invoking a familiar folkloric idea in many cultures that there are spirits in nature that act as "protectors of forests, rivers, animals, and really, anything on which humans might prey and inflict harm," which. "humans have sadly done for a long time." This time an unscrupulous real estate agent is acquiring land for a nuclear radiation disposal plant where there happens to be an earthquake fault line. Six Singinng Girls is "part comedy, part fantasy, part eco-thriller" in which "Ishibashi is covering a lot of territory to fully explore the space, as it were, of a layered and complex story." But his execution is "perhaps not always successful."

This is indeed true, and can be traced to the mixture of genres Rowan-Legg lists, which leads to wildly uneven tone. And the action is only superficially coherent. This ultimately may be due to the filmmaker's background in experimental film and performance art. What works before a live audience doesn't necessarily work cinematically, on screen. But those who are looking for a Midsummer NIght's Dream kind of festive comedy may find satisfaction here, nonetheless. Seeing the fight to protect the natural environment as a life and death struggle, as the film does as it approaches its finale, is touching, and true.

Six Singing Girls aka The Six Singing Women 唄う六人の女, 112 mins., according to Japanese Wikipedia (https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%94%84%E3%81%86%E5%85%AD%E4%BA%BA%E3%81%AE%E5%A 5%B3) opened Oct. 27, 2023. It was screened for this review as part of Japan Cuts 2024.

Chris Knipp
06-19-2024, 12:01 AM
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STILL FROM THE BOX MAN

GAKURYÜ ISHII: THE BOX MAN (2024) JAPAN CUTS (July 10-21, 2024)

Shedding identity to live inside a cardboard box: Ishii attempts to film an avant-garde novel

Based on the novel of Kobo Abe. In black and white, with clamorous, then tinkly and delicate, score. Set in 1973, announced in English. The Box Man follows an unnamed man, and then a rival, who would give up his identity to live with a large cardboard box over his head, encountering a range of characters as he wanders the streets of Tokyo.

A description of the Abe novel is given in the original December 1974 New York Times review (https://www.nytimes.com/1974/12/08/archives/the-box-man-by-kobo-abe-translated-by-e-dale-saunders-illustrated.html) of it by Jerome Charyn. The book sounds potentially more interesting, thought-provoking, and evocative than the film. Perhaps this is inevitable because it's just that, as had been said, the novel's material is unfilmable, and Ishii has necessarily failed to film it adequately. But he might have stuck closer to the material.

You might consider in the Japanese context the relation between this idea of confining oneself to a cardboard box and the "Hikikomori," Japanese young people who go into extreme social withdrawal within their parental home, who may by now comprise 2% of the total population.

From Eric Rowe on Letterboxd (https://letterboxd.com/film/the-box-man-2024/): "Life is a continual struggle, boxing oneself off from the world only leads to decay and eventual ruin. What starts out as what one could describe as punk rock nihilistic rumination on societal rot becomes a transcendental story of self and the nature of being. Deftly balances it's absurdist comedic sensibilities with what is ultimately a film with more profound philosophical intentions. I'm not sure anyone but Ishii could pull something off quite like this, his frenetic cinematic style of his early films infused with the transcendental qualities of his very best work. A metaphysical tale -- Be open to experience, consciousness itself is shaped by everything and everyone around you -- our souls are malleable."

The box man is an idea of someone who relinquishes his identity inside an anonymous covering. It's not a practical working-out of what it would actually be like to live inside a box. Sleeping in a box is another thing entirely. Jean-Michel Basquiat reportedly did that for a brief while when he first ran away to live in Manhattan and be an aritst. When it was daytime he was out and about in New York City. At night when he wanted to sleep he climbed inside (or under?) a big cardboard box. But living in a box, or wearing a box, are different ideas, and just ideas, which works well in a fantastic, speculative novel, but is harder to make into a film. It is a meditation on identity, on the escape from society, and also on writing, because the box man keeps a constant journal from his hidden vantage point inside the box. He is as much an observer as an outlaw.

Some will watch Gakuryü Ishiii's film simply out of an interest in Japanese avant-garde filmmaking. Letterboxd contributor Shookone suggests the film is as if "kafka gets shown a random Marvel film and then has 30 mins. to write a Japanese version of it right out of his grave" and suggests Tarantino might approve. A festival blurb writer calls the film "an appropriately frenetic production chiseled with the punk ethos of Ishii’s early work," so a knowledge of that work might add to the pleasure of watching.

In the film Masatoshi Nagase stars as Myself, a photographer who becomes enraptured by the sight of a box man; however, he quickly falls into the self-fulfilled prophecy dictated by the doctrine of the box man: "Those who obsess over the box man become the box man," and so he starts trying out the role, hanging out inside a big card board box with an observation rectangle neatly cut at head height. For a while he is in his big studio playing around with a nude model, Yoko (Anana Shiramoto). This segment feels a bit like self-indulgent voyeuristic softcore porn, and not particularly "meta" or evocative of the "nouveau roman" with which the book is associated. But later there will be the duel of the two rival box men, one of whom calls the other a fraud (the fake doctor, Tadanobu Asano). At times it is all absurd and funny and mostly it is thoughtful, and it provides a wealth of illustrative cinematic imagery for the labyrinths of identity and self-concealment. The Box Man eventually becomes, if you are patient with its meanderings, an interesting film.

The Box Man 箱男, 120 mins., debuted at the Berlinale Feb. 17, 2024, opening in Japan Aug. 23, 2024. Screened for this review as part of the Japan Cuts festival Jul. 10-21, 2024 in New York.

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GAKURYÜ ISHII

Chris Knipp
06-19-2024, 05:40 PM
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MARI SHIRATO IN MERMAID LEGEND

TOSHIHARU IKEDA: MERMAID LEGEND (1984) (JAPAN CUTS: CLASSICS)

Diver superwoman avenger

This strange, crude, naive, but powerful film from the Eighties, some of whose action is jaw-dropping, comes out of an impulse still found today in Japanese movies. We see it in the current Japan Cuts feature, Yoshimasa Ishibashi's Six Singing Girls, where beautiful folkloric women, spirits of nature and its protectors apparently, wreck vengeance on an unscrupulous real estate agent who is acquiring land for a nuclear radiation disposal plant where there happens to be an earthquake fault line. This time all focus is on one woman, Migiwa Saeki (Mari Shirato), who is an ama (海女) – a sea-diving fisherwoman. These women, whose practice goes as far back as the Heian period, used to wear only a loin cloth but in modern times are geared all in white and dive without technical gear or oxygen for pearls or food, are natural superwomen. It's only a step to turn one of them into an avenging angel.

In this small fishing hamlet, Migiwa Saeki dives for tuna while her young husband Keisuke (Jun Etô), with whom she constantly squabbles, mans the boat and she is completely dependent on him to pull her up when she runs short of vreath and tugs on the rope. And then one day he is killed and she sees his dead body with a knife in it floating down to the ocean's floor where she is diving. Trying to escape, she is shot in the arm with a harpoon gun. She becomes a fugitive when she learns from a crooked cop that she will be accused of murdering her husband if she stays around.

The region is dominated by Mr. Miyamoto (Kentarô Shimizu), an evil businessman seeking to acquire all of the land around. His transparent pretense is to build an amusement park, but his real plan is to drive out the locals and build a nuclear power plant. He has already bought the cooperation of the local power authority, police, and mayor.

The fishermen have been getting murdered, and Keisuke has witnessed one of these, the reason for his being offed. Migiwa passes out but washes ashore. It soon becomes evident that she is indestructible, indeed a superwoman diver avenging angel more suitable to a comic strip or graphic novel than a movie.

Photographer Shohei (Kentarô Shimizu), one of Keisuke's friends / drinking buddies and, incidentally also Mr. Miyamoto's son, becomes an ally to Migiwa, though his ulterior motive is sexual: Migiwa is beautiful as well as powerful, athletic, and exuding an aura of desirability and omnipotence. Shohei will get his when he oversteps his bounds and sexually attacks Migiwa in an extraordinarily crude way after he has helped Migiwa escape to Watakano Island.

This island, which is mostly populated by women, has no law enforcement and is unpopulated except for a brothel catering to mostly wealthy clientele. Migiwa is taken to the brothel run by Natsuko (Junko Miyashita), who agrees to give her shelter as a favor to Shohei, and is given a room where she's able to recuperate from her injuries and gears up for her revenge streak.

