Friday, February 26, 2010

Our Top Ten Favorite Cinematic Bad Girls


The femme fatale, the wild she-cat, the rebellious teen looking for dangerous thrills, the wayward girl who's made all the wrong choices, the woman who can drink, fight and fuck as good as any man - Cinema history is chock full of these "bad girls", and this is thanks in no small part to the contributions of Japanese filmmakers and actresses. Maybe we can thank Quentin Tarantino for distilling so many of Japanese film's bad girls into The Bride, the lead heroine of his 2003 two-part opus "Kill Bill". Since then women who fronted Nikkatsu's and Toei's exploitation films of the 60's and 70's have become part of our popular film geek imaginations, but "bad girls" just don't mean boobs and blood. We at the Pow-Wow got together to compile a list of our favorite women who, yes, are bad (some downright rotten), but who never stray into full on villain territory. These are the girls who intrigue us, arouse us, and who kick our asses seven ways from Sunday. Hope you enjoy it.


10. The Black Tight Killers - Black Tight Killers

"Yasuharu Hasebe's 1966 film "Black Tight Killers" is the kind of film that puts a smile on my face. It takes what could have been a lame Z grade picture and enlivens the story by using the medium - lots of colour, sets, shadows and angles to move the story forward instead of relying on too much exposition. Of course having a whole whack of go-go dancers, guys in trenchcoats and female ninjas helps keep things fun as well. Especially those bad-ass ninjas. Even though the film is named after them, they don't really have much to do with the plot - except, that is, to lay waste to their opponents with a barrage of wicked-cool weapons. Tape measures, old 45 singles and (my all time favourite secret weapon) the Ninja chewing gum bullet are extraordinarily effective deterrents when put in the hands of these fighting machines. They aren't out for vengeance or for any specific purpose, they simply relish any chance to do battle and don't seem to tire of it. You gotta love 'em for that." BT


9. Lady Kaede (Mieko Harada) - Ran

As Peter Cowie states in his new book on Akira Kurosawa, “Ran”’s Lady Kaede is the fiercest female character in the director’s body of work. The “King Lear”-inspired period epic is filled with terrible characters who remain ignorant to their long history of sins until far too late (Tatsuya Nakadai’s Lord Hidetora) or embrace the treacherous nature of the world they live in as they greedily scheme and kill their way to power (Akira Terao’s Taro and Jinpachi Nezu’s Jiro, Hidetora’s first two sons). But Lady Kaede is truly in a class of her own. Married to Taro, her prime goal is to claim vengeance for her family, who fell to Hidetora’s brutal reign. After Taro is killed in battle, Kaede quickly seduces his brother (and murderer) Jiro, then manipulates him into doing her bidding. Perhaps most heartlessly, she orders him to behead his own wife, Sue (Yoshiko Miyazaki), so she can officially claim him as her own. Kurogane (Hisashi Igawa), Jiro’s second-in-command and one of the few characters who keeps his wits intact, warns his lord of the danger she poses to him and, in a memorable scene, presents her with a stone fox head instead of Sue’s in a playful allusion to her true deceptive nature. Slinking in her white kimono and smoldering with equal parts seductive allure and carefully withheld fury, she confidently, calculatingly goes about the business of bringing down the family who murdered her own. By the time her spectacular final scene arrives, she deservingly possesses an air of cool triumph. One can certainly see a prototype figure for her in “Throne of Blood”’s similarly crafty Lady Asaji Washizu (Isuzu Yamada), but Mieko Harada’s intense performance easily pushes Kaede into the top tier of cinema’s greatest villainesses. MSC


8. Sumika (Eriko Sato) - Funuke Show Some Love, You Losers!

"Funuke Domo, Kanashimi no Ai wo Misero" ("Funuke: Show Some Love, You Losers!") begins with the offscreen death of two of the characters, antagonist Sumika's parents. Soon it becomes apparent that they are the lucky ones, spared any further exposure to their older daughter. You see, Sumika is a monster--a creature of such fierce, single-minded selfishness that her only onscreen equivalent is Daniel Plainview of PT Anderson's "There Will Be Blood". Eriko Sato ("Cutie Honey", "The Setting Sun") is no Daniel Day-Lewis, but she is terrifying in this role--a psycho-vixen who uses sadism and sex appeal in equal measure. Unlike characters who wear their vixenhood on their sleeves by fronting gangs or gambling for a living, Sumika is a failed actress/model who uses hers sparingly. A sociopath, she manipulates those around her not merely because it's convenient or advantageous to do so, but because she cannot exist any other way. She's an evolutionary anomaly, a being in whom the lizard brain developed beyond action/reaction into a smiling maelstrom of mean. Normal emotions simply don't exist in her. The film's scope is also narrow enough that she focuses the extent of her horrible skill on her immediate family, controlling each of them by whatever means get the desired result. Less pretty younger sister Kiyomi gets viciously bullied, and in the film's scariest and most charged scene, she stealthily observes Sumika seduce older brother Shinji in such a way that he's fully aware of his own powerlessness, but is helpless to do anything about it. Sumika simultaneously arouses and emasculates her own brother for what amounts to a few hundred dollars. She's not callous, she simply doesn't seem to know she has an option other than to emotionally crush her closest relatives and only friends. Reiko Ike and Meiko Kaji may have had the splashier and more iconic vixen roles, but even at their most vengeance-minded, neither approaches the measured, even casual cruelty of Sumika. There are no sly winks, no irony, and no respite; Sumika is a vixen for the global bank era, a creature devoid of guilt or conscience or compassion. EE


7. Chisato (Kirina Mano) - Bullet Ballet

If "Bullet Ballet" is Shinya Tsukamoto’s rendition of a film noir, then Chisato is his femme fatale. She’s definitely alluring and seductive in an angst ridden, suicidal kind of way. Whether or not Goda is drawn to her because of the similarities between her and his recently deceased girlfriend is irrelevant. What is relevant is that she pulls him into the dark and seedy world she exists in, and his search for the reasons behind his girlfriends suicide become entwined with his unwritten law of protecting Chisato at all costs. Does she manipulate him? Does she take advantage of him? Does she know her suicidal tendencies give him glimpses into the why of his girlfriends demise? Damn straight. But it quickly becomes apparent that she’s a beautiful wounded soul, who’s given up on life, the same as Goda. She may appear tough and hardened because she doesn’t care what happens to her, hoping for death, sometimes begging for it, but in reality she’s never been able to live. Chisato is like that dark, depressed Goth girl you had a crush on high school that seemed to radiate an aura of death, but within that aura resided a beautiful and captivating creature capable of swallowing your soul with its eyes. You wanted to help her, but you have to be pulled down into the belly of the beast first before you can both emerge into the sunlight. MH


6. Sachiko (Miki Sugimoto) - Girl Boss Guerilla

Miki Sugimoto is the street. In her brief film career (1972-77) she did play a period role or two ("Lustful Shogun and his 21 Concubines" comes to mind), but Sugimoto is a contemporary actress--she belongs in denim and leather, her hair flowing loose over her snarling face. In the hierarchy of pinky actresses she's neither the prettiest (Meiko Kaji) or the most outrageous (Reiko Ike), but she exudes a sexy, tough authenticity unmatched in the genre. Sugimoto was usually the co-lead alongside the more glamorous Reiko Ike, and somehow failed to gain the same popularity as the "Sex and Fury" star. This slight is nearly intolerable! Unlike Ike's naked swordplay, Sugimoto's nudity was never simply an invitation for the male gaze: It had a kind of fierce matter-of-factness that was reflected by Sugimoto's sneer. She was daring you to look, but promising to sock you in the eye if you did. The vast majority of her lead roles were tough girls, so it's somewhat ironic that her most iconic role as the titular Zeroka no Onna (in "Zero Woman: red Handcuffs") has her playing an undercover cop who is, for the bulk of the film, passively brutalized by the gang she's infiltrating. No such worries in her sukeban films, most notably "Sukeban Gerira" ("Girl Boss Guerilla"): She's Sachiko, badass leader of a chick biker gang that's just as tough as the guys and willing to prove it at the drop of a hat. The film's first five minutes features my favorite-ever moment in pinky violence: Sachiko's gang, furious at being flirted with by a bunch of guys on motorcycles, decides to throw a beat down culminating in Sachiko unzipping her leather jumpsuit to reveal her tattooed breast and shout about how girls can be tough too. It's audacious, sexy and scary, a great moment for any fan of '70s excess, a single gesture which both prefaced and outshone so-called girl power icons the Spice Girls. Sugimoto retired at the height of her vixenhood to become a housewife and preschool teacher. A sukeban no more at a mere 25 years old, she left behind a b-movie filmography full of bare-breasted attitude and steel-and-concrete toughness. EE


