Sunday, February 27, 2011

PORTLAND IFF REVIEW: Outrage

アウトレイジ (Autoreiji)

Released: 2010

Directed by:
Takeshi Kitano

Starring:
Takeshi Kitano
Kippei Shiina
Kase Ryo
Jun Kunimura
Fumiyo Kohinata

Running time: 109 mins.



Reviewed by Eric Evans


For the first 30 minutes or so, “Outrage” feels very much like Takeshi Kitano rebooting his yakuza storytelling. With character actors like Susumu Terajima replaced in supporting roles by bigger names like Kase Ryo and music by Keiichi Suzuki rather than longtime collaborator Joe Hisaishi, the stage is certainly set for Kitano to do something different within the mob framework that’s familiar to him and his fans. Early on he does, starting with two long dolly shots—one that scans the faces of the dozens of Yakuza minions waiting outside a summit of family leaders, the other a shot that, despite movement, stays locked on Boss Ikemoto (Jun Kunimura). Without a word spoken we know who the boss is, and that his men (among whose number we see Kitano and Kippei Shiina) are dutiful soldiers. Combined with the somber rumble of the score (Suzuki also did the similarly percussive music for Kitano’s 2003 “Zatoichi”), “Outrage” has a fresh, snappy beginning that promises more than the film that follows can deliver. In fact, a third of the way through I thought Kitano was going for an almost satiric look at revenge, with each violent turn being more (forgive me) outrageous than the last. Renji Ishibashi has the funniest role of his career as singularly wronged lower-rung family boss Murase, and Kitano the director is at his freewheeling yet tense best whenever that character is onscreen. After that first act, however, it becomes clear that the film’s basic premise—mob bosses’ violent machinations against one another leading to further violence—doesn’t build toward anything, but is the film’s raison d’être. Tension doesn’t lead to resolution or anything else, and there’s no sense of a grand plan being set in motion: one character makes a phone call, another character shoots someone, and there is revenge. Repeat 8 or 9 times until just about everyone is dead. The end.

Kitano employs his trademark scowl-and-bellow routine as Otomo, a middling boss known for doing the dirty work. There’s none of the introspection from “Hana-Bi” or “Sonatine” here, just a workmanlike approach that frustratingly hints at more. A younger Kitano might have had fun with the role of Mizuno (Shiina), his chief lieutenant, or upstart Ishihara (a game but miscast Ryo) in that both roles allow for a bit more mischief, with Shiina in particular benefitting from being able to revel in his criminality. Kunimara likewise brings a spark to his role as the conniving boss of the clan, but for the most part this is an unhappy bunch. Kitano has never really glorified the mob in his films, but these Yakuza seem to do nothing but sit around yelling at one another, waiting to kill or be killed, posturing and acting tough. It’s unhelpful that many key roles are played by otherwise fine actors who have no business in the movie. Ryo’s presence as a clever up-and-comer is as awkward as his character’s phonetic English sounds, and despite their not-inconsiderable efforts both Tetta Sugimoto (Ozawa) and Tomokazu Miura (Kato) feel woefully out of place as heavies. Kitano may have upgraded his cast on paper, but it’s not hard to imagine some of those lesser-known guys he used to employ bringing more authenticity to these roles.

A long break after his mob films “Goodfellas” and “Casino”, Martin Scorcese returned to organized crime with a completely different cast and approach in “The Departed”, and while no masterpiece the result was both a fine addition to, and a marked departure from, his previous work. But rather than taking a page from Scorcese’s book and reinventing the genre he helped introduce to a worldwide audience, it’s as if Kitano took a single sequence from a lesser Yakuza film like “Brother” and played it out over and over again. He stages the realistic violence well and his characters’ many confrontations have the tension you’d expect from his better movies, but after the fourth or fifth such scene it begins to sink in that all Kitano’s going to do is rehash elements from those previous films, with different actors and no point. Kitano manages what I would have thought impossible from him: he somehow makes a crime film with lots of violence and yelling seem boring. It’s his most one-dimensional film since “Boiling Point” yet lacks that film’s narrative drive. And the less said about the clumsy embassy subplot, the better.

I walk into every movie with a desire to, and a belief that I will, enjoy myself. Like many people of a certain age my childhood experience with film was limited to what was on one of three TV channels and those rare and wonderful nights when my parents took me to the movies. VHS came along just as I went to junior high and I embraced the format as enthusiastically as anyone, but there’s still a bit of magic every time I go to a theater to see a movie. I get my box of Junior Mints and I expect to have a great time. If the film in question is by a director I usually enjoy that sense of positive expectation is heightened, which is perhaps unfair to the filmmaker. George Lucas famously explained the audience’s relative disappointment with the fourth Indiana Jones film by saying “after 19 years, we couldn’t possibly live up to everyone’s expectations.” Maybe not, but in that film there was a sense that much of what made Indy special was purposefully diluted. Takeshi Kitano’s “Outrage” has a similar problem. After a decade away from the genre that made him a critical darling and a number of personal (and despite what his apologists say, nearly unwatchable) films, Kitano hasn’t softened his approach and seems conscious of one-upping his crime film oeuvre, at least in terms of bloodshed. Yet he fails to bring the humanity of “Hana-Bi”, the wistful boyishness of “Sonatine”, or any other extra factors to bear upon “Outrage”. This film pushes Yakuza violence to a place of sickening excess, but that’s not enough. The film would have been a success with either soul or a plot. It utterly lacks both, and as a result feels hollow. I won’t deny how gratifying it was to see Kitano onscreen, black suited and gun in hand, but there’s gotta be more to it than that.

11th annual Nippon Connection Festival announces first films in its amazing line-up

by Chris MaGee

A highlight of the J-Film Pow-Wow's year is fast approaching - the annual Nippon Connection Japanese Film Festival in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. I've had my ticket booked for about a month now, but have been eagerly awaiting word on what visitors to the fest will be able to see this year. This week that word came via a press release from Nippon Connection central.

Once again the 5-day festival will be bringing the best in Japanese film to Europe. Check out just some of the line-up that was announced: Hiromasa Yonebayashi's "The Borrower Arriety", Takahisa Zeze's "Heaven's Story", Yoshihiro Nishimura's "Hell Driver", Hideaki Hosono's "Dum Beast", Kazuyoshi Kumakiri's "Sketches of Kaitan City", Keita Kurosaka's "Midori-ko" and Keichi Hara's "Colourful" will all be on the big screen in Frankfurt.

Added to these will be a special retrospective of the work of Sion Sono in the Nippon Retro programme, a selection of this year's graduating class of the Tokyo University of the Arts Film Program and a special animation programme featuring the work of DVD collective CALF.

A great time will indeed be had at the 11th annual Nippon Connection Japanese Film Festival which runs from April 27th to May 1st. Check out there official website here. I'll have a big bowl of ramen there for all of you!

Mochizuki Mikiya’s manga “Wild 7” comes to the screen with Eita in lead role

by Chris MaGee

Stop the presses! They're turning a manga into a live-action film!

Okay, now that the sarcasm is out of the way let's move onto the news. Tokyograph is reporting that Eita (above right), star of such films as "The Foreign Duck, the Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker" and "Toad's Oil" will be starring in a live-action adaptation of Mochizuki Mikiya’s manga “Wild 7”.

"Wild 7" was originally published in Shonen Magazine between 1969 and 1979 and chronicled the adventures of seven counter-terrorist motorcyclists working for the Japan National Police Agency. This live-action film version of the manga will start shooting next month with Hasumi Eiichiro (Umizaru) in the director's chair and Eita as Hiba Dairoku, the young leader of the Wild 7.

This live-action "Wild 7" won;t be the first though. The manga formed the basis of a live-action TV series that aired on NTV between 1972 and 1973. Check out the opening below to tide you over until this new film hits theatres.

REVIEW: Sychronicity

心中天使 (Synchronicity)

Released: 2011

Director:
Naoki Ichio

Starring:
Machiko Ono
Hikari Kikuzato
Tomohiro Kikuzato
Jun Kunimura
Hisako Manda

Running time: 92 min.



