Thursday, December 22, 2011

Chris MaGee's Top 5 Favorite Films of 2011

Each year the J-Film Pow-Wow picks our top films from the previosu 12 months. This year is no different, so during the next few weeks keep checking back for lists of which films captured the imaginations of our contributors. We kick things off with Chris MaGee's top picks of 2011!

*Note: This has been a very busy year, both professionally and personally for the crew of the J-Film Pow-Wow. Both matthew Hardstaff and Bob Turnbull have had life impinge on marathon moviegoing sessions throughout the year, so they will be chiming in with their top DVD releases, so you can start racking up your credit cards as well as add to your must see list.



1. Kotoko (dir. Shinya Tsukamoto)

Director Shinya Tsukamoto has spent the last few years flirting with the mainstream. Sadly, efforts like "Tetsuo The Bullet Man" and the "Nightmare Detective" films felt more like a compromise than an artistic progression. What had happened to the Tsukamoto to frightened us with "Haze" or enticed us with "Vital"? Well, that Tsukamoto is back. Teaming up with his artistic muse, singer/ songwriter Cocco, Tsukamoto has produced a profoundly beautiful and disturbing portrait of one woman's struggle with mental illness. Self-mutilation, terrifying delusions and infanticide -- "Kotoko" is not an easy watch by any stretch, but it is a cinematic experience unlike any of us had this year, or in recent memory.


2. Wandering Home/ 酔いがさめたら、うちに帰ろう。 (dir. Yoichi Higashi)

Yoichi Higashi, the man who brought us the award-winning coming-of-age drama "Village of Dreams", had been absent from feature filmmaking for seven years, and many wondered when, or if, the 76-year-old director would step behind the camera again. "Wandering Home", the story of a fatal alcoholic and his struggle to get sober, finally broke Higashi's silence, and I for one am very happy. Tadanobu Asano, starring as real-life photojournalist Yutaka Kamoshida, delivers one of the best performances of his career; but besides some delerium tremens hallucinations there is no showy filmmaking here. "Wandering Home" is just a rock solid story about a very human struggle.


3. Milocrorze: A Love Story/ ミロクローゼ (dir. Yoshimasa Ishibashi)

For the past decade clips from TV Tokyo's late night comedy series "Vermilion Pleasure Night" have become viral sensations on Youtube. Now ten years later Yoshimasa Ishibashi, the man who brought us such zany clips as the One Point English Lesson and Oh Mikey!, delivers a full length feature film that further ups the zaniness ante. Interweaving three comic tales "Milocrorze: A Love Story" doesn't just win us over with laughs, but with wild creativity. Take a look at the opening sequence about a boy who covers the hole in his heart with a pot lid or the astounding slow motion sword battle to see what I mean. Still, the heart of "Milocroze" are the multiple performances by Takayuki Yamada. It's hard to think of any actor in Japan who could disappear into roles as diverse and strange as an abusive relationship councilor or a love starved samurai.


4. Ringing in Their Ears/ 劇場版 神聖かまってちゃん ロックンロールは鳴り止まないっ (dir. Yu Irie)

Japan's indie film scene is crowded with lethargic features centering around depressed and unemployed youth. Given that Japan has been suffering through a crippling economic crisis and this trend makes absolute sense. (The traumatic events and aftermath of March 11th only added to this bleakness). Still, it sometimes makes a movie lover pine for a film with energy and optimism... and we're not talking about the sappy variety of optimism on display in Japan's multiplex movie houses. 2011 saw an honest and uplifting film come from the indie scene -- Yu Irie's "Ringing in Their Ears". A trio of fictional stories are woven around real life indie rockers Shinsei Kamattechan, and the film climaxes in an electric live performance by the band.


5. No Reply/ 返事はいらない (dir. Satoru Hirohara)

Last year 24-year-old director Satoru Hirohara burst on to the international scene with his feature film "Good Morning to the World!!" This story of an isolated teen seeking out the owner of a lost satchel showed a lot of promise and ended up winning Hirohara the Dragons and Tigers Award at the 29th Vancouver International Film Festival. Still, "Good Morning" resembled many indie films by young Japanese directors. The question is whether Hirohara could follow through with another film. With "No Reply" Hirohara doesn't just follow through but totally outstrips his first feature. The slow single take, mid-shot aesthetic of “Good Morning to the World!!” is injected with true heart and soul with Hirohara introducing us to a young couple struggling with all the responsibilities that the word "love" brings.

Director Yoshimitsu Morita, 1950 - 2011

by Chris MaGee

Some truly sad and untimely news from the world of Japanese film this week. Yoshimitsu Morita, best known as the director of the 1983 classic domestic satire "The Family Game" and the erotic blockbuster "Shitsurakuen (Lost Paradise)" died this past Wednesday in Tokyo. The cause of death was reported as being acute liver failure. He was only 61.

Born in Shibuya, Tokyo in 1950, Morita studied at the Nihon University Graduate School of Arts as a Broadcasting student, but it was seeing the epic movies of David Lean, like 1965's "Doctor Zhivago", which convinced Morita that being a director was the path he wanted to pursue. He first began his career as a director making 8mm films like his 1978's "Live in Chigasaki". He would follow up this debut with his first 35mm film "Something Like It" in 1981, but he wouldn't gain acclaim at home and abroad until two years later when he would direct the the satirical domestic film "The Family Game", adapted from the novel by Yohei Honma. The film chronicled how the introduction of an outsider, a high school tutor portrayed by screen star Yusaku Matsuda, could knock the disconnected lives of a middle class Japanese family off balance, or back into balance depending on your point of view. "The Family Game" would be honoured with the Film of the Year Award from Kinema Junpo that year, and Film historian Donald Richie would call it "one of the most influential [films] of its decade], while New York Times film critic Vincent Canby described its climatic food fight sequence as a "grotesquely funny shambles".

Morita had problems following through with the tag of new cinematic genius though. His output after "The Family Game" veered from the award-winning 1985 drama "And Then", based on a novel by author Natsume Soseki, to disappointing horror fare like 1999's "Black House". Many would criticize Morita's decision to puruse a career as a journeyman director, shooting throwaway films with pop idols. In 1997, though, Morita enjoyed a huge hit in japan, especially with female audiences, with his erotic drama "Shitsurakuen (Lost Paradise)". Starring Koji Yakusho as a married man who has an affair with a married woman (Hitomi Kuroki), "Lost Paradise" would break attendance records, not only because of its melodramatic and tragic ending, but also for the amount of steamy sex scenes between its two stars. Recently Morita had enjoyed some renewed career success with the 2010 period drama "Abacus and Sword", which spent a number of weeks in the top ten at the Japanese box office. At the time of his death Morita had just finished production on his 28th film, "Take the 'A' Train", starring Ryuhei Matsuda and Eita.

Our deepest condolences go out to Morita-san's family, friends and colleagues during this time. We leave you with the trailer for Morita's defining masterpiece, "The Family Game". Thanks to Aaron Gerow and Mark Schilling for the details of Morita's remarkable life.

A look at Sachi Hamano's same-sex romance "Yuriko, Dasvidaniya"

by Chris MaGee

Here's a story that slipped under our radar. It was in October of 2010 that we reported on how veteran pink film director Sachi Hamano was going to be bringing the life of Yuriko Miyamoto, one of Japan's most influential feminist thinkers, and her companion, Russian literary scholar Yoshiko Yuasa to the screen. Since then the film has been completed, but with so little fanfare that, well, we missed it!

Titled "Yuriko, Dasvidaniya", the film chronicles the struggles that the two women faced during 1920's Taisho Era Japan in order to love one another. The film stars Hitomi Toi as Yuriko Miyamoto, Nahana as Yoshiko Yuasa and Ren Osugi as Miyamoto's husband Shigeru Araki.

Hamano, who has been making films in Japan's pink eiga scene since the early 1970's, has touched on lesbian romance before in her best known film, 2001's "The Lily Festival". That film told the story of two elderly women who discover their feelings for each other after an aging playboy moves into their seniors' home.