5. Taeko (Masumi Miyazaki) - Strange Circus

Masumi Miyazaki retired from the entertainment world in 1996, leaving a body of work that including several films, some nude photo albums and the Japanese edition of Playboy. 10 years later Sion Sono convinces her to take the role of Taeko/Sayuri in his Rampo Edogawa inspired mind fuck "Strange Circus". Sono fills the screen with Grand Guignol imagery and a fierce sense of traumatic glee. Miyazaki plays several incarnations of the same person, one more real than the other. But throughout, regardless of the depths of evil one of these personalities sink, no matter what Ero-guro inspired madness she permeates throughout the film, she always manages to maintain some semblance of grace and beauty. She can be one crazy, messed up chick, but man, she looks good doing it. There’s something strangely attractive about a psychosexual woman that will hack off all your limbs. MH


4. Mother and Daughter (Nobuko Otowa and Jitsuko Yoshimura) - Onibaba

Japan, the 14th-century: the country has suffered through nearly 50 years of war as two emperors, Ashikaga Takauji in Kyoto and Emperor Go-Daigo in Yoshino, vied for supremacy. Social order has given way to utter chaos. On the banks of a river near Kyoto a middle-aged woman (Nobuko Otowa) and her daughter-in-law (Jitsuko Yoshimura) have been reduced to brutally killing and looting the corpses of the half-starved samurai who are either returning home from or fleeing the battle front. Their is a faint, flicker hope that when their man Kichi, the woman's son and the daughter's husband, returns from the war that this animalistic existence may (possibly... maybe) come to an end, but when Kichi dies in battle and his friend Hachi (Kei Sato) returns instead these two women sink to even lower levels of depravity. Director and writer Kaneto Shindo based his film "Onibaba" on a Buddhist fable titled "A Mask with Flesh" about a mother-in-law who prevents her daughter from praying by donning a demon mask and scaring her as the daughter makes her way to a local temple. Shindo knew that prayer wasn't what he wanted to address in his film, it was lust and sex and the dark pit of our most base emotions. It's the jealousy that festers in Otowa's character towards her beautiful youthful daughter-in-law, and her desire for the handsome Hachi, that becomes the motivating factor for her to wear her demon mask. It was the frank and sometimes shocking sexuality of "Onibaba" (along with the work of Shohei Imamura, and Hiroshi Teshigahara's "Woman in the Dunes") that challenged the Japanese taboo of showing sex and nudity on screen, and there are plenty of scenes thoughout "Onibaba" that feature Otowa and Yoshimura in various states of undress. This was very apparent to international distributors, who instead of promoting "Onibaba" as the dark horror film that it was pitched it as a naughty sex film. Posters for the film promised glimpses of its "bad girl" stars' heaving bosoms rather than an examination of the black depths of the human heart. CM


3. Sada Abe (Eiko Matsuda) - In the Realm of the Senses

Up until this point all the women on our list have been fictional characters, but we couldn't compile a list of bad girls without mentioning one of Japanese cinema's, and 20th-century Japanese true crime's most notorious women, Sada Abe. The maid and former prostitute came to the attention of a shocked Japan in May of 1936 after she strangled and castrated her lover, Kichizo Ishida. It was a story that had everything a public scandal should have - infidelity (Ishida was the married owner of the restaurant that Abe worked in), kinky sex (Ushida had been strangled during a particularly vigorous session of erotic asphyxia), and insanity (it was rumoured that Abe cut of Ishida's penis as a way of keeping him with her after death). Abe was sentenced to six years for the crime and during her incarceration the transcripts of her police interrogation and confessions became bestsellers. Upon her release she operated her own bar where people would flock for a glimpse of this crazed sexual murderess. It just makes sense that the scandal would make it to the screen. Abe was portrayed by Junko Miyashita in Noboru Tanaka's 1975 roman porno "A Woman Called Sada Abe", by Hitomi Kuroki in Nobuhiko Obayashi's strangely whimsical 1998 "Sada", and most recently by aging sex symbol Aya Sugimoto in Rokuro Mochizuki's 2008 film "Johnen: Love of Sada". (The real-life Sada Abe actually made a brief appearance in Teruo Ishii's sado-masochistic 1969 film "Love & Crime") One actress came to personify Abe more than any other, though. When Japanese New Wave director Nagisa Oshima decided to bring the story of Sada Abe to the screen in 1976 with his "In the Realm of the Senses" he cast actress Eiko Matsuda as his murderous protagonist, but it was a terribly demanding role. Oshima famously had Matsuda and her co-star Tatsuya Fuji engage in unsimulated sex throughout the film, a decision that had it banned in numerous countries. Thankfully the film has been reassessed and is now recognized as a contemporray classic, but it effectively killed Matsuda's fledgling acting career. It's a terrible shame, because of all the Sada Abe's that have appeared on film Matsuda's was the most nuanced, being both totally sympathetic and utterly repellent at the same time, a girl who is neither good nor bad, but the victim of her own out of control passions. CM


2. Asami (Eihi Shiina) - Audition

Would Takashi Miike’s merciless masterpiece “Audition” be the horror classic it is today without Eihi Shiina’s femme fatale Asami? Absolutely not. Even had another actress played her, it is impossible to imagine that she’d have nabbed it as effectively as Shiina did – in one of her very first roles, no less. Asami first appears as the ideal woman for lonely widower Aoyama (Ryo Ishibashi), who browses over several young female applicants in an audition secretly designed for his personal matchmaking needs. Asami, a delicate-looking woman whose dancing ambitions were shattered by an injury, immediately appeals to Aoyama, and before long they begin a sweetly shy relationship. However, there is still a sense of mystery surrounding her, helped along considerably by the occasional shot of her sitting on the floor of her small apartment staring at her phone, ceaselessly waiting for him to call. The word “creepy” doesn’t quite do this unnerving sight justice, and by the film’s famous final reel, Asami has transformed into a very, very different person than the one she originally appeared to be. Again, the film’s expertly deceptive structure wouldn’t be nearly as powerful as it is without Shiina, who can pull off both disarming innocence and sadistic menace, not to mention, in true method actor fashion, actually vomiting into a dog bowl for one of the film’s ickiest moments. The final touch that makes her such a memorable bad girl is the fact that, while she discloses her feelings of disgust for men like Aoyama as she leans over him dressed in her leather apron and gloves, her exact motives are never made entirely clear. This streak of irrationality in her vicious behavior (along with the film’s similarly ambiguous quality) makes her character all the more chilling. MSC


1. Sasori (Meiko Kaji) - Female Convict Scorpion series

"Meiko Kaji's screen characters alone could pretty much fill up most of this list - the vengeful Lady Snowblood, the con-artist Nami The Red Cherry Blossom from the Wandering Ginza Butterfly films and the street wise gangster girl Mako from Stray Cat Rock: Sex Hunter are but a few. However, our number one slot has to go to Sasori - the Scorpion of the 4 Female Prisoner 701 films. Tough and determined, she survives rape, torture and multiple beatings (that's just the first film!) in order to collect whatever vengeance she is seeking. A woman of few words, she lets her actions speak for her and carries herself with dignity in every situation - even the hopeless and terribly humiliating ones. Even if she rarely speaks, her face says a great deal - a devastating stare of daggers with the curling lips of her sneer is enough to let anyone who messes with her know that they have very little time left. Though very sympathetic (especially when those nasty prison guards start working her over), it's not like Sasori is a good girl just protecting herself. No, she'll go above and beyond the call of duty to inflict upon you whatever punishment she thinks you deserve. She's dangerous, doesn't care for authority, doesn't trust anyone, remarkably handy with weapons and cannot be stopped. Now that is one bad girl. BT

Nobuhiko Obayashi's "House" on 35mm at Toronto's Bloor Cinema this July!

by Chris MaGee

We are all huge fans of the inspired insanity of Nobuhiko Obayashi's "House" here at the Pow-Wow, so with Janus Films touring a new 35mm of the 1978 horror film around North America we were all wondering when and/ or if it would be making its way to our fair city any time soon. The ever watchful eyes of Bob Turnbull have finally ended our waiting and fretting... According to Janus Films' "House" page the new 35mm print of "House" will be screened here at The Bloor Cinema (506 Bloor Street W.) for seven consecutive nights between July 23rd and July 29th! Obviously it's too far in advance to have screening times, but as soon as that happens we'll let you know. That'll definitely be a hot ticket this summer, and it's about bloody time! See you all there!

Kazuo Hara's "Extreme Private Eros: Love Song 1974" at Toronto's CineCycle on March 26th

by Chris MaGee

Besides "House" coming to The Bloor there's other Toronto screening news this Friday and it comes by way of myself here at the Pow-Wow. Some of you will recall that I and local film curator (and musician and artist and Renaissance woman) Naomi Hocura premiered butoh dancer Masaki Iwana's 2008 film "Vermilion Souls" here at CineCycle this past month. Now, as part of what we hope will be an ongoing series of events that will highlight the experimental and underground film and culture of Japan Naomi and I are pleased to announce our second event.