Reviewed by Nicholas Vroman


Though it’s been 10 years since Naoki Ichio’s first feature, "A Drowning Man", and "Synchronicity", some fundamental issues and ideas bind the two. First, there is a consistent plot device. Something happens. Something happens that fundamentally changes a character’s life. In "A Drowning Man", the main character, Tokio (Shinya Tsukamoto) find his wife, Kumiko (Reiko Kataoka) dead in the bathtub. After a night of not knowing what to do, he passes out in a drunken heap. The next morning, Kumiko, resurrected, helps him up and life continues – but it will never be the same, as much as Tokio may try to maintain it. In "Synchronicity", the three main characters, Ai, Yuu, and Kei go through some profound something-or-other that changes their lives. In this variation they try to continue on as normal, but every one around them, family, girlfriends, friends knows, but are helpless in what to do.

Chatting with Naoki, he acknowledged that Peter Greenaway is a huge influence on his work, but that he had never seen "The Falls". This seminal work by Greenaway catalogs of a group of people that had all experienced the Violent Unknown Event (VUE) – something that had changed their lives (mainly by giving them potagium fallitis, a disease that is turning, basically, into birds). In "Synchronicity", Naoki’s characters may have become angels.

The second binding concern of Naoki’s is surrealism. In a refreshing rejection of the common logic of even the most CGI-laden contemporary productions, Naoki has no fear in throwing a certain illogic into his stories and allowing the film to follow that course. Dream-logic, unreasoned and undefined, allows him to dig deeper into the emotional underpinnings of his strange tales.

Naoki believes that “we…are living in the loneliest age in history.” "A Drowning Man" addressed the problem through a self-purging personal story of a breakup of a relationship. "Synchronicity" throws the net wider, looking at contemporary malaise across the culture.

"Synchronicity" chronicles the live of three characters. Their lives may cross, but they don’t interact. Ai (Machiko Ono) is a concert pianist, in her 20s, living with her parents (played by the genial and ubiquitous character actor, Jun Kumimura and former 1978 Miss Japan/current epitome of Japanese grace, Hiasako Manda). Yuu (Tomohiro Kaku) is a 20-something salaryman already dead-ending in life and relationships. Kei (Hikari Kikuzato) is an unformed high school student, whose emotionally demanding single mother (Yumi Aso) has forced the young Kei into her own emotional retreat.

The film begins with each collapsing is some sort of rapture and coming to, changed in some fundamental but indescribable way. Through most of the film the main three characters drift through in an almost somnambulant state. It seems particularly perverse on the side of Naoki to take the young otaku idoru, Hikari Kikuzato, usually vivacious and kawaii and make her so completely flat. They walk through their lives with visual and audio motifs binding them – images of the sky, a mysterious ugly grey cat – the harbinger of the mysterious event, mirrors that fracture their faces, a beautiful trio of scenes depicting each with analog angel wings. The people in their lives recognize these changes, but have no idea of how to react. Mostly there’s misunderstanding and non-communication, but Ai’s father, also Kei’s school counselor, suggest that what Ai’s going through is what he, and most people, have gone through in their 20s, a certain unease with and ill-fitting into the universe that will pass with time.

Of course, it does pass, but in Naoki’s vision, a mystical – and cinematic – conflation of image and soundtrack brings all the forces at play into a somewhat new-agey symbolic union of Ai and Yuu creating a new “we.” They disappear into heaven. Young Kei, though is left in the world, now completely rearranged. She returns to her mother, only to find herself unrecognized. The remaining supporting characters find themselves in previously unknown situations. Kei eventually finds herself at Ai’s home, Ai’s parents now her own. Life goes on in a new formation and resolution. A final twist, driving to school with her new father, something happens.

Naoki’s oblique explorations into contemporary malaise dabbles with Lacanian notions of psychology, throwing a hodgepodge of symbolic, imaginary and “real” images on screen and in showing that once this malaise/desire is articulated in some way – in Naoki’s almost operatic orchestration of sounds and images at the denouement – that a resolution can happen. He’s also savvy enough and in a tradition of surrealist subversion, willing to playfully cut across most pop psychological notions and stir up the pot with slyly humorous images, dreams within the dream scenarios and scenes that belie much of any interpretation outside the sometimes abstruse logic of the film itself.

The Japanese title of the film, "Shichuu tenshi", roughly translates to "Angels of the Heart", but also references the idea of a double suicide. Naoki carefully and stubbornly refuses to give an easy interpretation to his images and ideas. As he says, “I’m not interested in seeking the cause. I am always interested in depicting ourselves symbolically.” The symbolism of his imagery seems broad, but cloaked. Naoki, ever the surrealist, allows the viewer to bring their own dreams to his films, revealing their own desires and interpretations.

Read more by Nicholas Vroman at his blog

21st annual Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival kicks off in Hokkaido

by Chris MaGee

The headline "Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival kicks off for another year" is always a great thing to see. That's because the film festival, and the Hokkaido city that hosts it, literally shut down in 2007. The film festival, which brings the best of genre and fantastic films from Japan and around the globe to northern Japan, struggled back to life and is now back to bringing over 10,000 visitors to Yubari each year.

This year is no different. Along with such films as Edgar Wright's "Scott Pilgrim vs. The World" (bringing a bit of Toronto to Japan) the Japanese programme of this year's Yubari Fest is packed with films. Nikkatsu's Sushi Typhoon forms the center of the programme with a trio of films, "Alien vs. Ninja", "Helldriver" and the world premiere of Yudai Yamagichi and Tak Sakaguchi's "Yakuza Weapon". Joining these are films like Kenji SEki's "Hard Life" (above) starring Saki Terashima and Shinwa Kataoka, Makoto Shinosaki's "Night of the Evil Comets", and Ryutaro Kajino's "Seafood Girl Maiko".

The 21st annual Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival runs until February 28th. To check out all that is going on in Yubari visit the fest's official website here.

Actor Kenji Kohashi hits the road for his documentary "DON'T STOP"

by Chris MaGee

Reality can often times be a hell of a lot more fascinating that fiction. Case in point is a new documentary by actor Kenji Kohashi. Kohashi starred in Ryuhei Kitamura's "Azumi" as well as more than two dozen TV series, but then he wanted more than just the life of an actor. The 31-year-old moved to the U.S. and it was his own journey to America that would end up mirroring that of the subject of his his new documentary "DON'T STOP!"

"DON"T STOP" tells the story of CAP, a 46-year-old Hokkaido native who is obsessed with America, particularly the frontier life of of bikers out on the open road. As a younger man CAP travelled the U.S. on a Harley, but when he was 26 he suffered a road accident that left him wheelchair bound, paralyzed below the waist and with a damaged left arm. Since then Life for CAP has consisted of watching Dennis Hopper's "Easy Rider" on a loop in his room in Hokkaido... that is until Kohashi helps him travel back to America.

"DON'T STOP" will be getting a Japanese theatrical release, but not until 2012. Until then Kohashi will be touring his documentary in a number of cities, and we can only hope on the film festival circuit.

Thanks to Tokyograph for news of this film, and to Oricon for the above promo image.

REVIEW: Underworld Beauty

暗黒街の美女 (Ankokugai no bijo)

Released: 1958

Director:
Seijun Suzuki

Starring:
Michitaro Mizushima
Mari Shiraki
Shinsuke Ashida
Toru Abe
Hideaki Nitani

Running time: 87 min.


Reviewed by Marc Saint-Cyr


The now-legendary Seijun Suzuki was still relatively new to the filmmaking game when he made "Underworld Beauty" – he had only directed his first film two years previous in 1956. It seems fitting that, just as he was getting started on his path to becoming one of the key figures of the Japanese New Wave, other directors elsewhere in the world were exploring fresh alternatives to cinematic conventions. The late 1950s and early 1960s are particularly notable for being the first years of the French New Wave, and produced such integral works as Jean-Pierre Melville’s "Bob le flambeur" (1956) and Jean-Luc Godard’s "Breathless" (1960). As in those films, "Underworld Beauty" indicates the strong influence of the American crime genre, which in many cases (including Suzuki’s) served as an appealing jumping point towards bold new directions.

The film begins shortly after the release of gruff con Miyamoto (Michitaro Mizushima) from prison. He goes to a hiding place within the sewers from which he retrieves a pistol and a small pouch containing three valuable diamonds. He wants to pass along the gems to Mihara, a friend who took part in their theft three years previous. The heist ultimately ended badly for both men, even though they got the loot – Miyamoto went to jail while Mihara was crippled. Yakuza Boss Oyane, upon learning of Miyamoto’s freedom, plans to seize the diamonds for himself. A botched attempt to sell them leads to Mihara swallowing the stones. After he dies from fatal injuries, his sister Akiko (Mari Shiraki) and her shifty boyfriend Arita both become involved in the frantic, greed-fuelled fight for the valuable prizes within Mihara’s stomach.