The film enjoyed a limited theatrical release in Japan, beginning with a run at Tokyo's Eurospace in October. Here's hoping that we'll see "Yuriko, Dasvidaniya" hit the Western festival circuit during 2012. You can check out the film's trailer below.

Shinya Tsukaomoto's "Kotoko" comes to UK theatres and DVD care of Third Window Films

by Chris MaGee

Sometimes writing the J-Film Pow-Wow blog is a little tricky, mostly because I can't always share the news that I've heard from friends and colleagues in the Japanese film industry. When someone tells me that certain things are confidential then that's something I take seriously. Thankfully, this week there was one less piece of news that I have to keep silent about.

UK distributor Third Window Films announced that is has acquired the UK theatrical and DVD rights for Shinya Tsukamoto's latest film "Kotoko". A dark psychological thriller starring Japanese singer/ songwriter Cocco, "Kotoko" has already screened in Toronto, Tokyo and Venice where it picked up the Orizzonti Award at the 68th La Biennale di Venezia.

So when can we expect "Kotoko" from Third Window Films? Third Window president Adam Torel says that he is planning theatrical screenings of the film in August and a DVD release in October. Fans with all region DVD players will be very, very happy to hear this news. I know that more than a few of us here at the Pow-Wow believe that this is one of Tsukamoto's best films.

Thanks to Twitch" and Third Window Films for this story.

Japan Foundation UK announces a touring programme of Japanese auteur films

by Chris MaGee

The Japan Foundation London has done a lot to bring lesser known films to the attention of of the Bristish public through their annual touring programme. Each year they pull together a line-up of films around a specific theme; for example this past year they toured "Back to the Future: Japanese Cinema Since the Mid-90s", which focused on some of the best films from Japan from the past 15 years. Now, the Japan Foundation UK has announced its 2012 touring programme, "Whose Film is it Anyway? Contemporary Japanese Auteurs", a programme of work by filmmakers who write, direct, and often produce and edit, their own films.

Which films can UK audiences look forward to when the programme begins touring the country, starting with a run between February 3rd and February 16th at London's ICA? The programme stretches as far back as 1963 with Shohei Imamura's "The Insect Woman" and goes right up to today with Katsumi Sakaguchi's dark drama "Sleep" (above). In between film fans will be able to see everything from deeply felt relationship tales like Ryosuke Hashiguchi's film "All Around Us" to Takatsugu Naito's hilarious low-key comedy "The Dark Harbour".

Head to the Japan Foundation London's website here to see where in the UK audiences will be able to catch this great line-up of films.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Six Questions for... Takanori Tsujimoto


During the past four years Japan has reasserted itself as a leader in splatter, gore films with a cabal of filmmakers and special effets wizards like Noboru Iguchi (The Machine Girl), Yoshihiro Nishimura (Tokyo Gore Police), Yuji Shimomura (Alien vs. Ninja) and Tak Sakaguchi (Yakuza Weapon). All of these directors have gathered under the auspices of Nikkatsu's genre wing Sushi Typhoon, and proudly wave the banner for cult exploitation cinema. Not all of this new batch of splatter/ action filmmakers fall into tyhe Sushi Typhoon group, although many have close ties with them. One of these filmmakers is Takanori Tusjimoto. Born in 1971 in Osaka Tsujimoto originally studied to be a dental technician, but his love for the films of Takashi Miike and Atsuhi Muroga he decided to make a radical career shift. He debuted as a director with his 1998 independent film "One Gun Story" and went on to collaborate with anime director Mamoru Oshii on his 2007 omnibus film "The Women of Fast Food" as well as the omnibus film "Kiru = Kill", for which Tsujimoto directed the segment "Two Guns". Most fans of Japanese splatter/ action films will know Tsujimoto for his two "Hard Revenge Milly" films, both starring actress Miki Mizuno. Most recently Tsujimoto's horror detective film "Red Tears" was selected as part of the line-up of the 24th Tokyo International Film Festival. We were happy to ask our six question survey to Tsujimoto this past fall. CM


1. What movie inspired you to become a film-maker? What was it about the movie that was inspiring?

“The Killer” by John Woo. I am fascinated by violent and beautiful gunfights.


2. Is there someone you always wanted to work with on a project, but have never had the chance?

Kenichi Matsuyama.


3. Please finish this statement: If I had not become a film-maker I would probably be a ________.

Dental Technician (my former work).


4. Which three people (besides film-makers) have had the biggest influence on you?
(only one response) Hirohiko Araki, cartoonist


5. What is your favorite book? Why is it your favorite?

“African game cartridges” by Makoto Fukami. It influenced the way I see action imagery.


6. What moment in your career has made you most proud so far?

When my films were played at overseas film festivals and were accepted by audiences.


Check out Takanori Tsujimoto's blog here.

Translation by Chikako Hirao Evans

Martin Scorsese finally moves ahead with his adaptation of Shusaku Endo's "Silence"

by Chris MaGee

How long have the rumors of Martin Scorsese helming an adaptation of Shusaku Endo's novel "Silence" been floating around? Seems like forever, or at least since the beginning of 2009, which was when we started to post about this potential project for the award-winning "Taxi Driver" and "Goodfellas" director. (Read our previous coverage here.) Now, after nearly three years of waiting, it looks as if Scorsese is finally ready to to take on this historic tale of the martyrdom of Christians by the Tokugawa Shogunate in 17th-century Nagasaki.

According to Collider.com Scorsese, whose 3D family film "Hugo" is currently packing theatres, has been quoted as saying, “I’m hoping to do Endo’s book next, 'Silence'… Not hoping, we’re literally pulling all the elements together at this point.” Elements for this production have actually been slowly being pulled together for a while now. Back in 2009 producer Bennet Walsh and art director Dante Ferretti both made trips to Nagasaki to do research and location scouting for the film; plus two big name actors have long had their names attached to the film -- Benicio Del Toro and Daniel Day-Lewis. It was just this past week that Del Toro hosted a screening of Kaneto Shindo's 1960 film "The Naked Island" at Los Angeles' Silent Movie Theatre. Del Toro is an ardent fan of Shindo, as the clip of an interview between the two from last year (below) can attest. Of course, many of you will know that Shindo directed his own adaptation of Endo's novel in 1971. This would strongly indicate that Del Toro is still connected with Scorsese's "Silence". The question remains, though, is Day-Lewis also still on board? The infamously rigorous method actor is currently prepping to portray Abraham Lincoln for Steven Spielberg, and many are asking if he can switch gears so quickly from a historic president to a Jesuit priest in Nagasaki.

The big question for Japanese film fans is who will be cast in the Japanese roles for "Silence"? It's here that we move into pure speculation, although one name keeps popping up again and again -- Koji Yakusho. Besides the 55-year-old star of "Shall We Dance?" and "13 Assassins" though any of Japan's current crop of A-list stars could be in the running for roles in Scorsese's production. We will continue to monitor this developing story and bring you more on potential Japanese casting for Martin Scorsese's "Silence" as news comes out.

REVIEW: No Man's Zone

無人地帯 (Mujinchitai)

Released: 2011

Director:
Toshifumi Fujiwara


Narrator:
Arsinée Khanjian



Running time: 102 min.




Reviewed by Nicholas Vroman


Toshifumi Fujiwara’s “No Man’s Zone” begins with the image of a tree standing alone amidst the rubble and detritus left by the earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011. It’s still graceful in its battered and wind-beaten shape. It could be an exemplary example of bonsai. The camera slowly pans a full 360 degrees across the wasted landscape. Trash, detritus, the remains of buildings and boats move by as a woman’s voice (Arsinée Khanjian) speaks of the disaster, how the images of disaster are difficult to digest, yet how we as viewers’ become addicted to images of destruction. As the camera comes full circle to settle back on the tree she asks if we noticed the smokestacks of the Fukushima Nuclear Plan, as they passed by in the background. Like most every one in the audience at its Tokyo Filmex premier, I didn’t.