On Friday, March 26th come out to CineCycle (129 Spadina Ave.) for a screening of Kazuo Hara's classic documentary "Extreme Private Eros: Love Song 1974". Hara, the director of such classic films as "Goodbye CP" and "The Emperor's Naked Army Marches On", obsessively documents his ex-lover Miyuki Takeda, a woman bent on living her life on her terms and in total opposition to society's expectations and morals. Living in Okinawa she takes up with a string of new lovers, both female and male, and supports her young son by dancing in a strip club catering to African-American G.I.s. Hara uses his camera both in an attempt to bring himself closer to Takeda and as a buffer against her frequent tirades against him and society at large.

The night starts at 8:00PM with a screening of the short films and video of Toronto artist DaHye Kim, and it's only $10.00 at the door (doors open at 7:30PM). We can't wait to see you there!

REVIEW: Golden Slumber


ゴールデンスランバー (Goruden suranba )

Released: 2010

Director:
Yoshihiro Nakamura

Starring:
Masato Sakai
Hidetaka Yoshioka
Yuko Takeuchi
Gaku Hamada

Teruyuki Kagawa

Running time: 139 min.

Reviewed by Chris MaGee


Aoyagi (Masato Sakai) has gone out and bought himself a new rod and reel, some bait and a snazzy new vest after getting an invite for a fishing trip from his old college buddy Morita (Hidetaka Yoshioka). Even if they don't catch any fish he envisions an afternoon of laughs and hashing old memories back and forth from their school days: the social club they created designed around grading fast food restaurants, their summer job working at a fireworks company with their old buddy Kazu (Hitori Gekidan) and Aoyagi's old girlfriend Haruko (Yuko Takeuchi), and their favorite Beatles album "Abbey Road". Aoyagi's afternoon doesn't go as planned though, not in the least. Instead of the great outdoors he ends up, with the little help of from a drugged water bottle, getting knocked out by Morita. Strange way to say "It's been way too long, old buddy!" but it was never part of Morita's plan to going fishing with Aoyagi. Actually this was never part of Morita's plan at all. Their day together was planned by someone else, someone who told Morita that if he brought his old friend to this exact spot, which just happened to be along a parade ropute, and drugged him until the Japanese Prime Minister's motorcade makes it's way past that Morita's gargantuan debts would be totally forgiven. You see, someone wants the Japanese Prime Minister dead and they want to pin the assassination on the unsuspecting Aoyagi. It's this dead simple and devious plot line that forms the basis of Yoshihiro Nakamura's edge-of-your-seat thriller "Golden Slumber".

If there's a director who can lay claim to the title of "The King of Journeymen Filmmakers", at least of the past ten years, it has to be Nakamura. With his career starting by penning such films as Hideo Nakata's "Dark Water" and Yoichi Sai's "Doing Time" (both mini masterpieces) the 40-year-old Nakamura has gone on to direct every kind of film you can imagine, from the J-Horror variation "The Booth", through the medical drama "The Glorious Team Batista", to the punk rock song that saves the world film "Fish Story". An auteur Nakamura is not. It's hard to find any pattern in his 12 movie filmography other than that three of them, including "Golden Slumber", are adaptations of the novels of Kotaro Isaka. Like his North American counterparts such as Stephen King and Michael Crichton the 39-year-old Isaka is hugely popular, but is far from being a literary genius. What his novels may lack in literary credibility they may make up for in tightly-crafted and hooky narratives, the kind of fiction that makes great screenplays. "Golden Slumber" is no different.

As one of the characters in "Golden Slumber" states at about 50-minutes into its 139-minute running time, "What a perfectly written scenario!" You see whoever has set the wheels of this assassination plot in motion has made sure that they've picked the perfect scapegoat to hang it off of. Two years previous to the series of events in the film Aoyagi, a run-of-the-mill delivery man for a large courier company, saved a pretty young pop idol (Shihori Kanjiya) from a burglar. It made him an instant hero, and a minor celebrity who will still on occasion be recognized by people in the street. So after the prime minister dies in a huge explosion during his parade and Aoyagi's photo is splashed across TV screens and newspaper headlines Aoyagi, this former everyman hero, finds it very hard to hide; in fact if it wasn't for the help of two totally deus ex machina characters, a mysterious serial killer (Gaku Hamada) and a hospitalized sewer worker (Akira Emoto) Aoyagi would be in the hands of the shadowy med in suits who may, or may not, be the ones who set him up as the 21st-century Lee Harvey Oswald.

Is an innocent everyman on the run, desperately trying to clear his name after being accused of a crime he didn't commit, an original story? Absolutely not. With such films as Alfred Hitchcock's "North By Northwest", Andrew Davis' "The Fugitive", and Tony Scott's "Enemy of the State" that innocent everyman on the run forms his own genre of films. "Golden Slumber" doesn't add anything new to this genre, except maybe the fact that it was made in Japan, but Nakamura's film can stand proudly at the front of this pack by being an utterly engaging piece of entertainment. So many times Japanese movie studios have tried to replicate a Hollywood thriller or action style film and failed miserably, either because Japanese films don't enjoy the same astronomical budgets that their North American counterparts enjoy, or because the cookie cutter Syd Field/ Robert McKee three act structures that comprise the engines of these types of films are just not as common in Asia. "Golden Slumber" is the rare Japanese film that gets the heart-stopping chases and continually racheted tension Hollywood thrillers right. There are two main players in this success. Of course one is Nakamura who, as he works from a script by Kotaro Isaka himself, never lets Aoyagi's run from justice lag for too long. The other is lead actor Masato Sakai. Sakai pefectly embodies his everyman character, a normal working guy always ready to be of help, always with a friendly smile on his face; but it's the eyes, frightened, tearful and alone, behind Aoyagi's smile that really makes Sakai's performance sing. His action/ thriller hero doesn't have rippling muscles and a gun in his boot. Aoyagi is a skinny, awkward guy who is just looking for "a way back homeward" like in The Beatles song "Golden Slumber" from which the film takes its title. Of course the supporting roles in the film are 100% expert as well with standouts being Teruyuki Kagawa's menacing government agent and Shiro Ito's scene-stealing performance as Aoyagi's father.

As I write this review the excitement I felt while watching "Golden Slumber", the bond that I formed with Aoyagi, all comes back to me and I find myself wishing I could return to that world again. It's true that hardcore fans of Hollywood thrillers may find the Japanese tendency to not tie every plot point up neatly and the time they give to charcater development a little off-putting, but I think that the vast majority of moviegoers will end up loving "Golden Slumber" as much as I did... that is if a domestic DVD distributor has the foresight to bring it to our shores. Let's keep our fingers crossed.

Koji Wakamatsu to receive a huge retrospective in Paris by the end of the year?

by Chris MaGee

Back in August we reported on how Paris-based distributor Blaq Out/ Dissidenz was going to be releasing 14 films by avant-garde pinku eiga director Koji Wakamatsu over the coming months. They already released a 4-disc box set featuring 1965's "Secrets Behind the Wall" (1965), 1966's "The Embryo Hunts in Secret", 1967's "Violated Angels", and 1969's "Go Go Second Time Virgin", plus selected Wakamatsu films (with English subtitles) that you can pay to stream online, but now Wildgrounds has gotten word of something much, much bigger.

Apparently Blaq Out/Dissidenz is involved in mounting a 40-film Wakamatsu retrospective at Paris' Cinematheque Francaise that wiull hopefully be running at the end of this year. A quick scan of Wakamatsu's lengthy filmography over at IMDb reveals that this will be nearly half of his creative output. Not many more details than that right now, but here's hoping that all this activity in France will spark the interest of DVD distributors in North America so that we can get more Wakamatsu titles on these shores soon.

Eita and Juri Ueno tweet about life and love in new TV series based around Twitter

by Chris MaGee

I have to be honest and say that even though the J-Film Pow-Wow has its own Twitter feed I don't us the damn thing very often besides sending out links to our blog updates. I just don't frankly think I'm important enough (or interesting enough) to let everyone know what I'm thinking using 140 characters at any given time during the day. Despite my wishy-washy feelings towards Twitter I know there are a lot of you out there who use it all the time, and it's for all you Twitter enthusiasts that Fuji TV will be airing a new series.