In true noir fashion, "Underworld Beauty" is filled with scores of morally questionable characters – though beneath his tough guy exterior, Miyamoto is an honorable man who only wants to help his old, unlucky partner in crime. Arita is much less sympathetic as he stoops to despicable depths in order to claim the valuable loot. A rogue’s gallery of gangsters and minions fill out the film’s sleazy ecosystem, but the person who easily warrants the most attention is Akiko. Exuding sensuality and spunk to spare, she holds her own against the men continually around her while keeping her best interests in mind. Especially entertaining to watch is her playfully combative relationship with Miyamoto, who she calls “old man” and resents for getting her brother involved in criminal affairs while he persistently tries to look after her. Whether partying in rowdy jazz clubs, pushing aside her grief for her brother to go drinking with an American sailor or pausing in mid-chase to give a child money for candy, Akiko adds hearty doses of fun and energy to the film’s hard-boiled proceedings.

Though "Underworld Beauty" is a very handsomely made film, it is clear that, at the time of its making, Suzuki had yet to become the innovative auteur responsible for the feast of colors in "Gate of Flesh," experimental effects in "Story of a Prostitute" and extravagant sets in "Tokyo Drifter." However, there are still plenty of memorable sequences to be impressed by, starting with Miyamoto’s first appearance on a shadowy street and his subsequent descent into the inky darkness of the sewers. Arita’s workplace, a combination of sculpting studio and mannequin factory, is a creepy setting filled with poised dummies and shelves of molded faces. Perhaps the most striking set piece is an intense shoot-out that ends in a sweltering boiler room, giving way to a visual onslaught of sweat, blood, water, coal and fire.

It could be said that "Underworld Beauty" occupies a spot in Suzuki’s career similar to that of "The Killing" in Stanley Kubrick’s. Both films being slick, pulpy thrillers that any director would be content to have in his or her filmography, they nonetheless only partially indicate the great heights in creativity and ambition that their respective creators would eventually reach.

Read more by Marc Saint-Cyr at his blog

Weekly Trailers

Kore de Ii no da!! Eiga: Akatsuka Fujio - Hideaki Sato (2011)

The zany imagination of gag manga artist Fujio Akatsuka comes to the screen with Tadanobu Asano in the starring role. Akatsuka's real-life editor Toshiki Takei gets an onscreen sex change with actress Maki Horikita portraying the woman who must keep this freaky manga-ka in line. "Kore de Ii no da!! Eiga: Akatsuka Fujio" is set to be released on April 30th in Japanese theatres.




Detonation! Violent Riders - Teruo Ishii (1975)

The King of Japanese exploitation cinema of the late 60's and 70's joined forces with Sonny Chiba to bring the story of a hard riding biker gang to the screen in 1975. "Detonation! Violent Riders". Toei was so happy that this film kicked off a series that ran in Japanese theatres throughout the mid-70's.

New Akihabara hair salon caters to the otaku and cosplay crowd

by Chris MaGee

I know that we have a few cosplay enthusiasts who read the blog regularly (Alexandria Cruz, we're looking at you...), so when I saw this news item posted over at Anime News Network I knew I wanted to share it.

Anyone who has been to otaku ground zero, Akihabara, knows that any and every obsession with girls in maid uniforms, anime gear, or some things a little more kinky are indulged in the streets of "Electric Town". Now if you happen to be one of those highly-coveted beauties who wander the streets of Akihabara you have a place right in the neighbourhood where you can get your hair done... or your wig made as the case may be.

Fuwat is a new hair salon that opened near Akihabara Station last October, and besides the standard shampoo and cut services the stylists at the salon also can do your hair up when you head out cosplaying. And if you don't happen to have shocking pink hair to go along with your dress then the Fuwat stylists will set you up with a wig to compliment your outfit.

Cosplayers can check out Fuwat's official website here for the next time they're in Tokyo.

REVIEW: The Legend Of Red Dragon

赤龍の女 (Sekiryû no onna)

Released: 2006

Director:
Toru Ichikawa

Starring:
Yu Misaki
Kenichi Endo
Kenji Ohba
Shingo Fukushima
Tatsuya Gashuin

Running time: 77 min.



Reviewed by Bob Turnbull


There are plenty of things wrong with "The Legend Of Red Dragon": the story is far from original, the low budget screams out with every frame, the "martial arts" action is neither martial arts nor action, the acting is either cranked up to 11 or dialed down to minus 11 and the video effects are rather pointless. None of those things are a crime though - you can't blame someone for trying and there's obviously some effort put into the filmmaking (different camera angles, specific framing of actors, etc.). What is a crime, however (or at least will be if I ever get into elected office), is making something this dull.

Though only a measely 77 minutes long, the experience of watching this movie lasted several days for me - simply because I fell asleep no fewer than 7 times while working my way through it. Part of the problem is a story that never engages or provides any mystery whatsoever. It's a straight up revenge picture that does nothing new with the premise (it barely does anything old with it). The next in line to become leader of the Kurosawa Kai yakuza gang is a man known as Sekiryu (because of the big red dragon tattoo on his back), but the jealous Aramaki has other plans. After killing the family head, he pins the blame on Sekiryu and then kills him as an act of revenge for his slain leader. He doesn't realize that Sekiryu's young daughter Yui has witnessed the killing and is determined to avenge her father. Now that she has become a woman (with her own tattoo) and trained for years with her caretaker, she is systematically wiping out the yakuza who are part of the Kurosawa Kai.

Aramaki's second in command is infatuated with her (one wonders why since Yui shows no personality at any point in the entire film), but neither he nor his boss realize that she is the one killing the yakuzas. There's room for conflict here: Should second in command Kunimoto stay true to his boss or follow his true love? Should Yui follow through her sworn revenge or grasp at her one chance for happiness (she sees something worthwhile in Kunimoto)? Can she reconcile that the one man who loves her works for the yakuza who killed her father? And yet little is done to fill the gap where the conflict should arise. This leaves a huge vacuum in its place, so any willingness you had left to care for the characters is sucked away completely.

Not that there should be much there anyway. We weren't more than a few minutes into the opening battle between rival yakuza gangs when I thought to myself "Already, I don't care". Part of this was due to the fact that EVERYBODY WAS YELLING, but it was also because a drawn out, poorly staged fight between stock gang members with no reason to root for anyone tends to leave the viewer (at least in my experience) rather bored. On top of that, its look is that of a flat washed out student film and its pacing is like shuffling through a field of molasses. That goes not just for the opening fight scene, but the following ones and both sex scenes too. The film never recovers from that bland opening and short of the pointless quirkiness of a band of assassins (who do a little dance and sing a song before their killings), the story brings nothing of interest to the table. Aside from a few moments of moderately interesting visual setups and an obvious attention to certain deatils, "The Legend Of Red Dragon" fails in the worst possible way: it's completely inert.

Read more from Bob Turnbull at his blog.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Bizarre new teaser trailer for Hitoshi Matsumoto's "Saya Samurai" pops up online

by Chris MaGee

Hitoshi Matsumoto has got himself a really interesting career. He makes up one half of on e of the best known Japanese comedy duos in history, Downtown, and he's a ubiquitous presence on Japanese TV. He also makes movies, starting out with "Big Man Japan" in 2007 and then "Symbol" in 2009. Both were received by lukewarm reviews from many Japanese critics, but North American audiences love them. Almost seems like Matsumoto is taking a page from the Takeshi Kitano career handbook...

Last October we reported on how Matsumoto was bringing his third feature length directorial effort to the screen, and that it would star an unknown Shinjuku bar owner Takaaki Nomi in the lead role. There weren't many other details besides that, but this week our new staff writer Nicholas Vroman sent a quick email saying take a look at this... a very strange teaser trailer for this new film titled "Saya Samurai". There were some stills floating around from the film at the turn of the year (check them out here at Twitch), but this teaser is something we hadn't seen before. A samurai in Coke bottle glasses, and covered in... well, we're not sure what he's covered in. With the sketchy plot detail that Nomi plays a samurai named Kanjuro who becomes a ronin after leaving his clan it looks as if "Saya Samurai" will remain a ystery in the same way Matsumoto's "Symbol" did for a very long time.