Thus begins Fujiwara’s Marker-esque exploration of the fact and the legacy of 3.11. His journey takes him within the 50 kilometer no man’s zone surrounding the crippled and leaking Fukushima Nuclear plant. The journey is not merely the usual disaster sightseeing trip, but a serious questioning of how it was and is being mediated, along with a healthy dose of asides and commentary, interviews with a handful of holdouts living with the zone and scenes of destruction countered with things like blooming cherry trees and flowers. For a film about one of the major disasters that ever hit Japan, it’s surprisingly beautiful.

Fujiwara takes on the role of the Stalker, leading us into the Zone. Tarkovsky was prescient! Whether this place will become the place where our desires will be fulfilled – only time will tell. Our darkest most troubled ones maybe. This may be where his insistence on his idea of our addiction to images of destruction lies. He offers up plenty. But he counters them with even more of images of spring reviving and taking back the landscape. And perhaps most importantly Fujiwara attempts to film the unfilmable.

First off there’s the officially unfilmable – going into the off-limits area to capture the wreckage, the empty streets, the cows and dogs and cats left behind, the last human holdouts of the towns of Ukedo and Iitate. This may be the easiest part. Scores of people have made the trip into the zone to rescue abandoned animals, take photos and film or just to gawk at the place.

Then there’s filming the invisible radiation. Truly unfilmable, the invisible particles that have traveled through the air and contaminated the soil and water have already left their long lasting mark. Fujiwara shows fields and forest, on the surface quite lovely, but now holding an invisible malignancy that requires an urgent but basically impossible effort to remove. His interviewees acknowledge this truth as they prepare for their forced evacuations from family homes.
And the last unfilmable thing is what will become of the Zone itself. As it becomes more an more apparent that the damage from the nuclear plant is uncontainable, the zone will certainly become a No Man’s Zone, left to lie fallow for generations. Fujiwara has made the effort to document this place in all its beauty and ruination because it may be one of the last times we will ever be able to see it, before it’s completely off-limits. The images of the film become the zone’s final legacy.

Fujiwara spends most of the duration of the film traveling from the small town of Ukedo to Iitate. Ukedo seems harder hit by the tsunami. As we travel down haunted and abandoned streets, a few sightings of cars with relief workers and police, images and stories of tragedies – a grandmother being swept out to sea – develop into a critique of how the tragedy was handled – how long it took to respond - and ultimately, a critique of how the whole thing was mediated. Fujiwara hopes to correct those impressions, not only by proffering a new set of images, but by questioning the meaning or unmeaning of the saturation of images proffered by the media.

His specific critique of how NHK mediated the event rings a little false in that NHK, with its vast resources, has actually done a better job than most indie filmmakers on documenting the destruction and reconstruction of Tohoku. One can and must question the ideology of a government news organization where (in Japan in particular) the coziness of the players public and private is appalling. But, there are a number of independent producers working for NHK who have been active in trying to fairly view and assess the legacy of 3.11.

Secondly, he manages to not illustrate his own movie with examples of the images that have offended him so. The viewer is left questioning, “What are these images that are so bad?”

And thirdly there are some iconic and auteur-less images from keitais and surveillance cameras that have been seared onto the world’s retina. The wall of the tsunami crossing the highway. The shot from a hill where we see the sluggish and forceful water swirling and sweeping up house after house. These two come to mind.

The recurring voice over of our addiction to images of destruction may also be more of a personal reflection on the part of Fujiwara. Endless loops of falling towers or tracking shots through kilometer after kilometer of leveled towns may be less about the viewers’’ addiction and more about the media’s role as a pusher. Are we addicted? Or are we ultimately beaten by images into being overwhelmed and ultimately inured to the meaning of these images?

“No Man’s Zone,” at least, represents a beginning. There are a number of lesser documentaries coming out now on 3.11 that even in their well-meaning shovel up endless clichés and hours of numbing footage of the disaster. Fujiwara questions it all. His answers, at times, may seem a bit too pat, but he’s going in the right direction. What are most powerful of No Man’s Land remain the images of nature’s healing and rebirth, even tainted by the invisible poison left by man. The final, somewhat mundane image of a tree takes on a new meaning in Fujiwara’s hands – something akin to hope, leavened with frightful knowledge and the weight of recent history.

Hayao Miyazaki classic breaks Twitter record

by Chris MaGee

What are two things that are insanely popular in Japan? If you're thinking baseball and Kirin lager... well, you're not wrong, but... If you think Hayao Miyazaki films and Twitter then you're on the right track. What happens, though, if these two things come together, then what happens? Well, you break world records, that's what happens!

According to a post over at TheVerge.com a recent airing of Miyazaki's 1986 animated classic "Laputa: Castle in the Sky" on Japanese television prompted rabid fans to head to Twitter to tweet about that broadcast. Obviously all of Miyazaki's films have a huge following amongst the Japanese public, but "Laputa" has gained special cult status with fans simultaneously shouting out "Balse!" along Pazu and Sheeta, during their final face off with the film's villain, Muska. The coordination of this unified shout of "Balse!" saw a record breaking spike of 25,088 tweets per second on the popular micro-blogging site. This far outstrips the previous record of 9,000 tweets prompted by the announcement of Beyonce Knowles pregnancy.

Check out this Youtube video below to see the Twitter madness going on in tandem with the broadcast of "Laputa".

Weekly Trailers


Rurouni Kenshin - Keishi Ohtomo (2012)


Based on the jidai-geki manga by Nobuhiro Watsuki, "Rurouni Kenshin" plunges us 150-years in the past, into a world where samurai still wield power. Starring Takeru Sato as Kenshin Himura, diretor Keishi Ohtomo's "Rurouni Kenshin" is set to open in Japan on August 25th.




Chi-n-pi-ra - Toru Kawashima (1984)


Veteran actor Kyohei Shibata stars in this tale of young punks entering the dangerous world of Japanese organized crime. Directed by Toru Kawashima, the man who brought us the 1983 yakuza classic "Ryuji".

REVIEW: Guilty of Romance

恋の罪 (Koi no Tsumi)

Released: 2011

Director:
Sion Sono

Starring:
Miki Mizuno
Makoto Togashi
Megumi Kagurazaka
Kazuya Kojima
Kanji Tsuda

Running time: 112 min.



Reviewed by Chris MaGee


On March 19th, 1997 the body of a woman was found in cheap apartment in Shibuya's love hotel district of Maruyama-cho. Police indentified the woman as Yasuko Watanabe, a 39-year-old employee of the Tokyo Electric Power Company, as well a graduate of Tokyo's prestigious Keio University. What was such an upstanding citizen doing in a dumpy apartment in Maruyama-cho, and area that in the late 1990's had become a place were street hookers plied their trade. It turned out that Watanabe was in fact one of those street hookers. It wasn't financial necessity or drugs that led Watanabe to a life of prostitution though. Apparently this well-bred woman had turned to selling sex purely for the cheap thrills and a bit of pocket money. The sexual and psychological mystery of why an upstanding citizen would risk everything to be a hooker forms the basis of Sion Sono's "Guilty of Romance". Sono takes the TEPCO OL Murder Case and does with it was he has done in all his films since his critically-lauded 2008 4-hour psycho-religious epic "Love Exposure" -- he turns the emotional volume up to 11 and leaves it there. It's not good enough for Sono to have his wayward women, 29-year-old Izumi and 39-year-old Mitsuko, die at the hands of a Nepalese restaurant worker (which is how real-life victim Watanabe died). Instead we are given a tour of the dark side of female sexuality, although often not a very believable one.

Izumi (Megumi Kagurazaka) is the dutiful wife of popular novelist Yukio Kikuchi ( Kanji Tsuda). Dressed in a proper kimono in public and conservative cardigans at home Izumi has taken on the demeanor of a woman easily 15-years her senior - she arranges her husband's slippers, she buys him expensive French soaps, she sits quietly on the couch as he reads and leaves his bookstore signings early so as not to be in the way. Their relationship is cold, clinical and chaste, and obviously the beautiful Izumi is bored senseless. She confesses in her journal that before she turns 30 that she would like to do something, anything with her life. She takes steps towards this by taking a job in a grocery store handing out samples of sausages. She's a bit too timid to make the position work, but it's here that she meets Eri (Chika Uchida), a woman who runs a "modeling" agency. Yes, Eri's modeling agency does do some legit work, but the lion's share of its business is shooting porn. This begins the slippery sexual slope that eventually liberates Izumi and leads her to the seedy streets of Maruyama-cho.