Titled "Sunao ni Narenakute" the show, which will debut on the Japanese TV network in April, will follow the lives of ten people (five men, five women) whose lives become intertwined via their tweets on the über-trendy social networking site. Amongst the cast North American film fans will recognize 27-year-old Eita (above left), star of "Toad's Oil" and "Dear Doctor", and 23-year-old Juri Ueno (above right), star of "Crying Out Love at the Center of the World" and "Nodame Cantabile". Eita will portray a photographer who is having second thoughts about following in his father's footsteps and becoming a war correspondent, while Ueno's character is a high school teacher who is wondering how much more mature she is compared to her students. According to Japan Zone the two actors have starred in so many TV shows together, "Sunao ni Narenakute" is number eight so far, that the Japanese press have dubbed them "The golden couple of the Heisei Era". I wonder if the two have become friends off-screen, and if so if they're following each other on Twitter. See how I tied that one up? Clever, I know.

REVIEW: Groper Train: Search for the Black Pearl


痴漢電車 下着検札 (Chikan densha: shitagi kensatsu)

Released: 1984

Director:
Yojiro Takita

Starring:
Yukijirô Hotaru
Shûji Kataoka
Kaoru Kaze

Kazumi Kimura
Naoto Takenaka

Running time: 64 min.

Reviewed by Matthew Hardstaff


Manchuria, 1928. The largest black pearl in the world is found on the dead hand of Zhang Zuoling, a Chinese man who was killed by a Japanese bomb. A Japanese soldier stumbles across the hand in a barren desert, and immediately recognizes it for what it is. He runs out of the desert in pure ecstasy, screaming and laughing like a mad man. The pearl is never seen again. Tokyo, 1984. A man gropes a girl on a train. He’s very explicit in fondling and grabbing. Then he has a heart attack. On his deathbed, he claims to know the whereabouts of the black pearl, but will only tell for one last fuck. And they do. And with his last dying breath he utters the words ‘pussy prints’. And so begins the search for one of the great mysteries of the 20th century, the search for the black pearl, a pearl so shrouded in secrecy it may even be responsible for Japans invasion of Manchuria just prior to WW2!

Yojiro Takita is possibly one of the most diverse directors in the world. The somber dramedy "Departures" won an academy award. Before that he did period films, some involving samurai, some involving blood spewing Yokai and others with magic wielding Yokai slayers. Prior to that he did some successful comedies, and before that he made this wonderful film, "Groper Train: Search for the Black Pearl". And he was incredibly successful at it. The series spans some 30 films, one made every year, and Takita directed almost a third of them. This was his bread and butter; this is how the academy award-winning director cut his teeth.

"The Search for the Black Pearl", and by extension I’m assuming most of Takita’s "Groper Train" films, are an infusion of "Pink Panther" type comedy and antics, melded into a Pinku film. One of Takita’s biggest editions to the series was his inclusion of Detective Kuroda and his sexy sidekick Hamako. The film is interspersed, almost at regular intervals, with a scene involving nudity, and more than likely groping or sex, and the search for the pearl. It’s obvious Takita was trying to make films you would get some kind of emotional pleasure from watching other than the sex. The humor can be very lowbrow at times, filled with gags involving farts and feces. Kuroda always wearing swimming goggles and carrying a breathing apparatus, combing the subways of Tokyo, looking for the vagina with the correct print, peering up women’s skirts, spraying down their private parts with ink and taking an imprint is hardly inoffensive material. But Takita isn’t exploitative in anyway, and Kuroda is presented as such a strange, weird character, that you can’t take any of his actions seriously.

Some of the gags in it are very funny, and they aren’t all lowbrow and in your face. Underneath the layer of European sex comedy inspired antics is a subtle, heartwarming underbelly that is trying to shine through. There are moments, incredibly small, and very infrequent, that you can see he’s trying to add emotional depth, trying to engage, and it works. It’s a bizarre mishmash of groping, private detective antics and a heartwarming tale.

On a side note, I’ve noticed that these films have always been listed as "Molester Train". With this release, and that of Wedding Capriccio, they’re now Groper Train. One obviously sounds worse than the other. I’m assuming that is the instigator of the name change? Because there technically isn’t much ‘molesting’ going on in the films, it is much more along the lines of ‘groping’, just so people aren’t confused.

Read more by Matthew Hardstaff at his blog.

Keiko Kitagawa plays a woman who loses her true love and her memory in "Matataki"

by Chris MaGee

If you have a Kleenex box nearby you better grab it. Tokyograph is reporting on a new film that seems to be designed to make people weep. Titled "Matataki" the film stars Keiko Kitagawa (Handsome Suit, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift) as a young woman named Izumi whose boyfriend dies (played by Masaki Okada) in a motorcycle accident. The shock of losing of her true love causes her to blank out all memory of the fatal accident, and it's up to Izumi's lawyer (Nene Otsuka) to help her client regain those last minutes of her boyfriend's life. That's the strange part of this whole project, which is based on a novel by Len Kawahara. If you're trying to recover suppressed memories you don't tend to run out and get yourself a lawyer, you get yourself a shrink... unless the whole plot revolves around one of those personal injury lawyers that advertise on TV. Maybe.

"Matataki" is being directed by Itsumichi Isomura, the man who brought us the the abysmal 1996 transgender romance "Close Your Eyes and Hold Me", while Misa Shimizu, Tomorowo Taguchi, and Kin Sugai will be rounding out the supporting cast. Japanese audiences can take their Kleenex boxes to the theatres in June when "Matataki" is slated to be released in theatres.

Weekly Trailers


Girl's Life - Yukichi Otsuka (2009)


Indie director Yuki Otsuka takes us into the world of hostess clubs in his latest film "Girl's Life". 25-year-old fashion model Rina Sakurai makes her acting debut as a young woman from Osaka who hopes to, if not make her fortune, then at least make ends meet by taking a job in a hostess club in Tokyo.




Ban Kaku Rock - Makoto Naito (1973)

What's a Friday without a bit of good old-fashioned Toei Pinky Violence? Taking a page from Yasuharu Hasebe's "Stray Cat Rock: Sex Hunter" Makoto Naito, best known for his "Furyo Bancho" series casts Emiko Yamauchi as the leader of a gang of female teenage delinquents. Get ready for Rock! Explosion! Young! But be forewarned, this trailer ISN'T 100% work safe.

REVIEW: Who's Camus Anyway?


カミュなんて知らない (Kamyu nante shiranai)

Released: 2005

Director:
Mitsuo Yanagimachi

Starring:
Shuuji Kashiwabara
Hinano Yoshikawa
Ai Maeda

Hideo Nakaizumi
Tomorowo Taguchi

Running time: 115 min.

Reviewed by Bob Turnbull


About halfway through Mitsuo Yanagimachi's 2005 film about student filmmakers, Albert Camus' most famous novel "The Stranger" is introduced. It's suggested that the main actor read it to get a better understanding of his character in the film - a man who one day simply kills an old woman to see what it feels like. The actor's knowledge of literature is somewhat slim as he can't even pronounce the author's name, but he shares more than he knows with both the killer in the story and the killer in the book. It marks a central theme to the film - how art imitates life and vice versa.

The story is straightforward as it covers a week in the life of film students in the pre-production phase of a film entitled "The Bored Murderer". Many production issues arise as the inexperience of the students shows through during team meetings and rehearsals ("does the continuity person need to be at a costume meeting?"). We also get to meet many of the team - the selfish director who thinks directing is "cool", the earnest hard working production assistant, the film geek prop handlers, the flighty continuity girl, the "living in the present" lead actor and the mentoring professor nicknamed Aschenbach. If you're wondering whether that's a reference to the main character in Visconti's "Death In Venice", you'd be right since the professor has developed a potentially unhealthy attraction to a young female student and follows her whenever he can. He's a former director himself, but has been spinning his wheels and lost his creative spirit since his wife died. If you want more film references they can be easily had - the obsessive girlfriend of the director has been dubbed "Adele" (after Truffault's "The Story Of Adele H"), a cafe scene where a student describes what it would be like if they were in a cafe in a Godard movie, an analysis of the number of edits in Mizoguchi films and the requisite lists of favourite movies.

The most impressive scene, though, is the single take 7-minute opening tracking shot that winds its way through most of the university campus, introduces all the main players and even contains two characters discussing other films with long opening tracking shots. Since one of the films they mention is Robert Altman's "The Player" (which does the exact same thing), it becomes almost a meta-meta moment. That's part of the enjoyment of this film though - these references and the struggles of its characters relate back to how intertwined film can be to people's lives. Are your reactions in certain situations your own or do they come from characters you've seen on screen? How much personal experience should you bring into your own characters or creative work? The lines blur. Particularly in a scene where several characters are discussing characters and find similarities with themselves - all the while student musicians are practicing in the hallway providing the music for the scene.