Check out the teaser trailer for Hitoshi Matsumoto's "Saya Samurai" below. The film is due for release in Japanese theatres in June.

Bunta Sugawara and Etsuko Ichihara to star in Yoji Yamada's "Tokyo Story" remake

by Chris MaGee

It was back in December when we reported on how Yoji Yamada was going to be paying homage to Yasujiro Ozu's best known film "Tokyo Story". The veteran film-maker whose titles include "The Yellow Handkerchief", "The Hidden Blade" and dozens of "Tora-san" films was reportedly going to be crafting a film around the central premise of Ozu's 1953 masterpiece - an elderly couple visit their daughter-in-law who has been widowed after her husband (and the couple's son) dies while fighting overseas.

At that time there was no word on casting for Yamada's loose remake, as well as no title, but now we have both thanks to the folks at Tokyograph. The title of Yamada's film will be one word off from the original - "Tokyo Kazoku (Tokyo Family)". Bunta Sugawara (Battles Without Honour and Humanity) and Etsuko Ichihara (Black Rain) will be starring in the film as the elderly couple, Hirayama Shukichi and Tomiko. Most of the other cast is accounted for as well - Masahiko Nishimura and Yui Natsukawa will play the couples son, a doctor, and his wife, Shozo Hayashiya and Shigeru Muroi will play the couples daughter and her husband, and Satoshi Tsumabuki and Yu Aoi will star as the son and his girlfriend. Aren't we missing someone here? The sympathetic daughter-in-law and wife of the deceased son/ husband originally portrayed by Setsuko Hara? Shochiku must be keeping that casting ace hidden... or we just aren't doing our math correctly.

Regardless "Tokyo Kazoku" is slated to start in April and then scheduled for a winter 2011 release in Japanese theatres.

"Scoutman" director Masato Ishioka introduces us to the world of Tadashi Yoyogi

by Chris MaGee

With directors like Takahisa Zeze, Yojiro Takita, Sachi Hamano, Koji Wakamatsu, etc., etc. having made the transition either permanently or occasionally from pink films to more mainstream cinematic fare it seems like it's about time that a fellow like Tadashi Yoyogi gets his due. 72-year-old Yoyogi, "Father of Japanese Adult Video", got his start in the early 70's making pink films for Purima Kikaku and then for Wakamatsu Pro. In the early 80's though he was one of the first pink film-makers, and one of the first film-makers period, who began utilizing new video technology. In 1981 Yoyogi kicked off the AV (adult video) revolution with his "April Lust" and shortly thereafter founded his own production company Athena Eizou. He's probably best known for his "Onanie" or "Masturbation" trilogy that were released between 1982 and 1984.

You have to love a guy who is honest enough to call an adult video "Masturbation". You also have to love a guy who is described by "Dear Doctor" star Tsurube Shôfukutei as "A yakuza, isn't he?" That's how the trailer for Masato Ishioka's documentary "Yoyochu: Sex to Yoyogi Tadashi no sekai (Yoyochu: Sex and the World of Tadashi Yoyogi)" begins, and like Tetsuaki Matsue's recent doc on AV star Yumika Hayashi, "Annyong Yumika", it looks like a fascinating watch. That fact that it's been made by the man behind 2000's "Scoutman", a drama about men who recruit young women for the adult industry. Check the trailer for the film which was just released in Japan last month below.

Takahisa Zeze follows up "Heaven's Story" with “Antoki no Inochi”

by Chris MaGee

It was only last week that Takahisa Zeze was honoured at the 61st annual Berlin International Film Festival with the FIPRESCI Prize for his 4-plus hour drama "Heaven's Story". Don't expect the 51-year-old director to start resting on his laurels though.

Tokyograph reported this week that Zeze, who has also brought us a wealth of pink films over his two decade career, is already planning his next project. Zeze will next adapt the 2009 novel “Antoki no Inochi” by author Sada Masashi to the screen. The book tells the story of a withdrawn young man named Nagashima whose job it is to see to the belongings of the dead. Nagashima finds himself opening up to his female co-worker, Yuki, and love starts to transform his cloistered existence. Things change after Yuki's past is brought to light.

Zeze has cast Masaki Okada (Confessions/ Halfway) as Nagashima and Nana Eikura (April Bride) as Yuki. Zeze will have a quick turnaround in bringing "Antoki no Inochi" to the screen. Filing will start next month with a Japanese theatrical release due for the fall. Just in time for festival season, no?

Japanese Weekend Box Office, February 19to to February 20th


1. Gantz* (Toho)
2. Hereafter (Warner)
3. Oba, The Last Samurai* (Toho)
4. Ashita no Joe* (Toho)
5. Red (Disney)
6. Kaasan Mom's Life* (Shochiku)
7. Paranormal Activity 2 (Paramount)
8. Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Fox)
9. The Social Network (SPE)
10. 1,778 Stories Of Me And My Wife* (Toho)

* Japanese film

Courtesy of Box Office Japan.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

PORTLAND IFF REVIEW: Sawako Decides

川の底からこんにちは (Kawa no soko kara konnichi wa)

Released: 2010

Director:
Yuya Ishii

Starring:
Hikari Mitsushima
Kotaro Shiga
Kira Aihara
Masashi Endo

Running time: 112 min



Reviewed by Eric Evans


Just before the new year I rewatched “Girl Sparks”, an observant, quirky and above all funny film from 2009’s inaugural Shinsedai Cinema Festival. It’s about a young woman graduating from high school who is fed up with her father, her friends, and above all her small town existence. The film is a little rough around the edges but manages to do hard things, like create a believable movie teenager, exceedingly well. Maybe the most easily accessible movie at the fest, it got big laughs and proved popular, and I thought “this filmmaker is one to watch. If he can maintain his unusual characters and comic timing but fix some structural issues, he’s going to be that rare beast: a creator of commercial, yet not shitty, films for young people. A Japanese John Hughes.”

That filmmaker is writer/director Yuya Ishii, and his sixth feature “Sawako Decides” fulfills that promise. At all of 28 years old, Ishii has proven to have an unmatched capacity for writing young (and not so young) women. Echoing the frustration with small town vicissitudes from his films “Girl Sparks” and “To Walk Beside You” (2009), “Sawako” manages to up the ante by resolving previous challenges with pacing without sacrificing any of the comedy. And the casting of lead actress Hikari Mitsushima elevates the material from the quirky and charming (see Ayuko Ikawa in “Sparks”) to the sublime. Like her previous breakout roles (Haru in Momoko Ando’s “Kakera” and Yoko in Sion Sono’s “Love Exposure”, both festival favorites), Sawako is a part that requires a total honesty—the self-conscious need not apply. It’s also a wildly unflattering role for a young actress: Sawako is usually wearing baggy sweats, shaggy hair hanging in front of a face that only becomes fully visible as she tilts her head back to swig a can of beer, constantly reminding everyone that she’s at best an average person (maybe “lower-middling”, or a bit below that). Mitsushima fearlessly brings the part to life, and exhibits a comic timing unseen in her previous work. It’s yet another impressive performance from someone who is still in the early part of her film career. Without the operatic excess of Sono’s film around her, Mitsushima carries “Sawako Decides” for its near two hours on the strength of her performance alone. Good actors ask the viewer to invest in the characters they play. Sawako is not a particularly likable person, but Mitsushima lets us see her uncertainty and her frustration, and you can’t look away.

Sawako lives passively. Her astonishing beer intake and chronic constipation hint that she’s not entirely content to live that way, but the one time she did act on impulse worked out poorly. Running away to Tokyo with the captain of the tennis team might have seemed like a romantic act five years ago, but the glow is gone once you get dumped and end up working low-level jobs to stay afloat. Worse, she’s flitted from guy to guy, content to have someone in her life but uninspired to find the right someone. Her current boyfriend Kenichi isn’t it: he’s judgmental about every aspect of her life, has a young daughter by a previous marriage (with whom Sawako shares a mutual disinterest), just quit his job, and wears foppish baby blue sweaters… which he knits himself. Things seem their worst when she gets a phone call informing her that her father is dying of Cirrhosis and she needs to come back to the small river town she fled as a teen. Kenichi and little Kayoko in tow, tail tucked, she reluctantly returns. Then things really go wrong.