It is here amongst the neon and the love hotels that Izumi encounters Mitsuko (Makoto Togashi), Sono's cinematic version of Yasuko Watanabe. Mitsuko is, like Watanabe, a professional from a good background. She is the daughter of a painter and holds a position as a professor of literature at a respect university. Underneath her prim, if sometimes intense, exterior is a nymphomaniac prostitute with a rock solid work ethic. Mitsuko will have sex with any man as long as she is paid for it, regardless of the sum. It's the principle that counts. She takes the already unbalanced Izumi as her apprentice and the two women begin to plumb the depths of their libidos in the back streets of Shibuya. All of this action takes place through flashback as Sono occasionally (maybe a little too occasionally) shows us Detective Kazuko Yoshida (Miki Mizuno) as she investigates the murder of an unidentified and horribly mutilated woman in Maruyama-cho. Headless, and limbless, torn in two with her upper and lower halves mixed and matched with mannequin parts Yoshida (and us in the audience) puzzles over who this woman was - Izumi or Mitsuko?

Once again Sion Sono, who has taken up the mantle of Japanese odd and extreme film king from the now mainstream Takashi Miike, brings his frantic creativity to a film that in no way shirks from its sexual foundations. In this respect "Guilty of Romance" is refreshing, given that Japan has in large part dampened sex in its contemporary cinema in favour of having respectable female spokespeople for commercial campaigns, TV panel shows and coy J-pop recordings. Sono's film, complete with full frontal nudity by its two leading ladies, is definitely a throwback to the kinky sexuality of films like Masaru Konuma's "Flower and Snake" or Takashi Ishii's "Angel Guts: Red Vertigo". It's no coincidence that both of these preceding films were produced by Nikkatsu, the same studio that now brings us Sono's film as well as a slew of blood and boob filled exploitation titles through its extreme genre wing Sushi Typhoon. Unlike many of Nikkatsu's Sushi Typhoon titles, "Guilty of Romance" has some serious psycho-sexual pretensions, but it doesn't always live up to them.

Without the mystery of which of our two anti-heroines may have ended up choped into bits there is little to propel the narrative of "Guilty of Romance" forward. "How low can they go?" and "How nude will they get?" only keeps the attention of the audience (a primarily male one, we can assume) for so long. Despite its attempts at some deep emotional and sexual surrealism "Guilty of Romance" is, at its heart, nothing more than another tired example of the classic patriarchal virgin/ whore duality that lurks in men's minds and that has seeded a whole subgenre or pink and ero-guro films in Japan. There are moments when "Guilty of Romance" manages to truly titillate and/ or make us squirm. A scene in which Izumi stands naked in front of a full length mirror and practices selling herself rather than mini sausage samples is equal parts campy comedy, disturbing character development and pure masturbatory fodder. Later on the appearance of Mitsuko's mother (Hisako Ohkata) gives Sono's films its most intense anbd truly surreal sequence during which this old, smiling woman delivers a shocking, bile-fueled indictment of her prostitute daughter in the most pleasing and dainty way possible. had Sono been able to deliver more of this kind of sickly subtlety throughout different points in "Guilty of Romance" he would have had a truly special film. Sadly, Sono has seemingly abandoned subtley after such rare entires into his filmography as "Hazard" and "Be Sure to Share". Now we have women set to rutting feverishly on screen and in one case screaming the word "Sex!" at the door of a potential horny client. We get it, Sono-san, ytou are a cinematic bad boy, one who gives us geysers of blood and buxom actresses urinating in front of school boys (as happens near the end of "Guilty of Romance"). You can definitely shock us... but what other tricks do you have up your sleeve? We know there's more, but this film wasn't all of it.

Makoto Shinkai creates a 30-second commercial for the Taisei Corporation

by Chris MaGee

Animator Makoto Shinkai made more than a few headlines this past year with his latest feature length film "Children Who Chase Lost Voices from Deep Below". This magical tale of a girl on a quest to find a lost love and the source of mysterious radio broadcasts propelled the already popular 38-year-old anime master to even more acclaim. What happens when you go from cult director to mainstream sensation? The big corporate boys come knocking.

Shinkai, whose other films include "Voices from a Distant Star" and "5 Centimetres Per Second", was commissioned to create a commercial for the multinational construction company Taisei Corporation. The result is below, and regardless if it's a 90-minute film or a 30-second commercial the result is equally as stunning. Check it out!

Japanese Weekend Box Office, December 17th to December 18th


1. Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol (Paramount)
2. Kamen Rider: Kamen Rider Fourze & OOO Movie Taisen Megamax* (Toei)
3. Kaibutsu-kun:The Movie* (Toho)
4. Friends:Naki On The Monster Island* (Toho)
5. K-on! Movie* (Shochiku)
6. Real Steel (Disney)
7. Tale Of Genji: A Thousand Year Enigma* (Toho)
8. The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn (Toho Towa)
9. A Ghost Of A Chance* (Toho)
10. Crossroads* (Shochiku)

* Japanese film

Courtesy of Box Office Japan.

REVIEW: Sleepy Eyes of Death 5: Sword of Fire

眠狂四郎 炎情剣 (Nemuri Kyōshirō: Enjo-ken)

Released: 1965

Director:
Kenji Misumi

Starring:
Raizo Ichikawa
Tamao Nakamura
Sanae Nakahara
Ko Nishimura
Ryuzo Shimada

Rrunning time: 83 min.


Reviewed by Matthew Hardstaff


After taking a brief respite, skipping "Sleepy Eyes of Death 4", writer Seiji Hoshikawa returns to the incredible anti-hero samurai series to collaborate once more with the late great Kenji Misumi. For the fifth part in the series, "Sleepy Eyes of Death 5: Sword of Fire" (which I think is suppose to be more along the lines of "Sword of Passion", the fire between the loins), Nemuri Kyoshiro’s desire for women, or his desire to punish those women that are corrupt and black of heart, becomes the central theme.

Nemuri Kyoshiro finds himself embroiled in a scheme by a retainer of the Todo clan and a corrupt merchant (Ko Nishimura) to steal treasure accumulated by a band of pirates, treasure they were suppose to present to the Shogun, and in the process killing all that are able to tell the tale. How does he become embroiled in this scheme? Wandering through the Japanese countryside he comes across a rogue accosting a damsel in distress, Nui Higaki. Higaki, obviously outmatched, but filled with the suicidal desire to kill the rogue, begs Nemuri Kyoshiro for assistance, claiming this man killed her husband and she demands revenge. Kyoshiro reluctantly intervenes, after being promised anything he wants, and with this act, he finds him pulled into the pirate treasure cover-up. Of course, the bastardly plot by the corrupt and vile players is merely a means to an end, as the real treat is watching how all the players double and triple cross one another, and watching how Nemuri Kyoshiro slowly works them against each other, until he’s the last man left standing.

What really separates this film from the others in the series is here we’re presented with a Nemuri Kyoshiro that is known throughout Japan not only as a master ronin with the deadly full moon cut, but he’s also known as a man with an appetite for woman, as it is put so eloquently, ‘a master of irrigating green young fields’. Of course, he only gains pleasure from irrigating those green young fields when they’re vile and dirty, as he states ‘when I see a woman like you, it brings out my roguish side!’ In previous films his relationship with woman has been a part of the series but never a focal point, but this time it’s at the films core. Several woman play key roles in the plot to steal the pirate treasure, and the ones pure of heart he treats as angels, and will do anything to protect them, but if they are tainted, if they’re is evil in their heart, then he uses them as little more than sexual objects, and then quickly discards them, often killing them or setting into motion events that will lead to their demise. Perhaps this has to do with his Christian beginnings, as he treats the pure of heart as virgins who must forever remain chaste. A sexual deviant Nemuri Kyoshiro must be, as he appears to only gain pleasure from having his way with the vilest of women (and of course the prize he takes from Higaki at the beginning of the film is a night with her body).