Most of the film takes place on the school's campus where there are always other students practicing music, dance, pantomime or some other creative pursuits either outside or within its multi-level open concept main building. It allows Yanagimachi to play with a variety of camera setups and framing as the characters wander between the school's different levels and all of its nooks and crannies. This allows for the many long takes, where we slide from one character interaction to another, to still be visually interesting and to incorporate the many other students who essentially provide the soundtrack with their constant creativity. All of this leads to the final 10-15 minutes of the film where the team go on location for their first day's shoot - the filming of the murder scene. It's a terrific depiction of a fully committed artist's own view of his work while he is creating it.

In the end, the movie a bit of a love letter to the medium itself. Early in the story the professor and a colleague are discussing how it is interesting that though Kabuki is thriving in the age of the computer, film is nearing extinction. The professor briefly stops and states "It's film's fragility that makes it so dear".

Read more from Bob Turnbull at his blog.

Criterion puts six "Zatoichi" films online for free while HVE's discs go out of print

by Chris MaGee

Here's a bit of news that all of you hardcore chanbara film fans out there have probably already twigged about. According to 24 Frames Per Second the first six of the 26-film "Zatoichi" series are now available for streaming online for free! That's the good news. The bad news is that these six films - "The Tale of Zatoichi", "The Tale of Zatoichi Continues", "New Tale of Zatoichi", "Zatoichi The Fugitive", "On the Road", and "Zatoichi and the Chest of Gold" - are only available for streaming in the U.S. via Hulu. Talk about a tease for us Canadians and you folks on the other side of the Atlantic!

Many hardcore Zatoichi fans will obviously not be bothered by the fact that this online streaming is only available south of the border as these six films have been available on DVD through Home Vision Entertainment for some time now. Or at least they were.

It turns out that many of these "Zatoichi" discs, as well as quite a few of HVE's other Japanese titles, have recently gone out of print due to their signed agreement with The Criterion Collection, who owned the North American rights to these films, expired at the start of 2010. This obviously frees up the Criterion folks to post these online, but it also leaves a lot of film fans holding onto out of print DVDs. I think that my collection has at least a dozen of the Home Vision Entertainment discs. See? Even though I may beat myself up for spending far too much of my money on collecting DVDs it's stories like this that vindicate that spending. One day a DVD is as common as dirt and the next minute they're rare as gold. Something to think about.

Takeshi Kitano joins friend Joji Tokoro on his latest comedy album

by Chris MaGee

Here's a fun little item courtesy of Japan Zone. If you've seen then Hayao Miyazaki's last film "Ponyo" you've literally heard Joji Tokoro before. The 55-year-old comedian/ TV personality/ singer voiced the character of Fujimoto, the father of the titular fish girl. In Japan Tokoro is a hugely popular entertainer, appearing on numerous TV shows and releasing a series of zany comedy albums (he's also the voice of "Alf" in the Japanese-dubbed version of the show). His latest comedy album "Kokekokko!" features a very special guest on a number of tracks. Yes, he's right there on the album cover - it's Takeshi Kitano. Tokoro and Kitano have been close friends for a number of years, both appearing on screen and hanging out off screen. While a thorough search of the web didn't result in any of the rock, enka, and pop-influenced tracks that make up Tokoro's latest album I did manage to track down this short clip of the two comedians hamming it up on Japanese TV. Looks like Kitano is having a good laugh with his trademark Komenichi pose while Tokoro is trying to strum a tune.

REVIEW: Gate of Flesh


肉体の門 (Nikutai no mon)

Released: 1964

Director:
Seijun Suzuki

Starring:
Jo Shishido
Yumiko Nogawa
Satoko Kasai
Koji Wada
Tomiko Ishii

Kayo Matsuo

Running time: 90 min.

Reviewed by Marc Saint-Cyr


Part of his remarkable run of films from the 1960s, “Gate of Flesh” shows Seijun Suzuki tackling more politically charged subject matter than that of his popular crime thrillers. It could be seen as a companion piece to his “Story of a Prostitute,” which was made one year later in 1965 and focuses on a group of prostitutes living on the Manchurian front during the China-Japan conflict of 1937. “Gate of Flesh”’s premise is similar (both are based on novels by Taijiro Tamura), but bears a significant difference: it is set not near the start of World War II, but just after its fateful conclusion in an American-occupied Tokyo .

The main character is Maya (Yumiko Nogawa), an innocent girl desperate to find a way to survive in the city. She joins a tough “family” of prostitutes who live in a derelict building and are led by the street-smart pro Sen (Satoko Kasai). Soon after, Maya successfully becomes one of them, armed with the proper knowledge and attitude for the dog-eat-dog world they live and work in. Yet complications arise in the form of Ibuki (Jo Shishido), a returned soldier-turned-scoundrel who stirs up trouble with his numerous dirty dealings and the feelings of desire he ignites within the circle of prostitutes.

The most fascinating aspect of “Gate of Flesh” is Suzuki’s vivid realization of the historical setting in which the film is set. Though he uses several techniques that undeniably call attention to their artificiality, the dominant tone that endures throughout the film is one of gritty realism. The market where much of the action occurs is constantly crowded and dirty, filled with merchants (both legitimate and not so legitimate), civilians, Americans, military police and the prostitutes hard at work and defending their territory, all of them coexisting in a Petri dish of heat and filth. The Japanese knowingly live in a country just beginning to recover from its recent defeat in the war. The stinging injury done to its national pride is clearly felt through the blame for the loss freely passed around, the need to rebuild and recover voiced by Ibuki and the ever-present, bombed-out ruins. Significantly, one character says, “We all got hurt in the war,” and none of them will be forgetting it any time soon. Maya often speaks of her brother who was killed in the war, and his flag that she keeps becomes a symbol not only of her loss, but of her country’s disgrace. In one memorable scene, Ibuki drunkenly sings wartime songs and reminisces about his experiences in Northern China before forlornly draping the flag over his head.

Another deeply interesting element in “Gate of Flesh” is the community of hookers and their self-made way of life. Savvy and sly, they follow a tough code that allows them to maintain their independence. Along with eschewing pimps and fiercely guarding their territory, they enforce one particularly important rule: never work for free, or else suffer the consequences. When it is broken, the other girls deliver upon the unlucky offender humiliating and terrible punishments, usually including a good beating. They view sex solely as a business, forsaking genuine romantic relationships and sacrificing happiness for the cruel yet necessary survival tactics of a world left in tatters. While somewhat admirable for the spirit of feminine independence that defines it, this rough justice is clearly another sign of the war’s damaging, dehumanizing effects.

Consideration of the amount and quality of ideas explored in Gate of Flesh alone would qualify it as a great film. However, being a Suzuki film, it is also a pure visual delight. Its story is told with plenty of energy, enlisting a confidently mobile camera (operated by Shigeyoshi Mine) to dive into the bustling city head-first – or, at certain points, to look down upon the masses of humanity from above. Several techniques are deployed for purely theatrical effect, such as the spotlight that follows Sen around a room before and after she services a customer and the constructed studio set in which Maya seduces a priest. Striking superimpositions and editing methods also stand out (as does one scene that Suzuki devotes in grisly detail to the killing and carving of a cow), but it is the film’s dazzling use of saturated color that really puts the icing on the cake. Each of the four main prostitutes is assigned a different color (yellow, purple, red for Sen and green for Maya), highlighted through their wardrobe, vibrant backdrops and screen tints with painterly exuberance.

“Gate of Flesh” provides a perfect blend of social commentary and intoxicating style, making it my favorite of Suzuki’s films that I’ve seen so far. I can imagine it making an interesting double bill alongside either Shohei Imamura’s similarly themed “Pigs and Battleships” or Akira Kurosawa’s “Dodes’ka-den,” which bears a resemblance to it both through its impoverished setting and kaleidoscopic visuals. In any case, fans of Suzuki or the excitingly radical Japanese cinema of the ‘60s would do well to add this film to their collection pronto – as I myself will be doing before too long.

Read more by Marc Saint-Cyr at his blog.

Monday, February 22, 2010

More titles announced for Nippon Connection '10!

by Chris MaGee

My flight is book and so is my accomodation, and I've officially been itching to head to Frankfurt for Nippon Connection 2010 since the first round of films was announced at the beginning of this month. Now that a new batch of titles have been announced for the 10th anniversary of one of, if not the best, Japanese film festival outside of Japan I may have to resort to sedatives to get me through the next month and a half.

Now added to such films as Toshiaki Toyoda's "Blood of Rebirth", Koji Yakusho's "Toad's Oil", and Isshin Inudo's "Zero Focus" are Yu Irie's indie success story "8000 Miles (Saitma's Rapper)", Tetsuaki Matsue's one-shot music film "Live Tape", Momoko Ando's "Kakera (A Piece of Your Life)" newly acquired by Third Window Films, underground gore director Shozin Fukui's "S-94" (above), Eiichiro Hasumi's crowd-pleasing "Oppai Volleyball", "One Million Yen Girl" by the insanely talented Yuki Tanada, Toya Sato's manga adaptation "Kaiji", Nobua Mizuta's "Maiko haaaan!!!" follow-up "No More Cry!!!", Yoshifumi Tsubota's manga biopic "Miyoko", and Keralino Sandorovich's comedy "Crime or Punishment?!?".