Miyamoto stages a celebratory banquet on the island at the brothel where Migiwa agrees to serve. There she connects with Miyamoto's chief yakuza, who tells her why her husband was killed and then brutally rapes her, with bloody consequences for him - the beginning of her revenge spree.

Mermaid Legend is nothing if not unsubtle. Migiwa's revenge attacks are marked by rivers of gushing blood, which gives off a loud hissing sound as it pours all over her and everything around. Toward the end of the movie Migiwa faces off crowds of evil men where, as in a traditional action film, she repels them one by one no matter how numerous they are in attacking her.

"Incurring a siren’s sanguinary wrath—one which can only be described as a sheer force of nature—" the blurb says, "the elegiac Mermaid Legend is a brooding requiem for loss, a cautionary parable for man’s true acquiescence to the natural world." Well, it would be those things if it were a different, subtler film. But it has in its favor the compelling and committed performance and physical impressiveness of compelling central performance from Mari Shirato, and the professionalism of Toshiyuki Honda's score and Yonezô Maeda's cinematography.

Mermaid Legend人魚伝説 (Ningyo Densetsu), 110 min., at the sixth Yokohama festival (1985) won three awards; Oct. 15, 2011 (Kawasaki Shinyuri festival); screened for this review as part of the 2024 Japan Cuts series (Jul. 10-210.

Chris Knipp
06-19-2024, 05:49 PM
TAKESHI KITANO: KUBI (2023)

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A LAKE OF COSTUMED CORPSES IN KUBI

Kitano returns to the screen with a wildly violent samurai drama that is eye-popping but hard to follow

Siddlant Adlakha's review of this film for IndieWire (https://www.indiewire.com/criticism/movies/kubi-review-takeshi-kitano-1234864877/), published for its Cannes Premieres release, is hard to beat. He praises the film, but points out that its complications drag the viewer down. It's odd, or interesting, for its "queer" aspect: it seems there is information that now can be revealed that samurais had a gay streak, and there are some messy wet male kisses. It's not clear that this adds anything.

Adlakha notes that in 1993, when Akira Kurosawa was still around, he remarked that when Kitano made a samurai film it would "surely rival" his own Saven Samurai, and this is very much not true; all we can say, as Adlakha does, is that Kubi "is not entirely without merit." But in this genre a miss is as good as a mile, and we are sorely in need of another truly great historical Japanese action film where the violence is exciting and stirring and also fully makes sense within a clear and compelling dramatic structure.

All we can say here is that the action is frequently bloody, including a knife-twisting, bloody gay kiss, and that there are many, many beheadings, probably a record number, with the full-on knife-in-the-neck shot and the head falling down off the shoulders, over and over. Oda Nobunaga (Kase Ryo) is shohwn as the first great unifier of Japan, as he has been before, and he is hunting down his rebellious vassal Murashige Araki (Endo Kenichi), helped by the "diligent, straightforward" (Adlakha's words) Akechi Mitsuhide (Nishijima Hidetoshi) and the more laid back Toyotomi Hideyoshi (Kitano himself). These three are involved in some kind of gay love triangle. Again it is not clear this adds anything. It would require a better director and a better film (and probably a lot of historical invention) to make it seem compelling and central.

The IndieWirereview summarizes that Kubi "isn’t so much about queering samurai ambition as it is about likening it to a sexual urge," but this is a distinction I'm not sure I grasp. Mostly the movie is about wanton violence, at which Kitano excels. It works better in his gangster movies where it is a kind of shock and shtick. Here is is a reminder that a better grasp of the historical context is lacking that would make a good film. IndieWire gives Kubi (which means "neck" but also "neck bag," a thing to carry severed heads as evidence) a "C+." Enough said.

Kubi, 131 mins., debuted in Premieres at Cannes 2023, also Philadelphia, Tokyo, Taipei, Torino, and Macao International Queer Film Festival. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 Japan Cuts series, Jul. 10-21, in New York.

Chris Knipp
06-20-2024, 01:50 PM
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SADAO YAMANAKA (IN HEAD SCARF), SUPERVISES SHOOT IN NEZUMKOZO JIROKICHI

RINTARO: NEZUMKOZO JIROKICHI (2023)

Homage to a pioneer Japanese animator

A famous contemporary Japanese animator, Rintaro, was in charge of this homage to the pioneering 1930's director Sadao Yamanaka and his Nazumikozo Jirokichi. The whole film runs only 24 minutes, and is in blue and gray monochrome. Yamanaka did not reach the age of thirty, and only three of his works survive, but his influence is recognized in a country famous for its animations. This attempts to recapture one of the early master's lost films, for which scripts remain, a tale of a famous, virtuous bandit in old Edo. The new production is a collective effort involving not only Rintaro but also Katsuhiro Otomo (Akira, Memories), Taro Maki (Pluto, Millennium Actress) and Masao Maruyama (Ninja Scroll, Perfect Blue).

The thing here is to simulate a silent film, because Yamanaka lived in the silent era, which incidentally lasted longer in Japan due to the highly developed system of performed sound for films which audience and practitioners were reluctant to relinqish. Nonetheless there is plenty of sound - but with panels simulating those accompanying silent films.

The little animation, about the failed attempt to entrap a famous thief known as "The Rat," is not so important. What matters is the story of early Japanese animation.

Naumikozo Jirokichi, 24 mins., was screened for this review as part of the 2024 Japan Cuts series.

Chris Knipp
06-20-2024, 01:51 PM
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TETSUY CHIHARA: ICE CREAM FEVER (2023)

A playful, inventively told tale of women that revolves around an ice cream shop

Adapted from a short story by award-winning author Mieko Kawakami, this is a tale of four women and begins in a delicate and playful manner, experimenting with pastel imagery, blurry and jiggly handheld camera images, and extreme closeups. Natsumi Tokita (Riho Yoshioka), a budding designer in a rut working part-time at the shop, becomes entranced by Saho Hashimoto (Serena Motola), a new customer, reserved, confident, dressed in black, whom Natsumi becomes fascinated with. She will turn out to be an initially feted novelist now struggling with a four-year writer’s block. Meanwhile, frequent customer Yû Takashima (Marika Matsumoto), who frequents a public bath (sentō) that she will later think of taking over, is surprised by a visit from her teenage niece Miwa (Kotona Minami), who has come to Tokyo in search of her estranged father—Yu’s ex and a source of resentment between Yû and her studious sister Ai (Yumi Adachi) Miwa’s mother. These darker, more serious elements are tempered by the pastel brightness and good cheer of the ice cream shop, where a women comes in pushing a stroller loaded with little twin girls, and the background features a jazzed-up, speeded-up version of Beethoven's Fifth.

Also working in the shop is Utaha (musician Wednesday Campanella), who is small and dresses like a punk schoolgirl. This film, which announces "This is not a film" before it begins, skips around playfully among its various young women. As Emily Jisoo Bowles puts it in her Eastern Kicks (https://www.easternkicks.com/reviews/ice-cream-fever/) review, which sees Sofia Coppola as an influence on the highly visual style, ice cream is "the sweetly sticky glue that connects the narratives." More importantly, the bright little ice cream shop sets a confidently cheery tone that also binds lives and events in the face of life's grimness - and the dominance of men. There are more women, who Bowles points out are "underused"; it's hard to keep track of them, especially since IMDb's cast list is inaccurate.

The four main women are chasing 小確幸 (Shōkakkō), Bowles suggests, using the term "coined by the Japanese novelist Murakami, which translates to 'a small but definite happiness,'" and for which ice cream and the ice cream shop no doubt are a metaphor. She further comments on the editing that its "playfully irreverent use" works like "a pink ping-pong ball" flying from scene to scene, and stopping time whenever there is a voiceover. This may be the most original film in the Japan Cuts series this year and it's more than just visually delightful, though if some of the characters feel a bit underdeveloped that shows this talented new filmmaker still may have more to offer us in her next outing.