Under the brilliant direction by Kenji Misumi, neophyte cinematographer Fujio Morita’s compositions shine, with some wonderful long takes, an expert use of the colour red and the usual Misumi style of a calculated and well crafted cinematic experience, filled with some terrific fight scenes that unfold with expert staging and choreography. The film helps to develop and flesh out the already nihilistic bad boy of the samurai world, and gives fans another spectacular foray into the world of "The Sleepy Eyes of Death" and the full moon cut!

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Director Daihachi Yoshida returns with a film about high school class struggles

by Chris MaGee

During the past half decade director Daihachi Yoshida has created a filmography filled with comedic characters who just aren't very nice people, or if they're nice then they are deeply damaged in some way. Just look at his feature debut, 2007's "Funuke, Show Some Love You Losers!" with it's psychotic would-be actress anti-heroine, or it's follow up, 2009's "The Wonderful World of Captain Kuhio", a film that centers around a playboy conman. Even 2010's "Permanent Nobara" features a lead character with some major reality vs. fantasy issues. What aspect of society could Yoshida take a swipe at next? How about of of the most fertile places for brutal power struggles and intimidation... high school?

According to Tokyograph Daihachi Yoshida is currently adapting RyoAsai's award-winning novel “Kirishima, Bukatsu Yamerutteyo” to the screen. The book, and now the film, tells of a high school in which there exists an unbreakable social caste system of the "upper" students" and the "lower" students. Well, unbreakable is a relative term, because the story follows the aftermath of one student named Kirishima who dares to move from the "upper" social circle to the "lower". In Yoshida's film this disturbance of the high school universe will be seen through the eyes of two boys - film student Ryoya, portrayed by Ryunosuke Kamiki (above), and baseball club member Hiroki (Masahiro Higashide).

A story of social strife in the halls of a high school from the man who brought us "Funuke"? Sounds perfect to us, but we'll have to wait until next year when "Kirishima, Bukatsu Yamerutteyo" is released in Japanese theatres. Thanks to Eiga.com for the above promo still.

Gakuryu Sogo Ishii returns with surreal "Ikiteru Mono Wa Inai No Ka"

by Chris MaGee

I've been playing a bit of catch up since returning from Tokyo, trying to get news posted that may have been overlooked while Nicholas Vroman and I were in our Tokyo Filmex bubble. One story that got picked up over at our friends Wildgrounds was bout the return of one of Japan's biggest indie film icons.

You'll recall that at the very beginning of 2010 we reported on how "Burst City" and "Electric Dragon 80,000V" director Sogo Ishii had popped back into the spotlight by announcing that he would be changing his name to Gakuryu Ishii and that this new moniker would usher in a new stage in his filmmaking career. Nothing much followed that news though. Ishii kept teaching at Kobe Design University and that was it. Now, for the first time since his hour-long 2006 film "Mirrored Mind" Ishii has returned to the directors chair with a surreal social drama.

Titled "Ikiteru Mono Wa Inai No Ka (Are Any of You Alive?)" the film follows a group of disparate characters whose strange behaviour climaxes in... well, from the trailer below it looks like it could be the end of the world. Ishii based the film on a stage play by Shiro Maeda, and according to Wildgrounds post Ishii claims that he was inspired by Spanish surrealist filmmaker Luis Bunuel and his film "The Exterminating Angel" for "Ikiteru Mono Wa Inai No Ka".

There were actually preview screenings of the film going on in Tokyo when I was there, but sadly I wasn't able to catch one. here's hoping this film makes the rounds on the fest circuit in the next few months.

Waseda Univeristy hosts fascinating exhibit on the history of Nikkatsu's Mukojima Studio

by Chris MaGee

This past fall New Yorkers got a chance to see some truly rare cinematic gems from the Nikkatsu vaults when "Velvet Bullets and Steel Kisses: Celebrating the Nikkatsu Centennial" retrospective was held at Lincoln Center's Walter Reade Theater. (read our report here). While the retrospective included films from the full century of Nikkatsu history as a movie studio, it was the earliest entries that had a lot of people excited. Films like Sadao Yamanaka's 1935 jidai-geki "The Pot Worth A Million Ryo" and Daisuke Ito's 1927 chanbara classic "A Diary of Chuji's Travels" rarely get seen in Japan and hardly ever get screened outside Japan; but what about more on the history of the very early days of Japan's oldest surviving movie studio?

According to a Facebook post by Yale professor Aaron Gerow, the Tsubouchi Memorial Theatre Museum at Waseda University is currently holding an exhibit on Nikkatsu's Mukojima Studio. This studio, in the east end of Tokyo, was built in 1912 and was in operation until its destruction in the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923. Many of the films shot at Mukojima were of popular shimpa, or "new school", stage plays. Although these plays portrayed melodramatic stories of modern Japan they, like traditional kabuki, still employed male actors to play female roles. Part of this exhibit will be free screenings of the 1916 silent film "Uikiyo".

For more details (in Japanese) on this fascinating exhibition which runs at the Tsubouchi Memorial Theatre Museum from December 3rd to March 25th click here.

IFC New York not only screening Ghibli films, they've also commissioned new posters!

by Chris MaGee

It was just a couple days ago that we reported on New York's IFC Center and their upcoming retrospective of the films of Studio Ghibli. Now there is word that not only will "The Studio Ghilbli Collection: 1984 - 2008" not only be presenting such classics as "Princess Mononoke" and "Pom Poko" in 35mm prints, but that these films will also be getting new, specially commissioned theatrical posters for each screening. Case in point, Hayao Miyazaki's 1988 film "My Neighbor Totoro" has got a new poster designed by UK artist and designer Olly Moss. That's just a sneak peek above. To get a full look at the poster design, and to start dreaming about what other poster goodness this IFC retrospective will bring, head to Bad Ass Digest.

"The Studio Ghilbli Collection: 1984 - 2008" will run at New York's IFC Center from December 16th to January 12th. For more details visit the IFC Center website here.

Japanese Weekend Box Office, December 10th to December 11th


1. Kamen Rider: Kamen Rider Fourze & OOO Movie Taisen Megamax* (Toei)
2. Kaibutsu-kun:The Movie* (Toho)
3. Real Steel (Disney)
4. K-on! Movie* (Shochiku)
5. Tale Of Genji: A Thousand Year Enigma* (Toho)
6. The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn (Toho Towa)
7. A Ghost Of A Chance* (Toho)
8. Crossroads* (Shochiku)
9. Happy Feet 2 (Warner)
10. Kaiji 2* (Toho)

* Japanese film

Courtesy of Box Office Japan

Sunday, December 11, 2011

REVIEW: Fish on Land

セイジー陸の魚― (Seiji: Riku no Sakana)

Released: 2011

Director:
Yusuke Iseya

Starring:
Hidetoshi Nishijima
Mirai Moriyama
Nae Yuki
Hirofumi Arai
Kenichi Takito

Running time: 108 min.


Reviewed by Chris MaGee


Yusuke Iseya went from being a fashion model and the punk protégé of director Hirokazu Koreeda to becoming one of the most bankable movie stars in Japan. Watching his cocky, awkward and utterly charismatic debut performance in Koreeda's 1998 film "Afterlife" doesn't belie some of the tent pole studio productions that Iseya would get tied up in (see Kaz Kiriya's "Casshern" and Fumihiko Sori's "Tomorrow's Joe" as two many examples). Still, during this rise to superstardom the now 35-year-old actor has slowly been nurturing ambitions as a director in his own right. In 2003 Iseya teamed up with friend and screenwriter Takamasa Kameishi for his directorial debut, the youth drama "Kakuto". Now, eight year's later Iseya returns (once again with Kameishi penning the script) with his second feature outing, "Fish on Land". It's story of a young man's summer working at a roadside restaurant often feels like a half-remembered summer from years ago. Some moments come to mind with crystal clarity while others blur out of reach and all slip and repeat in our memory. Constructing a film around ephemeral memories isn't an easy task even for a seasoned director. For a sophomore feature filmmaker like Iseya it might be too daunting a task, but he has managed to impress with a beautiful visual evocation of Tomoki Tsujiuchi's source novel. Unfortunately the narrative thread of the film suffers and some of its characters get lost in the mix.