Sawako shares the same indefinable disaffection with her life as Saeko in “Girl Sparks”, but Sawako somehow seems like she’s better defined, in sharper focus. In many ways, “Sawako Decides” functions as a sequel—or perhaps a refinement—to “Girl Sparks”. Young girl running away from small town to Tokyo? Check; love/hate relationship with her father? Check; returning to home town to assume place in family business? Check. But “Sawako” goes where “Girl Sparks”, a wonderful if slight comedy, didn’t: it holds its protagonist accountable for more than her own happiness, and when she finally does take action it’s for more than personal satisfaction. More, Ishii is refining his talents and demanding more of himself. “Sawako Decides” is a polished film, and not just owing to the cast. It snaps along without a care, never stalling or tripping over itself to get to the next laugh. Those laughs, when they come (and they come often), are in the same vein as early Juzo Itami, a result of characters and situations that, while absurd, aren’t contrived simply for the purpose of being funny. It was a surprise to learn that Ishii made both films just two years apart. “Sawako Decides” is a smart comedy that might seem too commercial for film festivals and too indie for the multiplex, but will find an appreciative audience at either.

“Sawako Decides” will be screened at the 34th Portland International Film Festival, February 10-26, 2011. For more information, visit www.nwfilm.org or follow the fest on Twitter @nwfilmcenter.

Tetsuya Nakashima's "Confessions" takes top prize at 34th annual Japanese Academy Prize

by Chris MaGee

Tetsuya Nakashima's revenge drama "Confessions" took the Best Film prize at the 34th annual Japanese Academy Awards. The awards ceremony took place on Friday in Tokyo and the Takako Matsu-starring story of a school teacher seeking revenge for the murder of her daughter by school bullies managed to beat out Takashi Miike's "13 Assassins", Izuru Narushima's "A Lone Scalpel", Yoji Yamada's "Younger Brother", and Sang-il Lee's "Villain". Tetstuya Nakashima also picked up Best Director.

Although "Villain" didn't take the top prize the crime drama about a store clerk who falls for a murderer ended up sweeping the acting categories. Eri Fukatsu snagged Best Actress while her co-star Satoshi Tsumabuki picked up Best Actor. “This performance was the culmination of my 12 years experience in the business," said Tsumabuki in his acceptance speech,"I wanted to dig deep and bring something original and personal to the role.” Joining Fukatsu and Tsumabuki were Akira Eomoto and Kirin Kiki who both took Best Supporting Actor and Best Supporting Actress respectively for their roles in "Villain".

To see the full list of winners at this year's Japanese Academy Prize head to Tokyograph here. Thanks to Japan Today for additional details on this story.

Takashia Zeze's "Heaven's Story" wins prestigious FIPRESCI Prize at Berlin

by Chris MaGee

In other awards news this week Takahisa Zeze picked up the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) Prize at the 61st annual Berlin International Film Festival for his 4-hour plus drama "Heaven's Story". Zeze was not in Berlin to accept the award but sent a statement from Japan expressing his gratitude for "the fact that the film was appreciated by an international audience." "Heaven's Story" follows interweaving storylines around a central storyline of a woman seeking revenge for the murder of her family.

The Berlin International Film Festival has become a key stop on the fest circuit for Japanese film-makers. This marks the third consecutive year that a Japanese film has picked up the FIPRESCI Prize at Berlin. In 2009 the honour went to Sion Sono's "Love Exposure and the 2010 award went to Isao Yukisada's "Parade".

Thanks to The Mainichi Daily News for this news item.

REVIEW: The Primitchibu World

プリミ恥部な世界 (Purimichiba na sekai)

Released: 2009

Director(s):
Kasumi Hiraoka
Takeshi Shirai

Starring:
Hanaka Kiki
Evaryu
Kanji Masuyama
Takeshi Shirai

Running time: 70 min.


Reviewed by Chris MaGee


Chi (Hanaka Kiki) and Poh (Evaryu) have a very simple, but ultimately crucial decision to make - to love or to fight. The world of this wide-eyed pair is one of Japan's many covered shopping arcades, and when they're not frolicking under its awning Chi and Poh play in an elaborate suite in a love hotel. Don't look for any sweaty pinku eiga action in Kasumi Hiraoka and Takeshi Shirai's "The Primitchibu World" though. When Chi and Poh are at home at the love hotel they really just play, sliding down a water slide into a jacuzzi tub, shouting "vroom!" and "beep" as they pretend to drive a car and playing creative games of dress-up. Yes, Chi and Poh love each other dearly, but these two are the epitome of adult children. What a better pair of young people to explore the aimlessness and apathy of today's Japanese 20-somethings?

You see there are dark clouds massing on the edges of Chi and Poh's consumer paradise. It's not just bad enough that the various shop keepers and vendors of the shopping arcade are letting minor quibbles separate them. The green grocer thinks that the boutique owner doesn't have any fashion sense so they no longer speak, while the bonito flake salesman got into a fight with the okonomiyaki chef, so the okonomiyaki now don't have any bonito flakes on top of them anymore. The cracks is Chi and Poh's world are tiny but growing. What is really tearing this couple apart though is that Poh is certain that a war is about to break out. When Chi asks what lies beyond the end of the shopping arcade Poh tells her a military base, one that if "you are born there you have to work their all your life." Everything around Poh is an indicator of a coming apocalypse. The street lights are sensors, the grocery store windows hold provisions and the passersby are lumped into three groups - allies, enemies and victims. The fact that Chi has a secret hiding place where a god lives doesn't stave off Poh's paranoia. Ominous grim reaper-esque figures stalk the couple and a mysterious woman shouts at the pair from their bedroom mirror that war will start tomorrow.

Gods in secret hiding places? Women shouting from mirrors? Yes, the world of "The Primitchibu World" takes major liberties with reality in the same way that the output of Seijun Suzuki in the past three decades has splintered stories into a thousand beautiful puzzle pieces. Kasumi Hiraoka, a film-maker, musician and pole-dancer, and Takeshi Shirai, a massage therapist by day, have a decidedly surreal view of the world that makes "The Primitchibu World" a wondrous visual experience. Colours are super-saturated and Hanaka Kiki and Evaryu as Chi and Poh sport wild and ingenious outfits - disco glitter ball are used as hats and frills and fabrics clash. The world of Chi and Poh doesn't hold up as well once the coming conflict eventually splits the pair apart though. Chi heads out into the world to discover it is made up of an abandoned amusement park, while Poh is trapped in the shopping arcade by his father... a man in a panda bear suit.

With it's wild street party vibe and it's constant obsession with war, it's hard not to think of films like Shuji Terayama's "Throw Away Your Books and Rally in the Streets" or Nagisa Oshima's "Diary of a Shinjuku Thief". Both of these used avant-garde imagery to show us the world of Japan in the late 60's and early 70's, a time when leftist groups had splintered due to ideological arguments concerning the ANPO Treaty and the Vietnam War and young people were caught in the middle of the conflict. War, both societal at home in Japan and actual in Southeast Asia was an everyday fact and the hallucinatory and somehow damaged visions of Terayama and Oshima perfectly reflected that. Chi and Poh, for all their talk of war (and Chi selling flowers to strangers like some latter day hippie peace protester) aren't the youth of 50 years ago and Hiraoka and Shirai aren't Terayama or Oshima, or Seijun Suzuki for that matter. That's not a bad thing though. Chi and Poh are revolutionaries (in a way) of a very different age. Today's Japanese youth face a whole other kind of existence fuel by rampant unemployment and a country in economic decline. Many end up living pay cheque to pay cheque working part-time jobs and living at home with their parents in a kind of forever childhood. Come to think of it, many young people (and not so young people) in the West are caught in the same limbo. "The Primitchibu World" as seen from this angle turns its cultivated strangeness and malaise into a dream journey into today's stagnant Japan.

Takayuki Yamada gets zany in new film by "Vermilion Pleasure Night" creator

by Chris MaGee

Sometimes I find myself in a real predicament. I'm very, very lucky to now be in the position of getting to see screeners of certain films before any official release has been announced or sometimes arranged. The predicament is that if I really like the film I am forced to be quiet about it until an official announcement is made by the producers or the studio. For the longest time I found myself in this position with a new feature film by the creator of "Vermilion Pleasure Night" creator Yoshimasa Ishibashi titled "Milocrorze". Thankfully now the cat is out of the proverbial bag.