Ice Cream Fever, 104 mins.,, debuted in Japan July 14, 2023, and also has been featured in Taiwan and Vienna. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 Japan Cuts series (Jul. 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-20-2024, 09:56 PM
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YUKO NAKAMURA, AN OGAWA, AND HIDEKAZU MASHIMA IN FOLLOWING THE SOUND

KIYOSHI SUGITA: FOLLOWING THE SOUND (2023)

Emotional encounters of three people

Matthew Joseph Jenner reports in International Cinephile Society (https://icsfilm.org/reviews/venice-2023-review-following-the-sound-kyoshi-sugita/): "The film focuses on a trio of characters, each distinct from one another, being drawn together by chance. Whether nurturing a new relationship between them or revisiting the past when they previously encountered one another (in one of the most emotionally resonant moments in the film), we see the deep connections that bind these people together." James Hadfield's review in The Japan Times. (https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2024/01/04/film/following-the-sound/) comments: "This obliqueness is both a strength and weakness for Following the Sound. Even compared to his previous work, Sugita leaves things wide open to interpretation here — and I have to confess that the film didn’t draw me in to the same extent as Haruhara-san’s Recorder. However, there’s no denying the emotional charge of the final scene. Just let me get back to you about what the heck it means."

Evidently, this film relates closely to Sugita's previous one, and refers to grieving. Haru (An Ogawa), has lost her mother (though as an adolescent), and still goes around with a little cassette player listening to tapes her mother made. Haru who has a pale, round, open face, approaches Yukiko (Yuko Namamura), asking her for help in directions to a cafe. Yukiko helps, but the cafe is closed. So Yukiko invites Haru to her house for lunch. If this were a film by Korean NYFF favorite Hong Sang-soo, there would be a lot of conversation. But with Sugita, people don't talk much. Sometimes the meaning is in everyday actions performed wordlessly. Preparing an omelette and eating an omelette may be all you get. What else is going on, as the Japan Times reviewer James Hadfield points out, is only hinted at, and Sugita is "awfully coy" about what the exact details are. But the emotional charge is there, and the overtone is of loss and grief.

Without a lot of conversation, Haru and Yukiko nonetheless clearly bond, and they go on a motorcycle trip to find a place, the sound of a stream or river, recorded by Haru's mother. The journey would seem to be for Haru's benefit, but Yukiko says "No, I’m being helped by you." Haru is a forerunner in grief, and now a teacher.

Haru also seems to be following a middle-aged man around, Tsuyoshi (Hidekazu Mashima). He responds by coming to the bookstore where Haru works, and the two of them go to a cafe where she acknowledges that they have met before. Tsoyoshi seems shocked by this reminder because of how they met. The plot summary will tell you: she stopped Tsoyoshi from jumping in front of a train. Meanwhile Haru and her friends, as Hadfield puts it, "dabble in rudimentary filmmaking," shooting little ordinary scenes with small video cameras. And Haru is in an art workshop for this, and also at one point a figure drawing class, where an older woman accuses her of staring at her instead of the model. There is also a project to make up a little play with ordinary events and speeches, which the characters see successfully performed, which they celebrate with a beer.

Eventually Haru, Yukiko and Tsuyushi wind up together. But this not the kind of film where conventional plot developments matter so much as the emotions, and the emotions are strong and evident from the start. It is an interesting watch, and Sugita is a filmmaker of evident sensitivity who plays by his own rules which we may still be figuring out. I feel more comfortable, and more rewarded, by the way Hong Sang-soo uses cafes than the way they are used here, but Following the Sound may reveal new layers on repeated viewings. Kiyoshi Sugita was an assistant director for Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Shinji Aoyama, Nobuhiro Suwa and others. This is his fourth feature.

Following the Sound,m 88 mins., debuted in Giornate degli Autori at Venice Sept. 2023. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 Japan Cuts (Jul. 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-21-2024, 09:25 AM
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NORIKO YUASA: PERFORMING KAORU'S FUNERAL (2023)

A lot goes on after you're dead

This appears to be Noriko Yuasa's feature film debut after short films and TV series, or at least her first big one. It's a complicated, ambitious film. The focus is as the title suggests a Japanese funeral with elaborate celebration and grieving ceremonies, drunkenness, angry outbursts, fakery, confusion, and a designated "chief mourner" who is an ex-husband, Jun (Koji Seki). You would need a deep understanding of Japanese language, culture, and traditions to follow this, to know whether it's being "dark" or "darkly humorous" or just serious; whether spot-on, or sometimes a misfire. Any intelligent moviegoer who can read subtitles can obviously see in general what's going on. But honestly, you'll be lost most of the time. There are too many shifts of tone, too many square-ratio, golden-tinted flashbacks, some long years ago, some as recent as yesterday, or Covid, to follow confidently.

Maybe we're meant to be lost, as is Jun. He gets a message, "Kagimino, Okayama Prefecture: Tachibana Funeral Parlor will organize everything." It seems from flashbacks well past midway that his marriage to Kaoru was was a sweet, youthful one that took place years ago, and quite brief (its cause seems to be depicted, but I didn't understand what it was). It is only here, well past midway, that Jun starts to realize he's not just the designated "chief mourner," a performer in a pretty empty collective ritual involving a lot of people he doesn't know, but actually has something to mourn himself, someting poignant indeed. Wasn't this actually his first, great love? May not its quick demise be seen as the tragedy of his life?

Kaoru - the recently dead one: there are several others, including a fussy bespectacled schoolgirl and a pretty young woman - was barely forty, it appears, and pretty, and was hit by a truck, and died. She has been exquitely embalmed. We glimpse that, especially the painting and plastering over of her face into a mask of beautiful perfection that is frequently revealed. And then some drunken guy slides the coffin lid back (yes, it slides, like a traditional Japanese door) and pours wine down on her. What is that about? Though Yumasa sticks mostly to convention, she seems unable to resist flashy, extreme moments like this, or like the old man who gets drunk and violent and causes a big disturbance in an initial dinner party; or late in the game, the mud-slinging battle between Jun and the young bespectacled schoolgirl Kaoru. The overall effect is theatrical, not subtle, in a genre to which the most complex, subtle, and deeply moving films in all of Japanese cinema, Akira Kurosawa's Ikiru, belongs.

Perhaps this thatricality is appropriate, since Kaoru was a screenwriter; and it may be an ironic, intentional embarrassment for Jun to be chief mourner, since he is just a would-be actor, who works as a driver for call girls in Tokyo. All this happens down in the small village in Okayama that Kaoru comes from. Here, there may be producers and other theatrical and movie people who have come, but this is not the time and place for them to be useful to Jun. And they're not of much use to us, either, because we don't know who they are or what their stories are either. The writer, Takato Nishi, and the filmmaker should have collaborated on something more sharply focused and clearly directed. They seem to have been swamped by their own ambition in this good-looking but shapeless film.

[i]Performing Kaoru's Funersl カオルの葬式, 101 mins., won the Japan Cuts award at the 2024 Osaka Asian Film Festival. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 Japan Cuts series, NYC (Jul. 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-21-2024, 09:28 AM
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JUNKO SUNKURADA, TOMOKO TABATA, AND KIICHI NAKAI IN MOVING

SHINJI SÔMAI: MOVING (1993)

A twelve-year-old girl in early-Nineties Japan confronts her parents' separation

A guide to Shinji Sômai from BFI (https://www.bfi.org.uk/features/where-begin-with-shinji-somai)

About the rerelease from Hollywood Reporter (https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/general-news/cinema-guild-shinji-somai-moving-theatrical-release-1235626921/)

Josh Slater-Williams, BFI (https://www.bfi.org.uk/features/where-begin-with-shinji-somai): "Critic Shigehiko Hasumi once suggested that Japanese filmmaker Shinji Somai – who died young aged 53 in 2001, after directing 13 features – 'is the missing link between the end of the studio system of Japan and the rise of independent filmmaking.' In their compassionate depictions of loneliness and alienation, you can certainly see the influence of Somai’s films in the works of several younger directors who followed, including Shunji Iwai (All About Lily Chou-Chou) and Kiyoshi Kurosawa (Pulse). . . So why is Somai relatively unknown in the west?"

Certainly much of Moving has a freshness, simplicity, and directness that set it apart from recent Japanese films - as is appropriate being from the point of view of a cheerful, plucky, but somewhat naive girl of twelve or so whose parents separate. The father of twelve-year-old Ren (the impressive Tomoko Tabata) suddenly moves out. She tries to pretend nothing has changed, and for a while nothing does. Eventully her schoolmates just know what's happened because she's different (and she's not the only one, though there's no support group here); it doesn't matter if they're divorced or separated. Something is "wrong," the wholeness of the traditional family unit has been broken.