I had a list of must-see-films after the first list of titles were announced, but now... Ah hell, let's just say that from between April 14th to April 19th I am going to be a very, very busy boy running from one screening to the next.

The Nippon Connection website hasn't been updated (yet) for this year's fest, but keep checking back there and here for more details on what to expect in Frankfurt this April.

The Berlin International Film Festival honours Yamada, Terashima and Yukisada

by Chris MaGee

While we Japanese film fans get ready to make the pilgrimage to Germany for this April's Nippon Connection film festival a lot of film fans are heading back home from Germany after the 60th annual Berlin International Film Festival wrapped up on Sunday.

While the Golden Bear went to Turkish filmmaker Semih Kaplanoglu for "Bal (Honey)", and film icon Roman Polanski was awarded the Silver Bear for "Ghost Writer", Japanese film fans can be proud of Shinobu Terashima (above right) for taking home the Best Actress Award for her role in Koji Wakamatsu's Edogawa Rampo adaptation "Caterpillar". I've been in love with Terashima since seeing her in Ryuichi Hiroki's "Vibrator", and all I've been seeing from "Caterpillar" reinforces my belief that she is one of Japan's most gifted actresses at the moment.

This year was also good for Yoji Yamada (above left). The director of such classics as "The Yellow Handkerchief" and "The Hidden Blade" was on hand to receive The Berlinale Camera for his contributions to world cinema. It's sad, though, that his latest film "Otouto (About Her Brother)", which closed Berlin this year, is getting some pretty damning reviews. Wildgrounds posted some highlights of various write-ups which variously call the film "lacklustre, unashamedly old-fashioned", "run-of-the-mill", and having "few genuine laughs and zero texture". Ouch!

At least Isao Yukisada got off with a bit more praise. The "Crying Out Loud at the Center of the World" director's adaptation of Shuichi Yoshida's novel "Parade", about a group of 20-somethings in Tokyo, was awarded the top prize in the Panorama programme.

Ryuhei Kitamura and Shunji Iwai to bring us "Fast and Furious" meets otaku culture?

by Chris MaGee

When I was about 12 a couple of friends and I had this elaborate plan that when we all turned 16 and got our driver's licenses we'd buy a van and totally pimp it out - a booming sound system, fancy detailing, and my responsibility was to use my artistic talents on airbrushing a huge Dungeons and Dragons-inspired scene on the side of it. Ah, the cheesy dreams of male adolescence! We never got the van, in fact I never even got my driver's license, but those heady days of youth came back to me this week as I read about another collaboration between Shunji Iwai and Ryuhei Kitamura. The creative partnership between the "All About Lily Chou-Chou" director and the man behind "Versus" has been well chronicled, from the aborted teaming up to bring the rock star tale "Bandage" to the screen to their eventual collaboration on the animated sci-fi film "Baton". Now it seems that Iwai and Kitanura are getting together for another proposed project about itasha car culture.

Haven't heard of itasha? Well, if you can imagine a hybrid of MTV's "Pimp My Ride" and super otaku geekdom then you'd start to get a good idea of what this subculture is about. Itasha, translated as "Pain Mobile" because of the financial pain its practitioners go through, is a sub-set of otaku culture that has people elaborately detailing their cars and motorcycles with manga and anime characters, mostly of the cute and buxom variety. You can check out a gallery of images of itasha cars at Pink Tentacle.

Well, this past weekend Kitamura and Iwai were in attendance at the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts for the "Contemporary Japanese Cinema: Outside, Elsewhere, In the World..." mini-film festival (read our original report here) and according to Anime News Network Kitamura revealed that he and Iwai may very well be working on a screenplay about itasha culture. "So, the other day, Shunji was watching, you know, 'Fast & Furious'," Kitamura told the audience at USC, "and he just told me, 'Can we come up something that's 'Fast & Furious' meets itasha?' What? 'Fast & Furious' meets itasha?" That's my sentiment exactly... what?!

What's that old saying? "I used to be disgusted and now I'm just amused"? After seeing that Iwai had directed a music video for pre-fab idol group AKB48 I was disgusted, but with this news of an otaku version of "Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift"... well, I can't say I'm amused, but I'm certainly not surprised anymore. There's no time frame yet for this project, which is fine with me. You'll excuse me while I go pop my DVD of "All About Lily Chou-Chou" in and try and forget about this news item.

Masaaki Yuasa returns with new animated series "Yojohan Shinwa Taikei"

by Chris MaGee

One of my very favorite animated films of all time is Masaaki Yuasa's mind-scrambling 2004 journey into the after life and beyond "Mind Game". I just don't understand that with the fever that people have for innovative anime from Japan why Yuasa's film hasn't made it to DVD while Satoshi Kon's, Michael Arias', and Makoto Shinkai's films have. It can't be the fact that people would view the 45-year-old animator as a one hot wonder. Yuasa has been kicking around the animation scene since the early 90's and has helmed animated TV series like 2006's "Kemonozume" and 2008's "Kaiba", both of which showcased his jaw-dropping animation skills and inspired storytelling.

Well, here's hoping that the third time's the charm as Yuasa is prepping his latest animated series for its run on Fuji TV on April 22nd. Titled "Yojohan Shinwa Taikei" the series is based on Morimi Tomohiko's novel of the same name that chronicles the life of a 3rd year Kyoto University student. The official site for "Yojohan Shinwa Taikei" has been updated with a trailer and once again Yuasa amazes with his collage of styles, from photocopied backgrounds to delicate character design (courtesy of Yusuke Nakamura). You can check out the full trailer below after which you'll be as confused as we are as to why Yuasa's work isn't more accessible here in North America.

Thanks to Wildgrounds for pointing the way to this.

Revealed! Kirsten Dunst turns Japanese with the help of McG and Takashi Murakami

by Chris MaGee

Remember when we told you about how Japanese pop artist Takashi Murakami had tagged "Terminator: Salvation" director McG to shoot a video of actress Kirsten Dunst running around Akihabara in a blue wig? We kind of knew what was going on and we kind of didn't, but we knew that the The Vapors 1980 hit "Turning Japanese" was involved. Well, now otaku icon Danny Choo has posted the end result of this odd collaboration, and for all of you pervs who were hoping beyond hope that the subtext of The Vapors song, ie: masturbation, was going to be addressed in the film you will be sadly disappointed (and get your mind out of the gutter!)

It turns out that what was shot wasn't some kind of quasi-art film, but a straight up music video titled "Akihabara Majokko Princess" which features Dunst singing (with the help of a hell of a lot of multi-tracking) "Turning Japanese". It's fairly cute and both Murakami and Bathing Ape founder Tomoaki "Nigo" Nagao make cameo appearances. All you fans of otaku and kawaii culture will get a lot out of this and all you pervs do get to see Dunst's undies as she battles mutant breakdancers. Hope that makes you happy.

You can check out "Akihabara Majokko Princess" below. Thanks to Japanator for the heads up on this. *** PLEASE NOTE" This video seems to be getting taken down from YouTube, but check it out at ebaumsworld.com...while you can.

March DVD Releases


Ponyo - Hayao Miyazaki (2008)
Disney/ Release Date: March 2nd

Castle in the Sky [Special Edition] - Hayao Miyazaki (1986)
Disney/ Release Date: March 2nd

My Neighbor Totoro - Hayao Miyazaki (1988)
Disney/ Release Date: March 2nd



Kiki's Delivery Service - Hayao Miyazaki (1989)
Disney/ Release Date: March 2nd

God's Left Hand, Devil's Right Hand - Shusuke Kaneko (2006)
Tokyo Shock/ Release Date: March 9th

High Kick Girl! - Fuyuhiko Nishi (2009)
First Look Studios/ Release Date: March 30th

Negative Happy Chainsaw Edge - Takuji Kitamura (2007)
Well Go USA/ Release Date: March 30th

Love and Honour - Yoji Yamada (2006)
Funimation/ Release Date: March 30th

TV comedian goes for world domination, or at least Osaka domination, in new comedy

by Chris MaGee

Osaka people are tough, resourceful, creative... but could they found their own Osaka fiefdom in the middle of Japan? That's the concept behind a new comedy due out later this year. "Saraba Itoshi no Daitouryou (Good-bye, Dear President)" is the feature directorial debut of TV comedian Sekai no Nabeatsu (a.k.a. Atsumu Watanabe). In the film, co-directed by Daisuke Shibata, Sekai no Nabeatsu gets elected as the Prefectural Governor of Osaka, but we can only assume power goes to his head because he quickly transforms Osaka Prefecture into The United States of Osaka and appoints himself President. Take that, Tokyo! Only problem is that a plot is hatched to assassinate the President of Osaka...