This week Tokyograph reported that Ishibashi's zany and surreal "love fantasy" comedy will finally be getting premiered at both the the Yebisu International Festival for Art & Alternate Visions happening now until February 27th and then at the 35th Hong Kong International Film Festival next month. The film will then be released in Japanese theatres this year.

The film features "Crows Zero" and "Densha Otoko" star Takayuki Yamada as three different characters in three different story lines that all deal with love and relationships. I will say that these characters are a young man with a broken heart, a relationship counsellor and a samurai, but at this point that's still all I can say. I can also say that it's about time because "Milocrorze" was one of my favorite films of last year, but I couldn't add it to any of my year end lists due to it being unreleased. Thankfully that's changed.

Thanks to Eiga.com for the above promo still from the film.

Two long rumoured projects coming soon: Martin Scorsese's "Silence" and 3D "Ring"

by Chris MaGee

When you report on the latest Japanese film news on a regular basis you hear of certain in-development projects again and again. Many of them you have to take with a healthy dose of salt and many never go beyond the rumour stage. This past week two long circulating project rumours suddenly became hard facts. One of them I have to admit I am happy to see and the other... well....

The good news first. Back in late 2008 and early 2009 we reported on how Martin Scorsese was developing a remake of Masahiro Shinoda's 1971 film "Silence". That actually may be over-stepping things a bit. Scorsese actually wanted to make a film of the same novel that Shinoda based his film on, Shusaku Endo's 1966 novel "Chinmoku". The novel is set in 17th-century Nagasaki and tells the story of of two Jesuit priests who travel to Japan to investigate the apparent apostasy (renunciation of faith) of their mentor. What they discover when they arrive is that the Tokugawa Shogunate has just defeated a Christian uprising and that the faith has been driven underground.

I was one of the many people who was concerned when it was announced that Scorsese was going to remake Andrew Lau and Alan Mak's 2002 Hong Kong cop film "Infernal Affairs", but once I saw "The Departed" I was pleasantly surprised how much I liked it, so the thought of a master film-maker like Scorsese re-imagining "Silence" didn't sting too much. Now, according to a post over at Variety.com it appears that Scorsese's "Silence" is a go. The post discusses Scorsese's plans to work with his recent screen muse Leonardo Dicaprio once again in the film "The Wolf of Wall Street". It then outlines the projects that Scorsese has to wrap up before he can move onto that film. Scorsese is now in the midst of post- production on the kids movie "Hugo Cabret" and then he is slotted to shoot "Silence" with Benicio Del Toro in the lead role. Very interesting.... Thanks to Wildgrounds for the heads up on this.

Now from the sublime to the ridiculous. Last April we told you about hoe Paramount wanted to make another remake based on Hideo Nakata's seminal J-horror film "Ring", and what's worse they wanted to make it in 3D. Now it looks as if Sadako will really be crawling off the screen in a 3D remake/ reboot of "Ring", but it won't be Paramount behind the project. According to Nippon Cinema Kadokawa has announced that it will be bringing ghost girl Sadako back to the screen in the tentatively titled "Sadako 3D". The film will be scripted by none other that Koji Suzuki, the man who penned the novel that the original novel "Ring". I suppose that is a bit of good news, but we'll have to wait and see until 2012 when "Sadako 3d" hits Japanese theatres.

REVIEW: Time Traveller: The Girl Who Leapt Through Time

時をかける少女(Toki o Kakeru Shōjo)

Released: 2010

Director:
Masaaki Taniguchi

Starring:
Riisa Naka
Akiyoshi Nakao
Kanji Ishimaru
Narumi Yasuda
Anna Ishibashi

Running time: 122 min.


Reviewed by David Lam

“You have to go back” is what Kazuko (Narumi Yasuda) tells her daughter Akari (Riisa Naka) before slipping out of consciousness. With those parting words, our young heroine is convinced that drinking a strange concoction from her mother’s research lab while wishing really really hard is going to send her back in time to 1972, where she will come across a mysterious man who will be able to bring her mother out of her coma. Things go according to plan except for the fact that she ends up two years ahead of her destination. As ridiculous as the premise is, the filmmakers manage to sustain the viewer’s attention for awhile by keeping things moving along in a relatively brisk pace. Unfortunately what ensues after Akari makes her way back in time is a mishmash of dodgy special effects and a whole lot of meandering.

What keeps time travel refreshing as a genre is the fact that there are no rules. It allows you to escape the traditional conventions of a linear narrative. You’re allowed to be as perplexing as you want. The story doesn’t have to make sense but it does have to be innovative. The problem with the film is that it makes too much sense. It doesn’t take advantage of its time travel premise to explore any interesting questions. Instead, the filmmakers are far too content with providing scene after scene of Akari pining for the love of college student Ryota (Akinobu Nakao). He has aspirations of becoming a filmmaker and she’s the muse he has been waiting for all along. They have feelings for one another, but there’s no way they can be together because she doesn’t belong in his timeline. Oh, the dilemma! All of this would be a little easier to digest if the love story itself wasn’t so shoehorned in. The swelling music in the background and the generous use of close-ups do nothing to mask the vapid performances of the actors. Even the scenes in which Akari finally encounters her mother and estranged father as idealistic youths are devoid of any sense of dramatic tension. Things just unravel in a pedestrian way without any emotional payoff. We follow Akari and Ryota while they visit a bath house, eat noodles at a food stand and occasionally attempt to make a film. We’re supposed to see meaning in their actions but instead it all just comes across as being extremely boring.

As the film inches along, it seems as if Akari has completely forgotten the reason for going back in time. She’s far more tortured by the fact that she can’t find a way to be with Ryota than awaking her mother. When the film finally does make its way back to the time travel plot, it introduces a character by the name of Kazuo Fukamachi (Kanji Ishimaru ). He serves as a deus ex machina, trivially tying up all the loose ends. He’s a time traveling guru who possesses the ability to course correct events by mind wiping those involved. No explanation is given as to how he came across this ability and the full extent of erasing someone’s memory is never explored. This isn’t necessary that glaring of a problem because at least it mercifully brings the film to an end, even if it’s an unsatisfying end. If anything, the dues ex machina shows up too late. Because unlike any of the other characters, he’s actually somewhat interesting. His appearance gives the story a much needed jolt and it’s unfortunate that the filmmakers didn’t base the story around his character or at least introduce him sooner.

Apparently, this film is neither a prequel nor a sequel to Mamoru Hosoda’s 2006 animated film "The Girl Who Leapt Through Time". By all accounts, both films have different storylines and are only linked together by the theme of time travel and some overlapping characters. There remains a slight possibility that watching the animated film will make the live action film a little more comprehensible and enjoyable. Even if that’s not the case, it’s hard to see how it could make the film any worse than it already is. Ultimately, "Time Traveller" wants to be both a coming of age romance and a piece of intriguing science fiction, but unfortunately, it doesn’t succeed at being either.

Read more by David Lam at his blog

Taichi Saotome swordfight performance amazing display of shadows and light

by Chris MaGee

During this busy week it was great to see something truly fascinating to ease the pressure. That came in the form a YouTube video posted by stage and screen technology studio Team LabNet of a New Year's performance titled "Dragon and Peony: Sword Dance and Shadowgraph". The video features Taichi Saotome, who if the name doesn't ring an immediate bell don't worry. I had to look him up myself, but it turns out 20-year-old Saotome is the young male actor who played female roles in Takeshi Kitano's "Zatoichi" and "Takeshis'". Saotome is a well known stage actor in Japan and he was asked to take part in this wonderful display of live performance and projected film. What you are about to see is all choreographed between Saotome and what is being projected on the screen behind him. Enjoy!

Thanks to Anime News Network for this great video.

Weekly Trailers

Ohkike no Tanoshii Ryoko: Shinkon Jigoku-hen - Ryuichi Honda (2011)

From the man who brought us "GS Wonderland" comes "Ohkike no Tanoshii Ryoko: Shinkon Jigoku-hen". Ryuichi Honda takes Yutaka Takenouchi and Asami Mizukawa on a honeymoon not from hell, but literally to hell. Who do they find there? YosiYosi Arakawa by the looks of it. "Ohkike no Tanoshii Ryoko" is due out in Japanese theatres on May 14th.