Everything is from Ren's point of view throughout, and the girl's (and Tomoko Tabata's) energy seems indomitable. They sit at a thin, triangular dinner table, a will-chosen piece of decor that already communicates this family's rejection of traditional norms and the "angular," cranky relations among them, where the child holds equal weight. Ren corrects her father's table manners. She's parenting her parents, and wonders if her "Oto-San" will be able to manage on his own. Then her mother gets drunk and Ren worries about the impression this will make on the neighbors, not because she's conventional, but because she's more grownup.

It's a while before her unstoppable good cheer begins to falter, though she's often obstreperous. Her parents are too: this is part of the fun and the freshness of the film: the parents are also childish, perhaps more so, because in this modern world, they fail to maintain the discipline of traditional customs and pretend they are free to go their own way. Nobody really is.

The film is a portrait of the early Nineties, a moment in Japan when couples were beginning to regard it as acceptable to divorce or separate simply for their own reasons. The economic bubble has burst, and every adult is responsible for being financially independent. Ren's mother has gone from not working to dressing up and going out to work at a good job. "Marriage is survival of the fittest”, Renko’s mom Nazuna (Junko Sakurada) later exclaims. Kenichi (Kiichi Nakai), her boyish, slightly goofy dad, has worked at home and partly played house-husband.

The roles are all confused: both parents are living by a new order but complaining that things aren't as they used to be. Ren learns family friend Yukio (Taro Tanaka), on whom she'd had an innocent childish crush, is engaged to be married, and his fiancée is unsure whether she wants to have the child. As they wander around on the scene of Ren's house it almost seems they're a surrogate family - but not one that provides stability, either.

All this confusing grownup and newfangled stuff is seen both starkly and from a distance, because we get it from Ren's point of view. Most importantly, Ren eventually becomes so confused she wonders out loud - she often asks questions out loud, by herself - why she was even born. But remember, she is still just a young girl, and all these things are external and not quite real to her.

The climax, still full of the film's initial energy but risky, because Somai doesn't know where to go with it, comes when Ren carries out a gesture that takes on literally the adult role and attempts to change things: she wants to have the three of them reunite once a week, no, maybe only once a month, but for now she takes her mother's credit card and buys reservations at a hotel by Lake Biwa, where they've been bfore, and travel there. This takes place, and then she goes off on her own, wandering into the safe, if comically confused and befuddled protection of a white-bearded and traditionally dressed old man, and thence off into the fire and energy of a local festival whose explosions are beautiful, intoxicating, and unreal. Kenichi, her father, turns up at the hotel: but this only seems to underline, for us as well as for Ren, that it's finished, which she already knew from her classmates.

It's amazing all that happens in this film as well as how clear-headed yet ultimately heartbreaking is its image of the dissolution of a marriage from the POV of an adolescent. But when the film gets into the festival, and Ren wanders off by herself, Somai loses the thread, and the action starts soft-peddling too much. Still, the vibrancy of individual scenes is unmistakeable and the realization of the character of the young girl is terrifically engaging.

Moving お引越し, 123 mins.,debuted at Cannes in the Un Certain Regard section, 1993. Numerous awards; 2023 Winner Venezia Classici Award
Best Restored Film. Revival screened for this review from 2024 Japan Cuts (Jul. 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-22-2024, 11:25 PM
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TOSHIHIKO TANAKA IN REI

TOSIHIKO TANAKA: REI (2024)

Seeking love in Tokyo and the Hokkaido snows

Rei refers to a genderless given name, a Japanese kanji character that only gains meaning when joined with other kanji. ("Pair.") This is presented before the film begins and in the middle of it. The implication must be that another person can "complete" you. But that doesn't prove true in this overlong melodrama, which is tarnished by a retro attitude toward disability: that and its long run-time as Wendy Ide says in her Screen Daily Rotterdam review, make this film unlikely to succeed in international theaters, despite its top Rotterdam Tiger Award and how absorbing it is in parts. A small child with learning disabilities and a grown man who is deaf are important characters and it is the way they and their effect on people around them are treated that is troubling and unsatisfactory.

Asari parents Hira, the small child, but it a burden that weighs terribly upon her. She is best friends with Hikari, a successful single woman in a design business, who encounters the deaf Masato (writer-director-producer Toshhiko Tanaka, who has a striking, youthful face) when she admires his photographs in theater brochures: she goes to plays a lot and seeks him out to do photos of her. She also gets involved with a lead actor in the plays. A scene where the actor, who says he has slost his passion and is quitting acting, tries to make Hikari recite for him a speech from King Lear is one of the most painfully overwrought moments of the film.

But it is Masato - sexy and mysterious as played by director Tanaka - whom Hikari follows to snowy Hokkaido, leading to a dramatic collapse in a blizzard and many beautiful landscape shots where dp Ikeda Akio’s cinematography shines. In fact, Masato is a photographer of landscape, not portraits. But he starts taking his big camera and shooting people later on, almost as a weapon, after a male admirer cuts him off from Hikari and he becomes frustrated and deeranged.

Masato has never bothered to learn sign language. When Hikari gets interested she studies it and finds out no, you can only communicate with him by email, handwritten notes, or maybe mental telepathy. There is little suggestion here that deafness or learning disability can be dealt with successfully or logically. Everything is impressionistic.

Poor little Hira exists only as a problem, by which her father justifies having an affair with a nurse who cared for Masato's mother in her dying days. Her mother doesn't want to put her in a special needs school, but that doesn't go well.

Hikari's own "problem" is that she has no problems, never has had them, of health or otherwise. Dissatisfied with her perfect life (but without a man), she sees herself as "transparent," or a blank. It is she who is the genderless letter needing to be completed.

But Hikari doesn't succeed; no one does. Each of the main characters of Rei at one point or another declares themself hopeless. Even Masato tries to speak late in the film to clumsily shout "I wish I was never born."

James Hadfield says in his Japan Times review (https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2024/05/30/film/rei-toshihiko-tanaka/) that this film is a gift of Covid, because the theater people who made it did so when the theaters were closed due to the pandemic. He says "there’s a palpable, go-for-broke energy to this underdog production, as if everyone involved realized they might not get another chance." There is something exciting about the complexity of the plotting and the raging feelings, the extravagant love affair with a deaf man, but it all starts to burn itself out before the three-plus hours are over. The filmmaker reportedly said at a screening that the script was finished in ten days. He gives Hamaguchi as an influence: I feared as much from the outset. What Hamaguchi does is not necessarily a good template. But a review (https://thefilmstage.com/rotterdam-review-toshihiko-tanakas-rei-is-an-ambitious-directorial-debut-that-draws-from-hamaguchi/) comments that "the echoes of Happy Hour and Drive My Car are plain for all to see." Tanaka has also said he wants viewers of his film to notice its depiction of landscape and the seasons and their effect on people and their moods, and this is what's best about it.

Rei莉の対 , 189 mins., debuted at Rotterdam Jan. 25, 2024, where it won the Tiger award. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 New York Japan Cuts series (Jul. 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-23-2024, 02:15 AM
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POSTER FOR SAYONARA, GIRLS.

SHUN NAKAGAWA: SAYONARA, GIRLS. (2023)

Graduating high school seniors wrestle with conflict and trauma

Adapted from a series of short stories by Asai Ryo, the film’s Japanese title is the more cryptic "girls don’t graduate" hinting at how hard it is to leave adolescence behind. The focus is on the day before and graduation day itself at a rural high school, Shimada High School in Yamanashi Prefecture. In keeping with the well known Japanese shyness and restraint, the action here tends to be conspicuously lacking in passion or overt displays of affection. Reviews have commented on the blandness. Nonetheless sentimentality reins: to make sure, the school itself is scheduled to be demolished, so the kids will never be able to return to the physical facility. And they keep saying they don't want to graduate. This is a somewhat wan effort. That doesn't mean it has nothing to say or isn't touching

You may have been shy too, and sympathize with Shiori (Tomo Nakai) the super-timid girl whose school days have been torture, her one support the school librarian, with whom she has a long chat in which he reveals he was just the same. He urges her to push herself, which she does, and returns later to show him a bunch of yearbook greetings classmates have penned for her, after all.

