Monday, November 28, 2011

Studio Ghibli Warns That Hayao Miyazaki's Next Film Won't Exactly Be Soothing Family Fare

by Marc Saint-Cyr

The newest film from beloved anime director Hayao Miyazaki is always an event worth keeping track of, but it seems like this time there is more in the works than yet another innocent, family-friendly fantasia like "My Neighbor Totoro," "Spirited Away" or "Ponyo." According to a recent piece from the Anime News Network, Studio Ghibli producer Toshio Suzuki has recently described Miyazaki's next project as "not the sort of work everyone in the audience can relax and watch." The new film will be an autobiographical one, though whether it will be based on Miyazaki's life or someone else's still remains unclear. Either way, this almost certainly indicates that Miyazaki will be adopting a more realistic approach than those he has taken in the past. Also worth noting is the fact that the project is not directly inspired by the March 11th earthquake and tsunami, since Miyazaki had apparently predicted the current state of Japanese society while planning the film. Regardless, it is notable that he is taking this different route in his work for his first effort following the terrible events of this past spring, as if to try to create something more appropriate and serious in this new chapter of healing that Japan is currently facing. It will certainly be interesting to see what this fresh effort from Miyazaki will eventually look like.

Four Films by Edmund Yeo Shown Online as Part of Yxine Film Fest

by Marc Saint-Cyr

Anyone who visits the Pow-Wow on a somewhat regular basis will probably have noticed our frequently-expressed enthusiasm for the work of Edmund Yeo, a Malaysian filmmaker who is based in Tokyo and has thus far produced an impressive number of moving, beautifully crafted short films. Yeo frequently travels to film festivals around the world to present his work, yet those who cannot attend such events don't have many other options for seeing them for themselves...until now, that is. The Yxine Film Festival is a Vietnam-based online festival which showcases short films from exciting upcoming filmmakers from around the world. This year, it is devoting part of its In Focus section to Yeo by showing four of his films: "Love Suicides" (2009), "Kingyo" (2009), "The White Flower" (2010) and "Inhalation" (2010). Yeo frequently moves between Malaysia and Japan to make his films, and has freely drawn from both cultures in terms of shooting locations, source material and other factors such as actors and production resources. Both "Love Suicides" and "Kingyo" are based on short stories by Japanese writer Yasunari Kawabata, with the latter shot in the Akihabara area of Tokyo. "The White Flower" was inspired by a Kawabata story, was partially shot in Tokyo and features a Japanese actor, Toru Inamura, appearing along with Chinese actress Zhu Dan and Thai actor Kong Pahurak (who recently served as a cinematographer on Yeo's latest effort, "Last Fragments of Winter").

It appears the festival will be wrapping up on December 12th, so make sure to squeeze in some time to catch these fantastic films before then (not to mention the considerable selection from other filmmakers featured on the site)!

Shinobu Yaguchi's "Robo-G" Gets a Trailer

by Marc Saint-Cyr

This past summer, we first reported on the latest comedy in the works from Shinobu Yaguchi, the director known for such comedies as "Waterboys" (2001), "Swing Girls" (2004) and "Happy Flight" (2008). The new film, entitled "Robo-G," stars Gaku Hamada, Shogo Kawai and Junya Kawashima as a trio of bumbling cyberneticists whose new robot is destroyed before its presentation at a robotics convention, forcing them to try to pass off an old man in a robot costume (Mickey Curtis, AKA Shinjiro Igarashi) as their latest invention. Thanks to Twitch, we now have a trailer for this latest effort from Yaguchi which, to the familiar notes of Styx' "Mr. Roboto," presents a taste of what looks like will be a very wacky and entertaining work.

Check out the trailer to see for yourself:

Sunday, November 27, 2011

TOKYO FILMEX '11 REVIEW: Tokyo Playboy Club

東京プレイボーイクラブ (Tokyo Pureiboi Kurabu)

Released: 2011

Director:
Yosuke Okuda

Starring:
Nao Omori
Ken Mitsuishi
Asami Usuda
Yasushi Fuchikami
Sakichi Sato

Running time: 92 min.


Reviewed by Chris MaGee


In the back alleys of Shinjuku are thousands of bars, clubs and dives promising infinite pleasures. One of these, the Tokyo Playboy Club, offers "Boobies, Boobies... Fondle, Suck..." but behind this enticing sales pitch is a tiny corner of the city that is filled with violence, rage and the occasional laugh. The club's doorman Takahiro (Yasushi Fuchikami) is tasked with dragging drunk and horny men in off the street. The pay for this job is low and Takahiro is in need of much more serious cash. It turns out that Takahiro has gotten a girl pregnant, something that his live-in girlfriend Eriko (Asami Usuda) knows nothing about. What is Takahiro going to do? On a night when his boss Seikichi (Ken Mitsuishi) leaves the club in Takahiro's hands the young doorman takes off with all the money from the club's safe. Big mistake, especially because Seikichi has brought an old friend, Katsutoshi (Nao Omori) on to work security at the club. Katsutoshi is a bloodthirsty psychopath, so between him and the club's yakuza backers Takahiro, and his girlfriend Eriko, find themselves drawn into a fight for their lives. A plot worthy of any classic yakuza film, no? Yet 24-year-old director Yosuke Okuda, famous for his indie "Hot as Hell" series of films, manages to only deliver on some of the promise of this lean, mean plot.