This sounds so goofy it might just be entertaining (Sekai no Nabeatsu is calling his film the "most popcorn-and-cola movie"), but after schooling myself in his comedy act by running through a bunch of YouTube videos I can't say I'm holding out much hope for "Saraba Itoshi no Daitouryou". Nabeatsu's Conan O'Brien hair and pencil mustache combined with his shtick of spastic word delivery got pretty tiresome after about 20-minutes of videos. I can't see how many folks would want to sit through 90-minutes of it, President of Osaka or no. "Saraba Itoshi no Daitouryou" does have a pretty good supporting cast though - Ren Osugi, Toru Nakamura, and Junichi Kimoto, amongst other - so you never know.

Thanks to Tokyograph for this news item and Sankei Sports for the above promo still.

Japanese Weekend Box Office, February 20th to February 21st


1. Avatar (Fox)
2. Oceans (Gaga)
3. About Her Brother* (Shochiku)
4. It's Complicated (Toho Towa)
5. The Fallen Angel* (Kadokawa)
6. The Negotiator: The Movie* (Toei)
7. Invictus (Warner)
8. Golden Slumber* (Toho)
9. Coraline (Gaga)
10. Shinkenger Vs Goonger* (Toei)

* Japanese film

(Courtesy of Box Office Japan)

Friday, February 19, 2010

First look at Naoko Ogigami's "Toilet"... filmed in Toronto!

by Chris MaGee

It was back in November that we reported on how "Megane (Glasses)" and "Kamome Diner" director Naoko Ogigami had managed to sneak in and out of Toronto during September and October to shoot her new film simply titled "Toilet". At that point details were pretty sketchy, but thanks to Cinema Cafe details of this homegrown project are coming to light.

"I was always hoping someday to film in North America," says the 37-year-old director who previosuly shot her 2003 film "Kamome Diner" in Helsinki, Finland. With "Toilet", which Ogigami also wrote, she got her chance. The film tells the story of an unlikely trio of siblings - a nerd who's obsessed with plastic models (Alex House), his pianist pianist brother (David Lendl), and their sister (Tatiana Mazurani), an aspiring air guitarist - who are coping with the loss of their mother. Somehow (and this remains a bit unclear) their real mother (played by Masako Motai) is in fact Japanese and comes to North America to live with them. All three of the Canadian actors were chosen after open casting calls in Toronto last year. On an added Can-Con note Caitlin Cronenberg, daughter of famed Canadian director David Cronenberg, worked on set as a still photographer. You can check out some of her work above.

Pony Canyon is set to give "Toilet" a limited theatrical release in Japan this summer, but hopefully we'll see it make the rounds of festivals in North America... and hopefully a bit of a homecoming here in Toronto.

Iconic manga "Ashita no Joe" to be brought to the screen in live-action adaptation

by Chris MaGee

Back at the beginning of 2009 I reviewed the 1980 animated film based on Tetsuya Chiba's iconic manga "Ashita no Joe". While manga characters like Astroboy, Gegege no Kitaro, and Doraemon have gained fame around the world none of them can boast the huge cultural impact that Chiba's orphaned boxer Joe Yabuki had to young Japanese during the tumultuous late 60's and early 70's. This was the scrappy pugilist pulled from the gutter to be a prize fighter who was adopted as an ideological hero of Japan's left-wing student movement including the Red Army Members who hijacked a Japan Airlines Boeing 727 and flew it to Pyonyang, North Korea in 1970, plus the manga character who was honoured with a real-life funeral organized by avant-garde filmmaker and playwright Shuji Terayama. Let's see if Astroboy can top that!

So it was with a certain amount of trepidation that I read this report posted over at Anime News Network this week. It looks like "Ashita no Joe" is going to be going the way of every other successful manga and anime character and will be recycled into a big budget live-action film. Japanese TV Network TBS is behind the project and apparently Tomohisa Yamashita (above left) of the boy band NEWS is set to put on slip on the gloves as Joe.

Now, a live-action "Ashita no Joe" isn't without precedent. Yasuharu Hasebe, the man behind the camp classic "Black Tight Killers" directed a live action film of Chiba's manga with Masatsugu Ishibashi in the role of Joe. Yes, Ishibashi had a career as a singer as well, but as you can see from the clip of Hasebe's film below he's a bit more butch that Yamashita... although Yamashita does look studly with his shirt off...

REVIEW: Lala Pipo

ララピポ (Lala Pipo)

Released: 2009

Director:
Masayuki Miyano

Starring:
Hiroki Narimiya
Tomoko Murakami
Yuri Nakamura
Mari Hamada
Tetsu Watanabe

Running time: 93 min.



Reviewed by Eric Evans


Set in the milieu of the Japanese sex industry, "Lala Pipo" looks like a romantic comedy--it's shot in the bright, colorful style of a Doris Day picture. But like the similarly visually-rich-but-misleading "Memories of Matsuko," that's a trick: Director Masayuki Miyano tells a harsh, at times brutal, series of overlapping stories. If you're familiar with the insipid current hit "Valentine's Day"--a collection of love stories showcasing shiny happy people falling into love with one another--here's the flipside of the coin, examining the broken romance at the seedy underbelly of AV films and hostess clubs.

But all is not gloom and doom. There are plenty of off-kilter laughs in "Lala Pipo", and (spoiler alert) try as I might I can't think of another movie with a talking muppet penis. It's tempting to recommend the film based on the few fantasy elements because they work so well, but they're few and far between. When events turn ugly (and they do) the film is unflinching. Considering the subject matter there aren't many of these sequences either, but they're jarring--moreso in that they're juxtaposed against the saturated colors and rom-com expectations of their presentation.

Writer Tetsuya Nakajima, who not coincidentally also wrote the similarly freewheeling flesh cartoons "Matsuko" and "Kamikaze Girls", adapted Okuda Hideo's novel with much the same wit and swing as his previous efforts. It's never boring, but it's a somewhat hollow enterprise--fun but forgettable. What seemed so unexpected in "Kamikaze Girls" doesn't seem so fresh or new here, and after the technicolor ebullience and emotional weight of "Matsuko", "Lala Pipo" seems lightweight despite hitting similar notes of pathos. But Nakajima and Miyano are talented enough storytellers that it's still a must-see, if only for the unrestrained performances of Hiroki Narimiya as a hostess club talent scout shamelessly preying on young women and Tomoko Murakami as an anime voice actress and unlikely predator. Both make much out of little, transcending ridiculous costumery to bring surprising depth to supporting roles that, on the surface, seemed like one-note clichés. The film's skip-and-jump chronology allows the viewer to watch a story unfold one way then re-examine it with added insight further down the line, allowing the characters to justify their actions with a level of honesty and self-awareness unusual in commercial film.

At just over 90 minutes "Lala Pipo" isn't long enough to wear out its welcome, but it's difficult to imagine Nakajima mining this vein again. He hasn't yet descended into self-parody, but a filmmaker this vibrant shouldn't be repeating himself to this extent. Perhaps that's unfair in that he just wrote the adaptation; After his early successes it's not difficult to imagine that his particular skill would be in demand, and like any industry, once something hits in movies it's bound to be repeated until the next thing comes along to replace it. It could be that contrasting serious subject matter with cheerful visual filmmaking tropes is his one trick, and if so it's a good one; Viewer expectations are so ingrained by Hollywood formula that, when the twists occur, they really are effective. There's a sequence with Murakami and a suitor which feels so much like a happy ending that when it goes wrong (and it goes WRONG) it's genuinely shocking. Occurring as it does in a fantasy-rich segment, and between two characters that have been portrayed quite sympathetically, it's the kind of sharp left turn rarely seen in films.

If this review seems at odds with itself, well, it reflects how I felt about the film. It's very engaging, but somehow the most memorable bits are the gimmicks. "Matsuko" stuck with me for days, but "Lala Pipo" was largely gone the moment the credits rolled. I would recommend it without reservation, but only to the extent that you might recommend a burger joint or a pop song: Don't expect anything more than a fun but fleeting entertainment and you'll be delighted.

Who am I kidding? You knew whether or not "Lala Pipo" was for you when you saw the phrase "talking muppet penis."

Veteran actor Makoto Fujita, 1933-2010

by Chris MaGee

Another sad loss this week in the Japanese entertainment industry. Veteran TV and film actor Makoto Fujita, best known to Japanese audiences as Mondo the assassin in the 1970's TV Asahi series "Hissatsu Shiokinin" and to North American audiences for his role as real-life Class B war criminal Tasuku Okada in Takashi Koizumi's "Best Wishes for Tomorrow" (above), has died Wednesday of an aortic aneurysm in Suita City, Osaka Prefecture. He was 76-years-old.