Another breakthrough is the sweethearts who have a fight on the way to school on graduation day because Kyoko (Rina Komiyama) has chosen to go to Tokyo for school to train to be a therapist while he is staying to attend a local training program, become a schoolteacher and coach basketball. He can't forgive her: but later he apologies and they have a sweet reconciliation.

The graduation includes "Pomp and Circumstance," which we glimpse, but a bigger focus is the planned performance of student musical groups, and the girl in charge of that, music club leader Yuki (Rina Ono) struggles with conflicts. A costumed lip-synch-only band called Heaven's Gate has won a vote, making them the final, climactic performance at graduation, but they are saying their win is a mockery because the students agreed to vote for them as a joke, and they refuse to perform. Then their makeup and instruments and equipment (which they don't know how to play anyway) are all stolen. At the last minute another girl reveals she has done it because she's admired the voice of the lead singer since junior high. He'll have to perform a cappella, and everyone will get to hear his nice voice. In the event he does do a creditable, if a bit slow, rendition of "Danny Boy" and gets an ovation.

These tales are all woven in and overlap in the editing. A more troubling element is Manami (Yuumi Kawai), a technical school candidate who, since she had fewer academic challenges to deal with, has been chosen to give the valedictorian address, but is struggling with the traumatic memory of a beloved boy called Shun (like the filmmaker) who (spoiler alert) has fallen to his death. When the moment comes, at the podium, she stands speechless. Later (spoiler) she meets with a fantasy Shun, whom she sees is cold (as he would be, since he's dead) and gives him her too-small school uniform jacket to warm him. They sit down on the gym floor and she reads her speech to him. Alas, it is simply a mass of clichés.

There is talk of Carrie earlier, but pop cultural references or light heartedness of any kind are limited. The kids all wear school uniform: matching jackets for girls and boys, long striped rep ties for the boys, foulard bows for the girls. Interestingly, they file their shoes outside classrooms and wear special foot covers inside (see photo). I liked that the boys' trousers are tartan. But that they don't dress up specially for graduation is a letdown. Someone remarks it's a pity they don't have a "prom," like an American high school.

There are lots of busy, lively enough young extras doing convincing ensemble work. On the other hand, the number of characters identified by name is limited for an ensemble piece like this. One thinks of how vivid and interconnected the cast is in the Norwegian series "Skam," or the strong presence of characters in the great John Hughes youth pictures of the Eighties. One doesn't want to call Sayonara, Girls lackluster. It has too effective a cumulative emotional effect for that. But as high school genre pictures go, it has its inevitable limitations and lacks the charm and flair of Hollywood youth pics at their best. But this feels very, very Japanese.

Sayonara, Girls.少女は卒業しない ("The Girl Never Graduates"), 120 mins., debuted at Tokyo Oct. 26, 2022; also Beijing Apr. 24, 2023. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 New York Japan Cuts series (Jul. 10-21).

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A CLASSROOM MOMENT IN SAYONARA, GIRLS.

Chris Knipp
06-24-2024, 01:25 PM
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SHINSUKE AOKI (LEFT) IN AUGUST IN THE WATER

GAKURYÜ ISHII: AUGUST IN THE WATER (1995)

Teenage lovers glimpse apocalyptic futures

Strange incidents happen to Izumi (Rena Komine), a young diving star transferred from another school now united with a new boyfriend, Mao (Shinsuke Aoki). During a competition, Izumi falls from a high pltform and sinks to the bottom of the pool. Mao jumps in and rescues her. She is hospitalized in a coma. Soon she comes out, but changed. This revival from thirty years ago is a quaint and charming and ultimately amazingly beautiful mixture of fantasy, science fiction, cosmic mysticism, teen romance, coming of age, and ecological parable. This is pointed out in a discussion of the film on Screen Anarchy (https://screenanarchy.com/2010/03/august-in-the-water-retro-review.html) by Niels Matthijs, and others. The mix of image and sound is world-class here and Gakuryû Ishii is a discovery for those of us who hadn't heard of him.

In the film, water starts running out, even though there is still plenty of water in the pool where its impressive diving platforms where Izumi fell. People start dropping down in the street (and people ignore them) and their organs turn to stone (the "stone disease"), which seems to be the result of the two meteorites that crash improbably, on a mountain very close together from very remote distances apart in space. What has happened to Izumi? Does she have new wisdom implanted in her from a remote galaxy?

One writer (Coeval Magazine (https://www.coeval-magazine.com/coeval/gakuryu-ishii-august-in-the-water)), who provides a plethora of stills, sums up events with "Isuku’s town is in cosmic trouble: an oracle in the form of a proto-Internet zodiac app predicts problems on the pastel-colored horizon.' So there is that, too; and Izumi consults astrology books.

Rather than any impressive special effects, AUgust in the Water is memorable for its prolonged sequence of girls performing in a high-level diving competition, and also for its traditional festival with men bare-assed huddled together pushing through the streets. When Izumi is recognized as having special knowledge, a group of experts, and the handsome boyfriend, sit together facing a big, high up Sony television set watching Izumi. Remember when those big Sony TV's were the state of the art?

A website called Onderhond Movie Meter (https://www.onderhond.com/blog/august-in-the-water-review-sogo-ishii) calls August in the Water as one of Ishii's "hidden gems" that is "yet to be discovered even by most fans." While Ishii is known as a master of Japanese punk cinema, full of dirt and mess, this is something different, peacefull, beautiful and haunting, and a mix, as the writer says "part romance, part fantasy, part sci-fi and part coming of age with some meandering philosophy [thrown] in."

The Coeval writer sums up: "Ecocriticism inflected with coming-of-age romance, August in the Water is a new-age love story from the precipice of a new millennium. With a haunting minimal vaporwave score by Hiroyuki Onogawa, Ishii’s film offers a touching answer to the alienation of teenage girlhood." Yes, "from the precipice of a new millennium," this seemingly dated charmer also looks into the future and has a nice score accompanying a great mixture of pleasing images. For a revival, it's a worthy, unexpected selection that may suggest films as far apart as Donnie Darko, Godard's Alphaville and Cocteau's Blood of a Poet.

At the end things turn around and the rains come, and what rains they are: it's a magnificent sequence, just one of several here that reveals Ishii to be a remarkable filmmaker, though from the descriptions, he has various styles, and this is not his most typical one (perhaps his 2023 The Box Man (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?5483-JAPAN-CUTS-July-10-21-2023-REVIEWS&p=41902#post41902), also in this year's Japan Cuts, is more typical). Recommended.

August in the Water 水の中の八月, 117 mins., premiered in Japan Sept. 9, 1995. Festivals: Goteberg Feb. 2, 1996; Brussels Mar. 1996; Pusan Sept. 1996; San Sebastian, Singapore, UK, Taiwan, Germany. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 New York Japan Cuts series (Jul. 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-24-2024, 08:26 PM
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HAKUTO MATSUMURA, AiNA THE END AND HIROSE SUZU IN KYRIE

SHUNJI IWAI: KYRIE (2023)

Pop stars in a complicated 3-hour saga about street musicians marked by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami

Wendy Ide, Screen Daily (https://www.screendaily.com/reviews/kyrie-busan-review/5186156.article): "Homeless street musician Kyrie (AiNA THE END) catches the eye of blue-wigged party girl Ikko (Hirose Suzu) one October night in Tokyo, 2023. It’s not just Kyrie’s raw talent that Ikko recognizes, but a shared past – a teenage friendship from a time when both girls had different names. Shunji Iwai’s music-driven melodrama weaves together multiple timelines, from 2011 until the present day, and a sprawling story that takes in earthquakes, bereavement, teen pregnancy and multiple instances of photogenic yearning. For the first couple of hours, it’s an engrossing piece of storytelling – the movie equivalent of a pulpy page-turner or an airport novel. The final third, however, starts to get a little bogged down with lengthy exposition and numerous tear-sodden emotional climaxes. Still, the music – the film’s key selling point – is distinctive and frequently rather lovely."

Letterboxd: Review by lll ★★. "When Shunji iwai and Makoto Shinkai wanted to revisit the trauma brought by the 2011 earthquake but instead they both made movies that fetishize young women who fall in love with someone played by Hokuto Matsumura."

Mark Schilling, THe Japan Times: (https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2023/10/12/film/kyrie/) "The story, which traces Kyrie’s tempestuous life over 13 years, unfolds on four different alternating and intersecting tracks. One focuses on Luca, a girl who was orphaned in the Great East Japan Earthquake and finds support from a kindly teacher, Fumi Teraishi (Haru Kuroki).