The Pornographers - Shohei Imamura (1966)

Film-making master Shohei Imamura examines the nether reaches of humanity's libido in his 1966 film "The Pornographers". Subu has a hard enough time dodging gangster and the law while he makes porn films for wealthy buyers, but his home life with a mentally unstable girlfriend and his affair with her daughter takes us from the bedroom to the psyche ward.

REVIEW: Nagurimono: Love & Kill

殴者 (Nagurimono)

Released: 2005

Director:
Hideaki Sunaga

Starring:
Hiroshi Tamaki
Asami Mizukawa
Takanori Jinnai
Don Frye
Quinton 'Rampage' Jackson

Running time: 93 min.



Reviewed by Matthew Hardstaff


In 2005, Dream Stage Entertainment was the most popular mixed martial art and kick boxing promotion in the world, holding attendances records surpassing 90,000. But forces were quickly working against the Japanese fight organization, as a shift in power at the hands of the USA based UFC was gaining strength (the UFC would eventually buy out and fold the Japanese company). Featuring the best mixed martial artists in the world, some of whom were and still are international superstars, DSE president Nobuyuki Sakakibara was looking for ways to maintain the foothold in the fight world while he still could. His answer, produce a feature film that revolves around a group of fighters doing battle in a tournament, and cast real life MMA superstars in the key fighting roles!

At this point, some MMA stars had branched out into acting. Bob Sapp already had roles in "Izo" and "Devilman", Don Frye had been in "Godzilla: Final Wars" and a slew of state side fighters were beginning to fill the North American shelves with bad, straight to video MMA films. Nobuyuki Sakakibara is a man of vision however, and wanted to create a more legitimate film, not just v-cinema trash, with MMA as the back drop. And so "Nagurimono" was born.

"Nagurimono" centers around a tournament between two rival yakuza gangs sometime in the 19th century. Both are vying for the acquisition of a drug sold by an English ex-pat (Christian Storms), and he suggests they arrange a fighting tournament to decide who gets the rights to his wares. Sounds like a simple enough plot, however writer Kazuhiko Ban had other ideas. Whilst the film starts with two fighters doing battle, and continues as we progress through the tournament and its aftermath, he crosscuts the action with backstory that establishes not only the reasons for the tournament, but also to add a few twists and turns to keep if from being a straight-up fighting affair.

At its heart, it winds up being a love story between Anrai (Hiroshi Tamaki) and his prostitute step sister (Asami Mizukawa) Both had their parents killed at the hands of Pistol Aijiro (Takanoro Jinnai), and both were taken in and raised by him. One obviously as a prostitute who Pistol often samples and the other his errand boy and right hand man. The constant unravelling of the tale does raise this film above most of the MMA trash that graces the video store shelves this side of the ocean.

One of the smartest moves Nobuyuki Sakakibara (who is also a producer on the film) allowed the filmmakers to do was to not only utilize the real MMA fighters DSE had under contract who were accustom to full contact fighting, but he actually had them take guys who actually fought, and in some instances re-enact their fights for the film. This instantly becomes one of the films highlights. And so art imitates life as Kazushi Sakuraba fights Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Don Frye battles Yoshihiro Takayama. Wanderlai Silva also battles Matsuki Koga, who is not a professional fighter, but an actor who is trained in a variety of martial arts and therefore comes off as very believable.

How do these fights fair? Ultimately, like the movie itself, parts are entertaining to watch, but overall, something feels like its missing. Rampage versus Sakuraba (Sakuraba being my favourite MMA fighter of all time) feels like the two fighters are just sparring. There’s little immediacy and it hardly seems like the two are desperate to win. Granted, you can tell they know what they’re doing, and they perform some of their signature moves (Rampage’s slam and Sakuraba’s monkey punch), but they don’t look like they’re givin’ er. However Don Frye and Yoshihiro Takayama is a different story all together. These two, in real life, had one of the most exciting fights of all time, in which they stood like two hockey players and punched each other in the face for 9 minutes (look it up on youtube, its spectacular). They re-enact that very moment, which may seem unbelievable, but hey, it actually happened. But these guys also look like they’re actually going it at, you can feel the kicks and punches, and this part is the high light of the film.

So, ultimately, if you like MMA films, this raises above most of the poor excuses for a fight film that exist out there, but it doesn’t reach the lofty heights I’m sure Sakakibara was hoping for, but very few films have elevated MMA to that height even now. "Flashpoint", "Undisputed 3" and "Blood and Bone" are the three that come to mind, with "Red Belt" close behind. This film doesn’t come close to those.

Read more by Matthew Hardstaff at his blog.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Japanese Trailer and Poster Online for New Kore-eda Film "Kiseki"

by Marc Saint-Cyr

Last September, we gave you some more insight into the cast and story of Hirokazu Kore-eda's upcoming film "Kiseki" ("I Wish"), which focuses on two brothers (real-life brothers and junior manzai actors Kouki Maeda and Oushiro Maeda) who plan to use the construction of the Shinkansen bullet train line as a means of getting their separated parents back together. Now, press materials are beginning to appear online, specifically in the form of a fresh poster (shown above) and trailer for the film. Along with the young Maeda brothers, the film will also feature actors Joe Odagiri and Nene Otsuka as the children's parents and a slew of actors from Kore-eda's recent film (and Criterion Collection DVD releaseStill Walking - Hiroshi Abe, Yoshio Harada, Yui Natsukawa and Kirin Kiki.

You can watch the trailer below, and go to this link to the Japanese website iFensi.com for a bigger version of the poster shown above.

Abbas Kiarostami Planning to Cast Aoi Miyazaki in New Japan-Set Film "The End"

by Marc Saint-Cyr

Last year, acclaimed Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami was a prominent figure in film news as his "Certified Copy"made the rounds through the international festival circuit. Set in Italy and starring French actress Juliette Binoche, it was notable for being the first film of his shot outside of Iran. It appears it won't be the last, for his new film, "The End," is due to begin shooting in Japan this spring. Kiarostami has made an offer to actress Aoi Miyazaki ("Mt. Tsurugidake," "Shonen Merickensack") for the lead role, though at the time of this writing, an official contract has not yet been signed. "The End" will be a co-production from France's MK2 and Japan's Eurospace and will apparently focus on “a contemporary relationship in today’s Japan.”

Many thanks to Nippon Cinema and Tokyograph for the story info.

Masahiro Shinoda's "Pale Flower" to be Released by the Criterion Collection in May

by Marc Saint-Cyr

This past Valentine's Day, the folks at the Criterion Collection spread a little bit of their own love in their monthly announcement of new upcoming titles. Of particular note to Japanese cinema fans was the previously hinted "Pale Flower," Masahiro Shinoda's 1964 crime film which Criterion confirmed will be getting a new DVD and Blu-ray release on May 17th, 2011. Bonus materials will consist of a new interview with Shinoda, an audio-commentary for specific scenes from Peter Grilli and an essay by critic Chuck Stephens.

This is welcome news for fans of Shinoda, Japanese crime cinema and the Japanese New Wave, the movement in which "Pale Flower" is recognized as a major film. Newcomers will almost certainly be intrigued by this new entry into the Collection, while those already familiar with the film may very well be tempted to seek an upgrade from the previously released DVD from Home Vision Entertainment.