A po-faced salaryman, looks back on an eventful summer 20 years before. Japan's Bubble Economy has burst and our young protagonist, portrayed by decides to hit the open road on his bicycle for one last vacation before battling it out to find work during the recession. We're treated to lovely shots of rural Japan until this young man literally crashes into his destiny. He is nearly run over by a pompadoured tough guy (Hirofumi Arai) driving a truck, one of a group of locals who call a roadside diner/ bar dubbed House 475 home. Soon our young traveler is bussing tables and washing dishes, and most importantly observing the goings on of House 475, from the farewell concert of a bar band whose bass player (Kiyohiko Shibukawa) is heading off to work in an office through a blind old man (Masahiko Tsugawa) and his granddaughter to a lovelorn woman (Nae Yuki) obsessed by the manager of House 475. This would be Seiji (Hidetoshi Nishijima). Like our young traveler, Seiji rolled off the road and up to House 475 years before and made it his adopted home, but he doesn't seem comfortable with the other denizens of the place. There is a different energy in Seiji, a polarity that is the reverse of his environment.

The entire cast of "Fish on Land" are spot on with their performances; but Sadly, the one performance that leaves a little to be desired is that of the lead actor, Hidetoshi Nishijima as the titular fish on land. I don't think that this is necessarily Nishijima's fault, but that of the source novel or the screenplay. For a title character Seiji ends up being more of a mysterious presence than a person, someone who the other characters continually refer to in a semi-reverent tone, but when he does appear on screen he mainly mopes, stares fixedly into the middle distance and only occasionally bursts into a misanthropic rant. The best of these is blasted out at a pair of environmental activists who come to House 475 smiling and bearing animal rights pamphlets. A little more of this fire from Seiji would make his character's hyper-dramatic conclusion make sense. Instead he ends up being an unsatisfying Christ or Bodhisattva-like character who, as the other characters in the film say, "can't feel joy as long as there are people suffering around him."

Still, there are sequences in "Fish on Land" where the imagery and the sound and music combine perfectly. A scene in which Masahiko Tsugawa's blind grandfather has a picture collaged by his granddaughter with an accompanying audio tape is a brilliant bit of filmmaking, especially due to the fact that it shifts so suddenly from domestic whimsy to horrible tragedy. This horrible event, though, comes from so far out of left field that one almost feels that it fell into "Fish on Land" from an entirely other film. It's just another example of how the complex fast forward and rewind style of the narrative outpaces and scrambles the best parts of the film. It's obvious that Yusuke Iseya has some impressive filmmaking skill at his disposal. Combining this with yet another solid ensemble cast and, most importantly, a top notch script and he could easily launch himself into the same cinematic territory as his mentor Koreeda. The key to this progression though will be to keep things simple. Mood and complex narrative structures are great when done right, but even for the talented Iseya, there is something to the old adage of learning to walk before you can run.

NYC gets a Studio Ghibli Retrospective from Dec. 16 to Jan 12... but will Toronto follow?

by Chris MaGee

2011 has seen more than a few amazing retrospectives take place at festivals and theatres worldwide. There was the monumental centenary retrospective of Nikkatsu films at the 49th annual New York Film Festival, a full programme of the early films of Sion Sono at the 12th Nippon Connection Japanese Film Festival in Frankfurt and the 12th Tokyo Filmex held a full retrospective of the films of little know director Shinji Somai. 2011 is ending with one more, do not miss retrospective, again in New York City.

The IFC Center will be hosting a 15 film retrospective of the films of Studio Ghibli from December 16th to January 12th. Presented by animation distributor GKIDS, "The Studio Ghilbli Collection: 1984 - 2008" is made up entirely of 35mm prints of such Ghibli classics as "My Neighbor Totoro", "Princess Mononoke", "Only Yesterday" and "The Cat Returns", many of them newly struck just for this event.

If you are feeling a little jealous of the wealth of films that New York has seen in the past 12 months don't despair. According to the report on ""The Studio Ghilbli Collection" posted at Sci-Fi Japan this week this retrospective will be touring North America during the first half of 2012. This includes proposed stops in Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington DC, Boston, San Francisco, Seattle... and Toronto! Yes, if we keep making our Christmas wishes we can look forward to settling in for a feast of Hayao Miyazaki, Isao Takahata, Yoshifumi Kondo and Hiroyuki Morita gems sometime next year. We'll keep you posted in the coming weeks and months on where and when this may happen.

Kumiko Aso and Yo Oizumi to play a pair of punk rockers in new film "Good Morning Everyone!"

by Chris MaGee

I've mentioned again and again my love/ hate relationship with the subgenre of Let's-start-a-band films that have come out of Japan in the past decade. It seems that everyone loves a musical underdog story, be it a group forming for the first time or an old band returning to the stage to reclaim their former glory. There's a new film that's just finished shooting that falls into that latter category.

Toru Yamamato, best known for being the second unit director on such films as "Sakuran" and "The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift", is currently in post-production on "Good Morning Everyone!" This adaptation of Toriko Yoshikawa's novel stars Kumiko Aso (above left) and Yo Oizumi (above right) as former bandmates in a punk group who are now raising their teenage daughter, even though Oizumi's character is not her blood father. Apparently Aso went through a month's worth of guitar lessons to play in scenes with Oizumi as the band's lead singer.

Call me a little more than suspicious, but I find the idea of Yo Oizumi and especially Kumiko Aso as members of a punk band to be a little hard to believe. I guess we'll have to wait until next year when "Good Morning Everyone" is slated for release in Japan.

Thanks to Tokyograph for this piece of news.

REVIEW: Matango: Attack of the Mushroom People

マタンゴ (Matango)

Released: 1963

Director:
Ishiro Honda

Starring:
Akira Kubo
Kumi Mizuno
Hiroshi Koizumi
Kenji Sahara
Hiroshi Tachikawa

Running time: 89 min.



Reviewed by Marc Saint-Cyr


Seen today, "Matango: Attack of the Mushroom People" serves as a refreshing reminder of the pure fun of B-movie creature features. It contains not a pixel of CGI, and is in fact fairly economical in terms of the special effects it does use. Cleverly, it leaves a sizable amount of its out-there premise up to viewers’ imaginations while simply focusing on keeping the story rolling along at a good pace. It is all too fitting that this film was made by Ishiro Honda, whose classic "Gojira" (1954) pulls off the same tricky feat of making credible entertainment from a highly incredible premise.

After a brief opening sequence set in a Tokyo-based psychiatric ward where we meet Murai (Akira Kubo), a young professor and the lone survivor of a terrible disaster, the film jumps back in time to a sunny, carefree yacht trip. On board with Murai is the ship’s skipper, Sakuta (Hiroshi Koizumi); its owner, Kasai (Yoshio Tsuchiya); hired sailor Koyama (Kenji Sahara); rising singer Mami Sekiguchi (Kumi Mizuno); Yoshida (Hiroshi Tachikawa), a writer; and Akiko (Miki Yashiro), one of Murai’s students. The ship soon gets caught in a violent storm and is afterwards left severely damaged and off-course. It eventually reaches an island that, at first, appears to be completely deserted, yet the stranded vacationers start to think otherwise once they discover a derelict oceanography vessel on the beach. Puzzlingly, there are no corpses to be found on board – just ever-spreading layers of mould and a mysterious cargo of giant mushroom specimens. As the crewmembers struggle to find food and conserve their remaining supplies, they are increasingly driven apart by disagreements and selfish motives, all the while threatened by the strange beings that live in the island’s dense jungle.