Another follows Luca as a lonely teenager (Aina The End) in Obihiro, Hokkaido. Though she speaks in whispers, she can sing like an angel. She is befriended by Maori (Suzu Hirose), a classmate whose mom runs a small bar. A rebellious type, Maori dreams of escaping Obihiro and moving to the big city.

We also meet the adult Luca (Aina The End again), who now calls herself “Kyrie.” Homeless and still barely articulate, she is busking on the streets of Tokyo when she is approached by Ikko (Hirose again), a mysterious woman in a blue wig, who offers to be her manager.

Connecting these plot threads is Natsuhiko Shiomi (Hokuto Matsumura), who was engaged to Luca’s older sister. Following her death in the 2011 disaster, he searches for Luca and finds her under Fumi’s protection in Osaka. After child welfare workers spirit the girl away, he manages to stay in off-and-on contact with her, while even becoming Maori’s tutor — all the while feeling guilty for not better protecting Luca and her sister.

There is much more to the over-packed plot, including Kyrie’s quick climb up the music industry ladder while never escaping the streets."

I can't say I could fully follow this film from scene to scene with its shifting multiple plot lines and chronology, but it is nonetheless a compelling watch, especially when it takes us right through two lovers experiencing the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami apart, but joined by cell phone as it is terrifyingly happening. If only the filmmaker didn't allow tragedy to drift into sentimentality at times. An overlong but impressively ambitious effort lightened up by a string of songs performed live by the musician characters and pop stars playing them.

Kyrieキリエのうた, 178 mins., debuted at Busan Oct. 5, 2023. Released in Japan, Hong Kong, and South Korea (twice) Oct.-Nov. 2023. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 New York Japan Cuts series (Jul. 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-25-2024, 10:38 AM
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KOTA NAKANO: RETAKE (2023)

A simple film about high school kids making a film becomes something a more complex through the use of multiple "takes"

It's the summer holidays. The energetic, grownup Yu (Urara), with her glittering, Katharine Hepburn smile, sees her boyish, wide-eyed, and enamored high school classmate Kei (Yutâ Mutô) shooting her across a bridge with his camera and recruits him to shoot a film she wants to direct as a school project. Kei recruits Jirô (Ryûsei Chiba), who's artistic, to play a boy who draws and Yu makes him the main actor in her film along with Umi (Nako Ôhara) playing a girl Jiro's interested in. They get Yu's guitar bandmate Arisa to record the sound. In the film, Umi will accompany Jiro to a land where time stands still so he can draw the girl, who is always in motion. They're making a movie about making a movie - or somebody is. But the first run-through is only the beginning.

Initially, these five young people are cute; they're having fun. There is a sense of enjoyment in being out in nature in lovely weather. They spend a lot of time by a roaring stream and waterfall. The roaring water becomes a character in itself, perhaps the most dynamic one.

After about 44 minutes, the film goes back over the filmmaking again, this time adding more detail and different angles to the original shots, and adding new shots or scenes. This is after Yu has told Kei on the phone that she's not coming back to direct because she finds the others too unmotivated. After this conversation, Kei says "Cut!" and gets up and comes toward the camera to turn it off. The next shot is of the actor who plays Kei, Yutâ Mutô, watching this previous shot on a screen. The meta POV has been established.

But we then move forward to other takes of earlier action. A chat between Arisa and Kei reveals that they may both see Yu as somewhat arrogant, though Kei is always easygoing and unflappable with her. He's a bit wishy-washy too, never having much of an opinion, for instance, about what to do the film's "last scene". Is Yutâ Mutô the dullest actor or the best actor in the film?

From the beginning, the filmmaking is so simple the line between life and "art" begins to dissolve quite quickly. Four of the five assemble into two couples. Kei is interested in Yu, though when she gets tired and overwhelmed with the filmmaking and rests her head on his chest he doesn't know what to do. Going around together for the film shoot, Jirô and Umi begin to like being together. Yu takes Kei later, just the two of them, "location scouting," to more rushing water, another setting, a train ride away, of natural beauty.

Yu and Kei differ on several things, and Kei defers to her, but she startles him at one point back at school by leaving him to finish the editing by himself. He films her with Umi in the music room recording a composition for the film score. Then Yu has an idea for the "last scene" that turns out to be dangerous. As a Letterboxd writer says, the film "doubles and triples back on itself.

One idea for the final sequence leads to a mishap, though apparently after the victim recovers, the little team commits to resuming the shoot. It would have been possible to introduce haunting, creepy variations in the manner of a Michael Haneke film. But this is not Kota Nakano's aim here. In fact, after the same moment when Yu says she's happy and Kei agrees and she wonders what the "last scene" should be is repeated for a Take 4, a Take 5, a Take 6 and a Take 7, all nearly identical, we're ready not just to yell "Cut!" but "Enough, already!" But some clumsiness in the editing notwithstanding, the line between reality and illusion has been broached and this is the kind of festival film that pleases people in search of tricky screenplays.

Retake リテイク, 110 mins., debuted at Tokyo (Pia Film Festival) where it won the Grand Prize

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URARA, YUTÂ MUTÔ, AND NAKO ÔHARA IN RETAKE

Chris Knipp
06-25-2024, 11:05 AM
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MISA WADA IN CHOKE

GEN NAGAO: CHOKE (2023)

(Reviewed by Mark Schilling in The Japan Times. (https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2023/11/09/film/motion-picture-choke/)

Woman meets boy

In this black and white semi-comical film a post-apocalyptic scene is focused mainly on a woman (Misa Wada) who fends for herself, living in the ruins of a vast dwelling. Nobody can speak, so the Japanese actors are able to show off their skill at mime. The woman, as a blurb puts it, " woman finds small joys in her daily survival routine of hunting and gathering." Things change when a male teenager (Daiki Hiba) turns up and takes an interest in her. Everything is accompanied by loud orchestral music.

He turns out to be a better homemaker than she is when to please her he comes up with a freshly killed baby rabbit and a meal full of unspecified but apparently delicious food. After they've been around each oher a while she starts grabbing him and they have through-the-motions sex and later hug and kiss, standing up. The inappropriateness of this relationship goes unrecognized. Choices may be limited.

There is an elderly trader who comes around from time to time to barter for goods. AS Mark Schilling pus it in his Japan Times review (https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2023/11/09/film/motion-picture-choke/), "they swap slices of dried meat as though they were Pokemon trading cards." It's not clear what his true value is except for providing a magnifying glass usable to start a fire, which is later broken by nearby toughs who come and mess things up.

One of them has a prolonged fight with the teenager. Daiki Hiba puts a lot into this combat which is violent but, in keeping with the whole film, is semi-comical, except the teenager gets a wounded foot. It's one of the film's liveliest and most entertaining moments. Things get stranger after that. The boy pointlessly torments an older gown-wearing man, who later is put in a cage. Then the woman has the boy in another adjoining cage. He has been getting too dominant, no doubt: menacing also the trading man, and having a lot of sex with the woman. She may miss the early days when she was alone and things were quiet. The teenager may have been poisoned with a much room; the older man in the gown remains alive.

This feature is a silent world made of micro-symphonies of noises, illiterate moans, and rhythmic drips which sometimes don't coordinate with the given scene.

It is difficult to make any sense of this meandering film and not certain that it rewards the effort it take to follow it.

Choke 映画 (窒息)/ "Movie (Choking)" 108 min.. Udine Far East Film Festival 2024. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 New York Japan Cuts series (Jul. 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-25-2024, 11:23 AM
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SHUNA IIJIMA, MAYU YAMAGUCHI, AND YUI KITAMURA IN BLUE IMAGINE

URARA MATSUBAYASHI: BLUE IMAGINE (2024)

About women who are victims of male assault; #MeToo in Japan

In 33-year-old Japanese actress Urara Matsubayashi's directorial debut, she deals head-on with the issue of ale sexual violence in the local film industry. In the aftermath of being assaulted by a well-known director, young actress Noel (Mayu Yamaguchi) finds refuge in “Blue Imagine,” a communal living space for abused women. Here, she meets survivors with similar experiences and receives support from a counselor (played by director Matsubayashi). Blue Imagine complexly explores the physical, mental, and emotional scars of abuse, transformative power of friendship, and difficult questions of revenge, recovery and self-realization.