Fujita, in a way, began his career in film at birth. The son of silent film star Rintaro Fujima he first took to the stage 1952 and then onto TV in 1957 mostly in musical and comedic roles. He continued in this vein through the 1960's starring in three films alongside the comedy jazz group The Crazy Cats. It wasn't until 1973 when he took the role of Mondo in the period drama "Hissatsu shiokinin" that he went from being a star to a superstar. He would spend the next three-plus decades appearing in numerous film and TV projects as well as more than a few "Hissatsu shiokinin" feature films and reboots. Sadly Fujita had been suffering with poor health in the past decade including a battle against esophageal cancer in 2008.

Our condolences to Fujta's family and friends. Thanks to Japan Zone for this news.

Mieko Harada stars in docudrama commemorating the Tokyo sarin gas attacks

by Chris MaGee

On March 20th it will be the 15th anniversary of the sarin gas attacks on the Tokyo subway system by members of the Aum Shinrikyo religious cult. The events of that day, which killed 12 people, severely injured 50 more, and sickened thousands of other commuters, rocked the foundations of Japanese society. Why did these cult members attempt mass murder and of their fellow Japanese no less? These questions still plague the Japanese consciousness to this day. While the victims (and the Japanese public at large) have never gotten the easy answers to these questions the shock of the attacks has been channeled into a number of films and documentaries from Tatsuya Mori's documentaries "A" and "A2", through Teruo Ishii's absurd satire "Jigoku", to Akihiko Shiota's insightful "Canary". Now to commemorate this 15th anniversary Fuji TV has enlisted one of Japan's top actresses to give a voice to the families of those killed in the attacks.

Mieko Harada (above left), star of such films as Kinji Fukasaku's "House on Fire" and Akira Kurosawa's "Ran", has been cast in the docudrama "3.20 Sarin Subway Attack 15 Years On - Just what happened that day in Kasumigaseki?" which will air on the Japanese network on March 20th at 9:00PM. The 51-year-old actress will play Shizue Takahashi, the wife of a stationmaster who worked at Kasumigaseki station and was one of the 12 killed that day. The real-life Shizue Takahashi has been a vocal advocate for the victims of the sarin attacks, attending the trial of the five Aum members responsible for seeding the train lines with the poisonous gas.

Thanks to Japan Today for this news item.

REVIEW: 100 Years of Japanese Cinema


日本映画史100年 (Nihon eiga no hyaku nen)

Released: 1995

Director:
Nagisa Oshima

Starring:
Nagisa Oshima (Narrator)

Original score:
Toru Takemitsu


Running time: 60 min.


Reviewed by Chris MaGee


In the past few months my girlfriend Polly and I rented the entire 1995 BBC TV documentary series "Cinema Europe: The Other Hollywood". We sat in rapt silence (only broken by the occasional "wow" or "that's amazing") as we watched the history of cinema in Europe from the invention of the cinématographe by the Lumière Brothers in 1895 to the proliferation of "talkies" during the early 1930's. For most of the series my girlfriend sat with a pen and pad writing down titles of films that we've continued to search out during the past weeks. "Wouldn't it be great if they had a series like this on Japanese cinema?" I remarked at one point, and I followed up with Marty Gross, a friend who works with the Criterion Collection resourcing Japanese films. I found out that he had helped get "Cinema Europe" released in Japan with Kenneth Branagh's excellent narration replaced by an equally excellent one by famed film critic Nagaharu Yodogawa. "Isn't there a similar series somewhere about Japanese film?" I asked Marty. "Not really. Japanese studios are notorious for not cooperating with each other, so it's very difficult to bring all that footage together like they did for 'Cinema Europe'," was his answer. In order for my girlfriend and I to continue our cinematic journey through Europe and onto Japan I had to turn to Nagisa Oshima's much shorter but still excellent one-hour 1995 TV documentary "100 Years of Japanese Cinema".

I had first seen Oshima's personal overview of the history of Japanese film a couple years ago during the Nagisa Oshima retrospective at Cinematheque Ontario here in Toronto. "You'll like this," I told Polly as I popped the DVD in to play, "It starts way back during the silent era, plus it has English narration." It turns out that the copy that a friend had lent me was the version narrated by Oshima himself. Okay, it might require a bit more attention for the subtitles, but in the end a bonus. We settled in, this time without Polly's pen and pad but my thumb on the pause button of the DVD remote so I could chime in with the occasional "I have that one," and "I wish they'd release this film." We were immediately struck by an important difference between Oshima's film and "Cinema Europe". So many of the early silent films that Oshima begins his history of Japanese film with, a history that Oshima quickly points out began just a year after the invention of the cinématographe, are simply represented by stills. This wasn't an aesthetic choice by Oshima. The sad reality behind these brief flashes of the very beginnings of motion pictures in Japan goes beyond the fragility of celluloid. The Great Kanto Earthquake, the Allied bombing of WW2, the American Occupation and strict film censorship under General Douglas MacArthur all meant that the percentage of films that survive from those first days of motion pictures in Japan is far less than in Europe or the United States. 1899's "Momijigari (Maple Viewing)", Shozo Makino's 1909 film "Battle at Honnoji Temple", amongst many others only exist in fragments, or in some cases only in a handful of stills. Thankfully Oshima tells us of the miraculous rediscovery of the lost print of Daisuke Ito's 1927 film "Chuji's Travel diary" (below), a print that To himself didn't know existed.

Quickly, and thankfully, the stills gave way to clips and some full scenes and I found myself really enjoying watching "100 Years of Japanese Cinema" again, mostly because many of the films that Oshima was covering were new to my girlfriend. Polly laughed during the scene from Yasujiro Ozu's silent comedy "I Was Born, but..." where the young boys debate whose father is more important, she asked me if the anti-heroine of Kenji Mizoguchi's 1936 drama "Osaka Elegy", played by Isuzu Yamada, was a prostitute or just a bad girl, and she gasped in wonder at the subtle moment when a paper lantern floats down along the gutter in Sadao Yamanaka's "Humanity and Paper Balloons". Right after "Humanity and Paper Balloons" we took a couple minute beer/ tea run to the kitchen. "I'm really liking this," Polly said, "but I'm finding it pretty wordy and the subtitles are going by really quickly. Most of what I'm not able to read seems pretty pretentious though." It's understandable, I thought. "They call Nagisa Oshima the Godard of Japan," I explained. Thankfully she came back with me to watch the rest of the film because French New wave intellectual Jean-Luc Godard is a filmmaker that my girlfriend detests. Later on, as Oshima switches his narration, referring to himself in first person as he enters Japanese cinema history Polly grabbed the remote and hit pause. "A 'premature conclusion on the post-war democracy'?" she yelled in response to the clip from Oshima's 1971 film "The Ceremony", "How the hell am I supposed to know what that means?" She had a good point, even though Oshima was quoting film critic Eizo Hori. Oshima, always the didactic filmmaker, doesn't break form and lays the self-serving intellectual clap-trap on pretty thickly at points through his documentary.

"100 Years of Japanese Cinema" isn't all self-aggrandizment though. Oshima does one thing that should be done much more often - he puts Japanese motion picture history in the larger Japanese historical context, and we're not just talking about viewing things through the rote "pre-WW2/ post-WW2 and then everyone got a TV and stopped going to the movies" series of events covered by so many Japanese film scholars. The February 26 incident, the attempted coup d'etat by Imperial Japanese Forces in 1936, the repealing of the ban on draft deferral of students in 1943, the ANPO Treaty of 1960, and the assassination of Inejiro Asanuma, the leader of the Japanese Socialist Party that same year, all of these events are brought into the equation as Oshima takes us through his history. He also brings up such fascinating footnotes as how the kaiju genre had its roots in the propoganda films of the 1940's and how Keiko Sonoi, the lead actress in the wildly popular 1943 film "Muhomatsu no issho" was amongst the estimated 80,000 people who died instantly when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. He also makes the bold, and some would say the correct assertion, that the time of great flux in Japanese cinema history during the late 60's and early 70's when the studio system collapsed, directors released films through the newly formed Art Theater Guild while other directors cut their teeth making pink films formed the Third Golden Age of Japanese Film. It's a point worth considering.

By the end of "100 Years of Japanese Cinema" we began scouring my DVD shelf to plan what movies we should watch next, so even though my girlfriend wasn't totally sold on Oshima's cold intellectual dissection of the first century of motion pictures in Japan (and even though this wasn't a true film review) we were both left with a renewed interest in the history of film. I suppose that's what matters the most.