Initially, one might expect Honda to primarily focus his main energies once more on using monsters as a means of disguised social commentary as he did in "Gojira." That view certainly has some credibility considering that the titular mushroom people – the hideously mutated shipwreck survivors, rendered so from eating the strange fungi – were thought to resemble survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, threatening the film’s release in Japan. Surely enough, at one point the ruined ship is said to be affiliated with nuclear testing, suggesting that Honda is yet again underlining the perils of meddling with science. But tellingly, most of the action unfolds amongst the seven members of the yachting party as they grow more fraught with frustration and hostility towards one another. Thus, in the spirit of "Lord of the Flies," humans and their inclinations towards greed, betrayal and violence are presented as far more dangerous and bestial than the moaning mushroom people, who in fact only appear in a handful of scenes and are given little in the way of actual character development.

Consequently, "Matango" can perhaps be best described as an adventurous survival drama with mildly silly doses of science fiction and horror thrown in for flavor. It contains some wonderfully creepy scenes of lurking dread and slow suspense as the mostly unseen creatures stalk the characters. But just as compelling to watch is the human drama that unfolds through secret alliances, hidden stashes of food and clashing egos that all gradually wear down the group’s sense of order and loyalty. These episodes unfold in wonderfully decorated sets for the abandoned ship, humid jungle and a grove filled with mushrooms of different shapes, sizes and colors while practical special effects like the model yacht batted around by waves and the grotesque costume and makeup effects for the mushroom creatures all exemplify the charm and fun of schlocky, old school–style studio filmmaking that no computer can replicate. Those looking for a good, pulpy movie night will get exactly that – and a little more in terms of solid character work and thematic depth – with "Matango: Attack of the Mushroom People."

Read more by Marc Saint-Cyr at his blog

Hitoshi Takekiyo's animated short "After School Midnight" goes feature length in 2012

by Chris MaGee

I have to 100% honest and say that before reading this post at Anime News Network I was unaware of animator Hitoshi Takekiyo and his 2007 computer animated short film "After School Midnight". I had to do a quick Google search on this 7-minute comedy about an anatomical dummy who comes to life overnight at a high school, and I am so glad I could track it down. It's pretty funny stuff and beautifully put together as well (to take a look for yourself just click here). Now, four years after Takekiyo produced "After School Midnight " there is news that he will be expanding it into a a full length animated feature.

Apparently Takekiyo will be teaming up with manga artist Yōichi Komori, who will pen the script for a full version of "After School Midnight", and Japanese mini-theatre chain T-Joy will be screening the end result in its theatres next year. Will 7-minutes of zany anime be able to be stretched into a watchable feature film? With the creativity on display in the original short our vote is for "yes".

Weekly Trailers


Between Today and Tomorrow - Junko Kobayashi (2011)


A documentary portrait of one of Japan's most respected modern dancers, Yasuyuki Shuto. "Between Today and Tomorrow" premiered this past fall at the 24th Tokyo International Film Festival.




The Last Samurai - Kenji Misumi (1977)

No, this is not the trailer for the Tom Cruise star vehicle from . This is a trailer for acclaimed jidaigeki and chanbara director Kenji Misumi's last film, 1977's "The Last Samurai" starring Ken Ogata, Hideki Takahashi, Masaomi Kondo and Keiko Matsuzaka.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Tokyo Filmex 2012 Report


For our full report on this year's Tokyo Filmex (November 19th to 27th) we thought we would tag team things a little bit, with Chris MaGee and Nicholas Vroman giving their own perspectives on this annual showcase of international filmmaking.


Chris MaGee's Report

This is my second year attending Tokyo Filmex and I'm glad to have seen another batch of great films (both from Japan and elsewhere) programmed for audiences. There were also some interesting parallels between films in this year's programme, although not all the films were as successful as others. The Japanese premiere of Toshiaki Toyoda's "Monsters Club" shared settings with the opening film of this year's Filmex, Kim Ki-Duk's "Arirang". Both are set in ramshackle cabins on the outskirts of civilization, but Ki-Duk's utterly self indulgent cinematic portrait was no match for Toyoda's beautiful protest film. Audiences were better served to attend the screening of imprisoned Iranian director Jafar Panahi's "This Is Not a Film", which may superficially have shared a concept with "Arirang", but had a much deeper meaning. As Nichiolas mentioned below, this is the J-Film Pow-Wow, so I'll quit my meandering and focus on what Tokyo Filmex had to offer Japanese film fans.

Japanese, or Japan set films, proved to be some of the hottest tickets at this year's Filmex. The film that packed the lobby of the Yurakucho Mullion Building to capacity was Iranian director Amir Naderi's Tokyo-set "Cut" starring Hidetoshi Nishijima. Not only was this Japanese premiere sold out, but tickets were actually being scalped for as much as ¥40,000 (nearly $500!). This cut of "Cut" (excuse the pun) was edited down by approximately 12-minutes from the version screened here in Toronto in September, and the good news is that it didn't lose anything from the trimming. This new edit of "Cut" simply tightens the story of a man literally fighting it out in the name of pure cinema. One very interesting piece of information about the film came out during the post-screening Q&A when Naderi revealed that the lead character of Shuji was actually inspired by American indie film legend John Cassavetes. This was news to star Hidetoshi Nishijima, who had grown up idolizing the "The Killing of a Chinese Bookie" and "A Woman Under the Influence" director.

Another hot ticket for Japanese film lovers was the Japanese premiere of Shinya Tsukamoto's "Kotoko". With its Orrizonti Prize win at this year's Venice Film Festival the advance buzz on "Kotoko" was significant, and while it didn't disappoint audiences it did leave them more than a little shell shocked. As was the case with the screening of the film at the Toronto International Film Festival, Tsukamoto amped up the sound levels for the Filmex screening. The ear-splitting sobs and screams of singer/ songwriter turned actress Cocco in the title role didn't have people walking out of the theatre, as they did in Toronto, but a few got out of their seats and clung to the walls, unsure whether they could take the barrage of sounds and images. "Kotoko" is definitely not an easy watch, but there was an added level of discomfort to this screening as not only Tsukamoto, but Cocco were in attendance. When I first saw the film in Toronto I was blown away by Cocco's performance, but I was unaware that many of the issues that the main character deals with are also ones that Cocco has struggled with over the years, namely cutting and anorexia. This added bit of autobiography made some of us more than a little concerned, while others found that this expanded their understanding of this raw, sublime film.

The biggest treat for fans of Japanese film at this year's Filmex had to be its full retrospective of the films of director Shinji Somai. Somai, who died at the tragically young age of 53 in 2001, is a filmmaker who is known more outside Japan for writing on his films rather than screenings of them. If it weren't for bootleg Hong Kong copies of his 1981 film "Sailor Suit and Machine Gun" his films would probably be entirely unseen in the West. This retrospective went a long way in remedying this, although maybe not as far as it should have. Of the 13 films screened only 4 were screened with English subtitles, an unusual turn of events as Filmex is fanous for fully subtitled retrospectives. Japanese and foreign critics have long lobbied for Somai to be better known internationally, but without subtitles and with certain prints of films from the early 90's already looking faded and worn, it's easy to see why this hasn't happened up to this point. Still, films like "The Catch", "Typhoon Club" and "Moving" (above) were revelations to many. Here's hoping that we see some kind of DVD set released by the folks at The Criterion Collection or Masters of Cinema sooner than later.

In the end it was Tibetan director Pema Tseden's "Old Dog" that was awarded the top prize by the Filmex jury (made up of director Amir Naderi, film critic Philippe Azoury, film scholar Soowan Jung, director Makoto Shinozaki and President of the Nicholas Ray Foundation Susan Ray). Meanwhile a student jury made up of Ryoko Kochi, Naoya Yamaguchi and Matsumi Kaji honoured Yosuke Okuda's first major film production "Tokyo Playboy Club" with a special Student Jury Prize.