Blue imagine an organization that offers support to those who have suffered sexual abuse and harassment. The young women depicted here meet there.

Two years ago, the lid on the sexual exploitation and harassment that structures the Japanese film industry was finally lifted. It was revealed that directors Hideo Sakaki and Sion Sono had abused their position as director to force sexual "favors." But the power dynamics have not changed. Everything remains very much the same in the Japanese film world.

The focus is on spiring actress Noeru Saito (Mayu Yamaguchi), who is a victim, and her friend Yurina Nishi (Asuka Kawatoko) confesses to her of being verbally and physically assaulted by her sugar daddy.

Guess what? A woman made this film. And it sets out to show that the power dynamics have not changed. Also, the social pressures, even traditional shyness of much of Japanese society, make it hard to speak up against any abuses or pressures exercised on the weak, which includes attractive but powerless young men, who are also shown to suffer sexual assault in the Japanese movie world.

This film is about three women who do what they can. The offending director who is exposed still goes ahead and releases his latest film, but these women show up at the press conference in the concluding scene to challenge him. It's a scene that starts out slowly, but does build up some steam by the end. This film is a quiet milestone in Japanese cinema.

This film will speak to the older generation but it may inspire the younger one to action. It's a clear, simple, straightforward film but it doesn't lecture us. See the Osaka Festival review in PsychoCinematography (https://psychocinematography.com/2024/04/01/blue-imagine-2024-review-oaff-2024/). Written by Minami Goto, cinematography by Isao Ishii.

Blue Imagine ブルーイマジン, 93 min., debuted at Rotterdam Feb. 2024. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 New York Japan Cuts series (Uul. 10-21).

Chris Knipp
06-25-2024, 11:27 AM
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MARIKA ITO IN CHA-CHA

MAI SAKAI: CHA-CHA (2024)

A free-spirited girl comes to the design shop

In this sort-of-femninist rom-com, former Nogizaka46 idol pop star Marika Ito has the lead in the fourth installment of the (not) HEROINE movie series, which also relates to Shinya Tamada's I Am What I Am (https://www.chrisknipp.com/writing/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=5209) (JAPAN CUTS 2023). The (not) HEROINE project focuses on up-and-coming actresses and next-generation directors to create films from unique perspectives and non-traditional, female-focused stories. Individual editions may vary.

Cha-Cha is the sort-of-love-story of the titular Cha-Cha, a free-spirited artist who goes to work at a design studio, and Raku (actor and host Taishi Nakagawa), a young cook who is harder to figure out. Cha-Cha is painted with the whimsical colors of a rom-com on the surface but goes on an oddball, deranged digression midway through. Cha-Cha is silly, sweet, screwball, and completely unexpected. See if you think it all makes sense to you.

Raku is a sou-chef in a restaurant on another floor of the building where Cha-Cha comes to work as the new designer/illustrator and the darling of her colorful boss. Raku and Cha-Cha meet in the rooftop smoking area of the building, and eventually he flirts with her and she responds. The pivot point is the gift of a soda drink. On still another floor is the cheery, zoftig Peo (Filipina actress Stefanie Arianne), who teaches English. Her boyfriend (Akihisa Shiono), who never stays at any job, she tells us, also seems unfaithful, leading Raku, when he starts stalking Peo because he loves her eyes, to view him disapprovingly. Very, very disapprovingly, given the action he takes.

Another woman in the office (Sawako Fujima), bespectacled and more conservative in her dress, who envies Cha-Cha's spark and free spirit, not to mention how much the boss favors her, and she starts to spy on her. Cha-Cha paints her work "analog," which others, including the boss, admire. She has an impulsive and frivolous manner and dresses in a unique, eclectic way, favoring a layered-skirt look. Raku is notable for the elegant simplicity of his attire, all-black when at the restaurant, all-white when off-duty. We're not sure that Cha-Cha is really his style, but both have plenty of attitude, and that seems to draw them to each other.

Cha-Cha moves into Raku's busy spread and appears content there. He doesn't seem to love her. He does cook for her, especially his special Mont Michel omelette, and a fantastic soft drink with a cream topping. A montage where they smoke and vape together may not seem very healthy to the US audience, but in a Japanese way it may be bonding of a very high level.

The point of view shifts from one character's voiceover to another as the story unfolds, avoiding any favoritism or feel of a major protagonist, though Cha-Cha sets the style somehow and she does, after all, give her name to the movie. Everything is light and bright for a while, till the two young men's temptation toward unfaithfulness, and some strange ideas about eye lenses and the taste of familiar blood - what is that all about? - start to pull events in a dangerous, potentially violent direction direction (illegal, too). Somehow things right themselves, though, because this remains a lighthearted, superficial, and playful film. At some point it was reminiscent of early Jean-Luc Godard, and it probably would hot exist if he had not made his brilliant and revolutionary films of the 1960's. But the style of revolutionary young people with nothing to be revolutionary about has become as thin and light as a Japanese paper flower by now, and the sprightly, playful tone doesn't fully compensate for the lack of narrative content.

Ito reportedly had a fashion designer mother and a graphic designer father, so she is well cast as an illustrator here. Props to the costume and interior design departments and the composer of the lighthearted score. Fans of manga will like this and sometimes the principals seem to have walked right out of the pages of one.

Cha-Cha チャチャ 108 min., was screened for this review as part of the New York 2024 Japan Cuts series (Jul. 10-21).
SHOWTIME:
Friday, July 19, 2024
9:30 pm

Chris Knipp
06-27-2024, 12:49 AM
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TSUKAO OGA IN SHADOW OF FIRE

SHINYA TSUKAMOTO: SHADOW OF FIRE (2023)

Searing drama of a ravaged post-war Japan

A Letterboxd sage suggests in this movie Tukamoto wanted to make (Elem Limoov's recently revived 1985 tour de force) Come and See, but with a smaller boy. True, this also is a view of the horrors of WWII, with a smaller boy, but there are fewer incidents, by far. The incidents however, except for what seems like some saccharine moments, are powerful and vivid and cut like a knife. The main setting is the black market district in a nameless, Japanese town immediately after the war, and things are very bad, and people are broken. The boy (Tsukao Oga) is an orphan. He sees and has seen and feels and has felt terrible things. He has nightmares. But his eyes are bright and his skin is clear. Not so the others.

At first the boy enters the remains of a tavern where a young woman (Shuri) who, run by a brutal pimp (Go Riju), serves as a prostitute for men who come at night. She takes him in. She also tries to take in an emaciated soldier (Hiroki Kono), pitiful but sweet.

Japan lost the war. That grim truth is embodied in everything, but most of all this soldier, who is badly shell-shocked. How he reacts when there is a loud noise is not something you want to see. He carries a "Second Grade Algebra" reader as a talisman: he was a teacher before the war and he would like to be one again. It doesn't appear he is in any shape to do that. But for a few moments there is this little, sad, faux family, a shred of hope so paltry it seems even more hopeless.

This world is grim, sepulchral, and yet it has a kind of beauty in extremis, like a Samuel Becket play, of finding truth when nothing more can be said. And these tavern scenes are largely like a play. The young prostitute takes the boy to her breast. She offers to see customers only in the daytime, so they can all sleep at night. The ravaged soldier also has said this is the best sleep he has had in a long time. She begs the boy to promise always to be with her.

But that cannot be. The young prostitute turns against the boy, because he has to hustle on the street. He comes back bloody: a mean bigger boy has attacked him to take away money he has earned or things he has stolen. She can't stand that. Her heart is shrunken and warped.

What follows is more like a short story. The boy joins up with what Mark Shilling in his Japan Times review (https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2023/11/30/film/shadow-of-fire/) calls "a sketchy black-market hustler" (Mirai Moriyama). This slick gown-garbed man with ponytail is another false family for the boy. But what the boy becomes part of briefly is like an episode in Klimov's Come and See, because he is drawn into a revenge, a dangerous event he cannot escape. The hustler was a soldier and the older man he is after was his superior officer who led him and others into terrible mistreatment of prisoners. He uses the boy as a messenger and also for the pistol he has found in a man's hand and carries in his bag.