Japanese Weekend Box Office, February 12th to February 13th


1. Oba, The Last Samurai* (Toho)
2. Gantz* (Toho)
3. Tomorrow's Joe* (Toho)
4. Red (Disney)
5. Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Fox)
6. Kaasan Mom's Life* (Shochiku)
7. Paranormal Activity 2 (Paramount)
8. The Social Network (SPE)
9. 1,778 Stories of Me and My Wife* (Toho)
10. Partners: The Movie II* (Toei)

* Japanese film

Courtesy of Box Office Japan.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

INTERVIEW: "ANPO" director Linda Hoaglund

ANPO director Linda Hoaglund

Interviewed by Chris MaGee

The 1960's saw the world explode in a political and cultural revolution. In the United States civil rights activists and anti-Vietnam War protesters took to the streets, France saw a general strike that nearly ground the country's economy to a standstill, Ernesto "Che" Guevera preached his doctrine of global revolution, while in China Communist leader Mao Zedong set off his own cultural revolution. Japan was by no means exempt from this tumult, in the country was nearly torn apart over The Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan, known in Japan as Anzenhoshō Jōyaku and subsequently abbreviated to ANPO. Hundreds of thousands took to the streets to voice their opposition to the Treaty signed on January 19th, 1960 that tightened Japan's political ties to the United States and would allow U.S. military bases to remain on Japanese soil. Many saw this as an attack on Japanese sovereignty, left-wing members of the Japanese parliament had to be dragged from chambers, many demonstrators were injured, some even lost their lives; but for a young Linda Hoaglund, the daughter of American missionaries, the conflicts went on virtually unnoticed. "I had led a very sheltered life." Hoaglund says of her years growing up in Japan,"Although I was out in the provinces and although I did go to Japanese school, so in that sense I was very much on the front lines of the Japanese lived experience, but I barely knew about the Vietnam war, I didn't know anything about the protests believe it or not." Hoaglund has subsequently explored this secret history of the country of her birth in her directorial debut "ANPO", a film that sees these massive protests through the eyes of the artists, photographers, film-makers and playwrights who lived through the period. The documentary brings together nearly 175 works, not only from the 1960's but right up to the present day, all created by artists who've made Japan's ambivalent relationship with the United States the crux of their work.

Untitled from the series "Days of Rage and Grief", Hiroshi Hamaya, 1960

Hoaglund, one of today's most sought after film translators, had in many ways become an honorary Japanese by spending the first 17 years of her life in the country, but this came with the same road blocks that many Japanese face when it comes to being educated about 20th century Japanese history. "They have tried to hide whatever part of their history is inconvenient including, I would say, this amazing history of resistance that began in 1960." So as Hoaglund would leave eventually leave Japan, study at Yale University and eventually work on translating and subtitling 140 Japanese films, including Kiyoshi Kurosawa's "Bright Future", Hirokazu Koreeda's "After Life" an Hayao Miyazaki's "Spirited Away", this seismic period of Japanese history remained a mystery to her, and consequently enough, only began to be reveal itself to her through Japanese cinema. "I think my first glimpse that something had gone terribly wrong in 1960 was when years ago MOMA had a Shohei Imamura retrospective and it was chronological . I was just flabbergasted, because I had seen "Pigs and Battleships", but the tone of the film he made before that ["My Second Brother"] was so like... We're really poor and I'm an orphan in a coal mine, but I have hope for tomorrow. It wasn't communistic, but it was socialistic idealism, and it was very optimistic about how we may not have money but we have hope and we have each other. And to cut from that to his next film "Pigs and Battleships" which as my editor [Scott A. Burgess] said is the darkest film he's ever seen in his life, with the subject of U.S. military presence in Japanese ordinary life and its corrosive impact. That was my first tip off and I thought what on earth could have happened that depressed this film-maker so much?"

Pigs and Battleships, Shohei Imamura, 1961

Hoaglund would continue to uncover signs of this great societal schism around the ANPO Treaty in the films of Nagisa Oshima, Yasuzo Masumura and even Akira Kurosawa, but even bigger clues as to how ANPO scarred the Japanese psyche came from the world of fine arts. Two artists in particular sparked Hoaglund's artistic exploration of the period. Hoaglund recalls how five years ago a rare book dealer friend sold her a collection of photographs by Hiroshi Hamaya which featured images from the 1960 protests. "Those images were so powerful and they really stayed with me and I wanted to find out where those faces had come from and what had happened to them." Shortly thereafter Hoaglund discovered the work of artist Hiroshi Nakamura, a man she calls "Japan's Picasso", by seeing a documentary about his work on Japan's national broadcaster NHK. "They showed the painting ["Sunagawa No. 5"] of the police struggling with the peasants and my jaw dropped, I was like... Wait a minute! I thought I know a lot about Japanese contemporary art, but who the hell is this guy?! Partly it was interesting to me because that painting in particular, I think if you show that painting without saying anything to anybody not that many people would guess that it was a Japanese painting. So, literally as soon as the show was over I went to the museum and saw this full retrospective of this astonishing artist."

Sunagawa No. 5, Hiroshi Nakamura, 1955

While Hoaglund continued to piece absorb the power and beauty of Hamaya and Nakamura's works as well as the world of protest they depicted she was called on by prominent M.I.T. History Professor and author John Dower to create a unit for his online image-driven scholarship source Visualizing Cultures. "I said I want to do ANPO. Then I showed him the Nakamura paintings and Hamaya photographs and he was just stunned. She did have one stipulation though, "I said I want to make the film first." That of course meant digging deeper into Japan's political and artistic past. "Fortunately we have something called Google," Hoaglund jokes, but in an age when information is at everyones' fingertips she could have never guessed at how huge a subject she had taken on. "I had no idea when I started researching how many painters I would find," she admits. These would come to include painters Chozaburo Inoue, Shideo Ishii, Tatsuo Ikeda, Kikuji Yamashita, photographers Eikoh Hosoe, Miyako Ishiuchi and Mao Ishikawa, multimedia artists Sachiko Kazama, Makoto Aida and Chikako Yamashiro and pop artist Tadanori Yokoo. The one artist that Hoaglund regrets she couldn't include in the film is film-maker Nagisa Oshima, the director of "Night and Fog in Japan", "Cruel Story of Youth" and "The Ceremony" who has lived in seclusion since suffering a series of debilitating strokes. "He's a towering intellect and a man who never sold out."

Kinji Fukasaku (left), Junji Sakamoto (right)

The wealth of history, stories and gallery of artwork that Hoaglund assembled for her film resulted in a huge challenge, "How to wrestle this gigantic treasure trove down to the ground." Although Hoaglund had had experience working in film before as the writer and producer of Risa Morimoto's 2007 documentary "Wings of Defeat" she still needed some help to tackle the immensity of her subject. "I was actually really stuck about a year ago," she admits, "I had a 2-hour, 10-minute cut that I knew was way to long. I hate feeling exhausted when I come out of a movie. I think the best way I want to come out of a movie is "Wait a minute, what was that? I have to see that again!" and figure out how that is put together." Although Hoaglund says she took special strength from the example of late director Kinji Fukasaku during the making of "ANPO" ("I learned so much from just being in his presence and also from subtitling 15 of his films") it was her friendship with "Face" and "Chameleon" director Junji Sakamoto that proved most valuable during the film-making process. "He didn't give me detailed notes, but what he said was your film is way too meticulous. Shock the audience, get rid of everything that's already in history books and grab them in the first 15-minutes. And that that was feedback on how to make a great fictional film." The result is a film that Hoaglund describes as "a cinematic collage", one that has not only captured the attention of general film audiences, but also the world of fine art.

From the series "Hiroshima", Miyako Ishiuchi, 2008

Not only has "ANPO" been featured in an 8-page spread in the January 2011 issue of Art in America, but the inclusion of Hoaglund's film in the 2010 Vancouver International Film Festival has led to a major exhibition for one of the "ANPO" artists. "The Museum of Anthropology at UBC recently expanded and put in a 6,000 square foot exhibition space for fine art and believe it or not starting in October Ishiuchi-san Hiroshima series, 52 of the large photographs, are going to be exhibited there for five months." Miyako Ishiuchi's "Hiroshima" series consists of haunting large scale photographs of clothing that that was worn by survivors of the atomic bombing of the city. "They're going to put huge posters of her work in all the bus shelters in Vancouver, which I think will cause something of a storm," Hoaglund says excitedly, "I mean I think she's one of Japan's finest artists." Beyond the enthusiastic welcome by the arts community the reactions that Hoaglund is most touched by are those from young Japanese who, like her many years ago, have no clear knowledge of the vents that shook their country a half-century ago. "I think one Japanese young person put it best, she said you know, after watching this movie it's sort of like if you have an illness that no doctor had been able to diagnose and suddenly a doctor comes along and says this is your illness and this is why you're sick. That was the effect of watching 'ANPO' on her. So 'ANPO' is my way of saying don't stay sick! And that's why I ended the film with Ishiuchi saying 'I refuse to stay wounded.' I believe saying 'I refuse to stay wounded,' is the beginning of so many things - it's the beginning of much great art, it's the beginning of therapy and it's the beginning of personal transformation."