Nicholas Vroman's Report

Tokyo Filmex seems like a family affair. That is your family includes a who’s who of contemporary filmmakers and film artists, a legion of Tokyo film buffs and an international cast of film writers, bookers, translators, movers and shakers. It just feels cozy and inclusive. There’s a particular indulgence of viewing a smartly curated selection of films by Shozo Ichiyama. Even if you don’t like them all, they tend to all fit into a clever puzzle of themes, associations and leitmotifs, making the festival itself seem a seamless whole.

Another of the pleasures of the festival is that it brings comrades and collaborators from far and wide. I had the distinct pleasure of having Chris MaGee spend a few nights on my apartment floor and days tag-teaming it to catch films.

I saw a mess of international films – a few terrible ones, a few ma ma, several good ones and at least one brilliant one (Nick Ray’s 1972 “We Can’t Go Home Again”). But as this is the J-Film Pow-Wow, here’s a quick report on films Japanese.


The Catch

I know that Chris has already weighed in most eloquently on Shinji Shomai’s “The Catch,” but a few comments seem to be in order. From the opening scene that introduces Shomai’s wild camera pan/zoom/truck/crane technics, like most in the darkened house, my mouth was agape with an oh-my-god sort of awe. Several other set pieces throughout the film with the god-like camera floating over water, twisting and turning over the prows of boats, across quays and back again made me wonder if the film was more about impossible camera setups or the somewhat old-fashioned proletarian “Islands In the Stream” story of taciturn and shochu- fueled men men men against the sea. Perhaps I prefer my crazy camera work a little less tainted by plot. Give me Michael Snow most days (even though Snow does play with tainted plots). But there were times in “The Catch” where the figuring out of how the hell he did that shot overwhelmed the drunken drama that was being played out. The film’s ostensible documentary veracity, played against the increasingly melodramatic plotline, made for one of the more novel cinematic experiences of my life. I’m still in awe of and questioning the arcane and retrograde method of catching tuna – long lines drawn in by hand and when the behemoth is finally pulled to the edge of the boat, it being bludgeoned to death. Haven’t they every heard of winches? Or fishing poles? No wonder these guys are so messed up. The images and actions in “The Catch” seem to come from some sort of strange otherworld. Even John Huston’s stylized translation of “Moby Dick,” with Gregory Peck’s overwrought Ahab seems to have more connection with the things of this world than the seemingly more realistic world of “The Catch” which comes off like science fiction.

CUT

Of course, Emir Naderi’s “CUT” was the big ticket of the festival. Naderi, with his outsized and generous personality was the head of the festival jury and seemed to be everywhere at the festival, glad-handing and joking – a kind of crazy fun Iranian bachelor uncle you wish you had type. His film was getting the big hype for low-budget art house fodder (Note: I have been a small part of the hype machine with an article I wrote more than a year ago about a visit to the set of “CUT”). The brutal intensity of the film more than lived up to expectations. The lack of dramatic curvature, though, made the parable about the suffering of the artist-cinephile a bit of a slog. And in the penultimate scene where a countdown of 100 great films punctuate the seemingly endless beating one is left with more of an intellectual release rather than an emotional one. What twisted my mind and left me squirming more after the houselights went up was Naderi’s simultaneous critique and exploitation of the idea of violence as entertainment. The direct pleasure of men beating up another man versus the higher aesthetics of cinema art was laid on display for the audience to “enjoy” voyeuristically in a high art film that was laden with violence. It makes the mind boggle.

Monsters Club

A couple of buddies were put off by Monster’s Club opening scenes where our hero, a younger, richer and more fashionable Ted Kaczynski (as played by Eita) goes through his hermetic routines - which mainly include sending mail bombs to owners of media conglomerates - in his Hallmark perfect winter cabin. His voice over mouths anarcho-primitivist screeds. They felt that filmmaker Toshiaki Toyoda was in agreement with the sentiments voiced. He may well be, but between Eita’s incongruous (and great) haircut and his character’s acknowledged privileged I felt that he was more of a 3rd Generation type and his motives completely up to question. As his madness ensues he does become a monster, delivering his last payload to the crowded streets of Tokyo – bringing a metaphorical and literal winter with him. Monster’s Club was disturbing, visionary and uneven. The literalizing of his demons was a bit overdone, but the nod toward JLG had a particular resonance. The bigger reference to Kenji Miyazawa, children’s book author and poet may have been a bit too Japanese culture specific to translate beyond borders, but even without the cultural reference the final voice over poem throws the whole thing into a more enigmatic and resonant place. Toyoda’s mixing it up with performance artist Pyuupiru, musician KenKen and a host of others show a generosity of spirit that’s visible in the final result. It’s good to see Toyoda, after his abysmal stoner slog, “The Blood of Rebirth,” finding a bit of footing on a new rocky trail – exploring, taking chances and creating interesting new work.

KOTOKO

Most problematic was “KOTOKO.” (above) Like “CUT,” not only was the title all in caps, but gushers of blood stained the screen through most of the running time. In KOTOKO’s case the boundary between fiction and fact were completely upended. “KOTOKO” follows the story of a woman, played by Okinawan singer Cocco, going mad. The manifestations of her madness include hallucinating doppelgangers and non-existent personages along with self-mutilation (cutting in this case) and anorexia – something that the real life actress is known for. She appeared on stage before the screening with director Shinya Tsukamoto, a scary image of walking death, spaced out (on meds?) and nearly incoherent. It was a sad sight. Tsukamoto appears to be genuinely in love with her – not only visible from his appearance in the movie as her potential savior, but even in the Q and A afterwards, it was pretty obvious. KOTOKO’s story was developed from Cocco’s ideas and whether the film exists as some sort of insane therapy session masquerading as a movie or an uber-Polanski exploration into troubled behavior is up to question. It seems that both director and subject are in an extreme enabling stage. Despite the visceral and unrelenting affect of the film (Tsukemoto certainly knows how to put together a film) one wonders if it may be better for Cocco to get some professional help soon.

No Man's Zone

“No Man’s Zone” is Toshi Fujiwara’s documentary meditation on the disaster in Tohoku. If Cocco wears the marks of her self-mutilation on her forearms, Fujiwara wears his Markerisms on his sleeve. Even the voice over by Arsinée Khanjian sounded uncannily like Sandra Stewart, the voice on the English language version of “Sans Soleil.” There was coy set of questions and statements about what you were looking at. A Where’s Waldo “whoops you missed what you should have been looking at” turned with increasing gravity to “the thing you should be looking at – radiation – you can’t see.” For a film that’s about trifecta of earthquake, tsunami and nuclear meltdown, it’s surprisingly beautiful. The landscapes and still lives of the massive destruction of 3.11 give way to the revival of spring and nature reclaiming the devastated land. But the radiation has made the place a “No Man’s Zone.” Tarkovsky was prescient on this one! Fujiwara’s haunting images of empty and emptying towns serve as a document, a remembrance to our own follies. Where Marker builds his critique of images and documentary truth with trove of historical, and cinematic references and a lifetime of knowledge, Fujiwara tends to shorthand his seemingly pithy third person commentary, leaving the experience of No Man’s Land a bit of a didactic exercise. But as one of the first films that attempts to make some sense of the endless images of destruction and rapidly developing mediated myth of stoic and hardworking Japanese coming to terms with yet another disaster, at least “No Man’s Zone” is trying to look at things with fresh eyes with a certain anger and sadness that says, “Look at this and remember.”

Japanese Weekend Box Office, December 3rd to December 4th


1. Kaibutsu-kun:The Movie* (Toho)
2. K-on! Movie* (Shochiku)
3. The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn (Toho Towa)
4. A Ghost Of A Chance* (Toho)
5. Crossroads* (Shochiku)
6. Kaiji 2* (Toho)
7. Moneyball (SPE)
8. Life Back Then* (Shochiku)
9. Happy Feet 2 (Warner)
10. Suite Pretty Cure: Take Back! The Heart Binding Miracles Melody* (Toei)

* Japanese film

Courtesy of Box Office Japan.