There is of course a Message in this revenge, when the hustler explains why he's doing it. But Tsukamoto's screenplay convincingly embeds message in action. All that happens in Shadow of Fire is so intense and brutal we're just happy to get on to the next thing. And then we realize that's what the boy would do. And so he becomes a hustler in the market, and survives. However damaged he may be, here everyone else around him is more so.

Another comparison that may occur, which itself came immediately after the War, is with the great films of Italian Neorealism, Rossellini, Vicconti, Zavatini, De Sica. Shoeshine and Bicycle Thieves are tearjerkers and have small boys in them. But Tsukamoto adds a psychological brutality that is outside the Neorealist range. Shilling points out the boy actor Tsukao Oga is "reminiscent of Yuya Yagira’s turn as an abandoned child in Hirokazu Kore-eda’s 2004 masterpiece, Nobody Knows, and indeed I was reminded of that film. It goes for its emotions faster than the Kore-eda, though, does not have that kind of slow accumulaiton of feeling that hits you as you walk out of the theater. But it's still good, and carries out its powerful work with elegance and economy.

This film has obvious links with Tsukamoto's 2014 Fires on the Plain and 2018 Killing, which premiered in competition in Venice. Also reviewed by Wendy Ide (in Tokyo) for Screen Daily (https://www.screendaily.com/reviews/shadow-of-fire-tokyo-review/5187223.article).

Shadow of Fire ほかげ, 95 mins., debuted in the Orizzonti section at Venice Sept. 5, 2023; also Toronto, Tokyo, Taipei. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 New York Japan Cuts series (July 10-21), where it was scheduled as the Centerpiece Film.

Chris Knipp
06-28-2024, 05:27 PM
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MIRAI MORIYAMA IN GREAT ABSENCE

KEI CHICA-URA: GREAT ABSENCE (2023)

Life of an estranged father with dementia explored like a detective story

Great Absence is a study of dementia, based on the filmkaker's family experience, so deft it gets under your skin, till you thihk you're getting confused, don't know how things work, have fallen out of time. The film jumps around in time, as films do nowadays, but this time it underlines both the disconnect between a father and his estranged son and the father's own loss of connection. Takashi (Mirai Moriyama), is a Tokyo actor who visits his estranged father Yohji (Tatsuya Fuji, winner of a Best Actor award at Saint Sebastián for the role) across the country in a care home, coming with his wife producer Yuki (Yoko Maki), where Yohji, now paranoid and wildly fable-weaving, tells them crazy tales to explain what has become of his longtime love, Naomi.

But the film begins with police and excitement at Yohji's home, an alarm he has sent because he has lost his fix on the world. He cannot remember how to work a phone, or a cooker, or a fridge. His basic mental functions have declined so rapidly. And this scene makes the film feel like a detective thriller at first, a process continued as Takeshi and Yuki explore Yohji's disordered house, a jumble of lost objects and post-its trying, uselessly, to help the older man find his way around a familiar world that has grown strange.

The film revisits two earlier moments. Part of the confusion comes from the fact that Takashi and Yohji have long been estranged, but once earlier Takashi visited his father when Naomi was there. Naomi (Hideko Hara), the woman for whom Yohji had left Takashi’s mother many years before is there then. But when the lost, confused Yohji summons the police, she is gone. Where has she gone? Yohji doesn't know, and may not quite remember who she is. At this earlier time, Takashi has recently enjoyed some success in a popular period TV drama, and Naomi reveals that Yohji gets excited for hours whenever this show is going to be on - one of several signs that they care more about each other than their lives have allowed them to acknowledge. Yohji left Takashi's mother for Naomi many years earlier. In the present, when Takashi explores his father's house, he finds a journal of Naomi's stuffed full of love letters from his father: he is discovering a world of feeling neither man shared, and now both are losing.

Takashi seems to have plenty of time, so he stays around exploring these documents and pondering his father's life - which his father in person now is useless as a source for: now that they can be together, there is no there there. This meandering allows the film to be dilatory, and reviews have to acknowledge that it goes on too long. But if the length doesn't work artistically, it certainly helps build our sense of the confusion of dementia. Yohji has long been a ham radio fan. A moment that sticks with me is the one where he comes back from buying a new microphone that he unwraps happily - only to find he already has one just like it. As Jessica Kiang says in her Variety review (https://variety.com/2023/film/reviews/great-absence-review-1235741729/), " despite being a little long, "in another way its multiple strands and many endings are extraordinarily, poetically appropriate" - because with dementia we are plagued by "a series of erratic goodbyes."

Mirai Moriyama as Takashi, with his sweep of longhair and long forelock hanging down like "William" in Season Two of the great Norwegian series "Skam," makes a very watchable protagonist, but of course it is the old man this is most about, and in his different appearances, even brief ones, the prizewinning Tatsuya Fuji runs the gamut of all the ways dementia can manifest, and seek to hide, itself. This is a devastating and haunting film.

It's also a terribly relevant one, although, since Takashi is an actor in rehearsals for an avant-garde play, if reminds us this syndrome goes back as far as Shakespeare's King Lear. Japan particularly has an aging population, and reportedly now has upwards of six million people with some form of dementia. It could happen to you; but just as bad, it could happen to someone close to you. The irony for Takashi and Yohji is that as they grow closer they are also growing further apart. The worst trick of memory is for memory to leave you. Screenplay by Kei Chika-Ura, Keita Kumano; director Kei also co-wrote and produced his sophomore feature. Cinematography by frequent Hirokazu Kore-eda collaborator Yutaka Yamazaki.

Great Absence 大いなる不在, 152 min., debuted at Toronto Sept. 10, 2023, showing also San Sebastián, where Tatsuya Fuji won best performance; plus Vienna, Israel, Göteborg. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 New York Japan Cuts series.

Chris Knipp
06-29-2024, 10:36 AM
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FUJINO (LEFT) AND KIYOMOTO (RIGHT) IN LOOK BACK

KYOTAKA OSHIYAMA: LOOK BACK (2024)

Animation about two girls who become manga artists

This is the story of contrasting schoolgirls Fugino and Kiyomoto who both love drawing manga Japanese comic book art. Ayumu Fujino (voiced by Yuumi Kawai) is confident and attends school, wild-eyed, tousled-haired Kyomoto (Mizuki Yoshida) is a shut-in too shy to talk to a convenience store clerk. They start competing for the four pictures in the weekly school newspaper. Eventually they meet when Fugino is sent to deliver Kiyomoto's school diploma, and Fugino coaxes Kiyomoto out of her shell and they become successful collaborators, Fugino doing the foregrounds and Kiyomoto the backgrounds, winning an award even though they're still in school. When Kiyomoto chooses to go to art university, trouble comes.

Whether the trouble is dire or finds a happy outcome is uncertain since the story is told in several versions. After all, Japan is the home of Rashomon. And this is itself based on a manga book. What is notable is these are two girls who find success in a loving collaboration doing manga art. It's also about the drive to succeed and questioning how to live one's life.

The idea comes up that while Fugino wants to become more skillful at manga - early on a set of drawings sent in by Kiyomoto seems more accomplished - and gets books and fills drawing books with her sketches to improve - her fellow students complain that she is becoming an otaku and not fun anymore. Later when she gives up drawing manga, it seems like a liberating choice. The story about the fascination with manga, anime, and other forms of popular culture also considers that in its extreme form makes someone an otaku, an obsessive. But for a while the two girls become a very successful team, producing one popular series of manga books after another.

Mixed messages here? Yes, but it seems the essence of this kind of storytelling that alternative versions are offered, flashbacks, flash-forwards, fantasies, dreams, and nightmares all considering a subject from different angles and in different moods. The last minutes of the film consist of a series of stills, again depicting Futino and Kiyomoto's happy times of collaboration and friendship.

The violence that comes to one of the girls could be frightening to young readers or viewers, and one of the conclusions is that maybe Kiyomoto should never have been lured from her seclusion. Again one is reminded of the prevalence of reclusive youths in Japan, with now an estimated half million Hikikomori, living shut away with their families. Anyway, Look Back is made up of regrets as much as of successes.

Based on an award-winning manga by Tatsuki Fujimoto, creator of the popular Chainsaw Man,.

Look Back ルックバック ("Rukku Bakku") 56 min., debuted Juh. 10, 2024 at Annecy International Animation Film Festival. Screened for this review as part of the 2024 New York Japan Cuts series (Jul. 10-21).