Okuda has long been the B-boy wunderkind of Japan's indie scene, a young man who has synthesized violence and dark humour into his own ticket into a world of criminals, hard-done-by women and losers. I have to admit to not being a huge fan of Okuda's laughs and bloodshed formula, but you have to give credit where credit is due -- Okuda is doing something that most young Japanese filmmakers seem to feel is of secondary importance -- he's trying to entertain the audience. There is infinite energy in "Tokyo Playboy Club", a respectable amount of laughs (although many a little misplaced), and like Okuda's main influence, Quentin Tarantino, there is some very effective use of music during key scenes. That being said, "Tokyo Playboy Club"ends up suffering from many of the same pitfalls as the work of his peers in the Japanese indie film scene.

There is not a lot of effort on Okuda's part to satisfyingly take us from point A to point B with his characters, and so many questions are left unanswered. Why would Eriko agree to be sold into service at the Tokyo Playboy Club for Takahiro, an unfaithful and uncaring boyfriend? Exactly what kind of friendship or history does Seikichi share with the sociopathic Katsutoshi (although Nao Omori's compelling performance is the heart of the film)? Why does Takahiro get off scot free, and physically intact, after stealing the money from the club? Instead of tying up these loose ends Okuda, like a lot of young indie filmmakers, puts his energy into sometimes ingenious but ill-explained action.

One huge issue that is left unexplored is how obviously unsuccessful the Tokyo Playboy Club of the title is. We are treated to some truly funny banter amongst the trio of hostesses who work at the club, but we never see them with male clients. It appears that the Tokyo Playboy Club has absolutely no clients at all. Exploring this dead end club with an ensemble cast could have been truly interesting. Instead, the men who should be visiting these lovely ladies are off taking care of other concerns.

One of the most incongruous things about the male characters in "Tokyo Playboy Club" is their overbearing and infinite anger. Most times when Katsutoshi, Takahiro, Sekichi or any of the other main male characters in the film open their mouths it's to yell, growl and threaten. This being at heart a yakuza film this kind of alpha male posturing is par for the course, but again, we find ourselves wondering what has gotten everyone so damn angry. When we first meet Takahiro he's handing out leaflets in front of a hostess bar, and he goes on a rant to a young unemployed salaryman about the haves and have-nots of today's Tokyo. Had Okuda followed through and carried this thread of righteous anger through the rest of "Tokyo Playboy Club" a lot of the questions about the motivations of these characters may have been answered. Sadly this early promise gets lost in the recycled tropes of the yakuza eiga genre.

It doesn't seem that a top notch cast, crew and big budget that Yosuke Okuda has been able to make a smooth transition from indie filmmaking to a mainstream release. Maybe a few more years honing his filmmaking talent and channeling his obvious energy and anger will see Okuda take us on a truly satisfying cinematic journey. Until then, though, we'll just have to wait.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Tokyo Filmex '11 REVIEW: The Catch

魚影の群れ (Gyoei no mure)

Released: 1983

Director:
Shinji Somai

Starring:
Ken Ogata
Masako Natsume
Kocihi Sato
Yukiyo Toake
Saburo Ishikura

Running time: 140 min.



Reviewed by Chris MaGee


The 12th annual Tokyo Filmex film fesstival (November 19 to 27) is currently holding a full retrospective of filmmaker Shinji Somai at Shochiku's Togeki Theatre in Higashi Ginza.

Tokiko (Masako Natsume) is a lovable and vibrant young woman, so much so that she can make a young man like Shunichi (Koichi Sato), who works in a café, dream of being fisherman. You see, Tokiko comes from a fishing family, or at least has a father, Fusajiro (Ken Ogata), who operates his own small tuna-fishing boat, the Toki-Maru #3. Tokiko's life is so tied in with the sea that if Shunichi loves her he must love the other. He must also learn to love the sea in order to win the approval of Fusajiro and this marks one of the central crisis of Shinji Somai's 1983 film "The Catch". While Shunichi loves the sea (ie: loves Tokiko) Fusajiro depends on it, and the sea has been a fickle, unforgiving and often dangerous taskmaster. If Fusajiro can hook and haul in a 140kg tuna that will fetch him ¥540,000 his life is paradise, but it's the hell wrestling these beasts from the deep that more often than not has made his life a living hell. Fusajiro can't even remember exactly when he began fishing. All he knows is that he's had his own boat since he was 23. The rest has been lost in the salt air and in umpteenth magnums of sake. So in order to enter Tokiko's life Shunichi, in essence, must become this disillusioned, ocean-weary man, a daunting proposition that will nearly take his life. Director Somai is tasked with taking us into this thankless and mysterious brotherhood of men who live off the sea.

Shinji Somai is not a filmmaker who is little known outside of Japan, aand when he is mentioned it is normally in conjunction with films like the high school drama "Typhoon Club" or the action film "Sailor Suit and Machine Gun", both that explore and expand upon the idea of youth. It's because of this reputation that many would be forgiven for thinking that "The Catch" would center around the familial and romantic life of Tokiko and that her father Fusajiro would be a charismatic supporting character. Not the case. "The Catch" is in fact split into three sections -- The First Summer, One Year Later and The End of Summer. Once Shunichi heads out to sea for a tragic fishing trip with Tokiko's father the film shifts gears and we discover that main protagonist of "The Catch" ends up being Fusajiro himself. Soon we're in gloriously anti-heroic territory, both both in terms of narrative and and in the construction of the film.

The one defining mood of "The Catch" is one of hard-drinking, calloused-handed machissmo. Along with Mutsuo Naganuma's showy cinematography which pitches, chops and flows dramatically like the sea itself, this alpha-maleness is probably the film's biggest strength, as well as some troublesome weaknesses. This is the realm of Ernest Hemingway and in some ways Werner Herzog. We're introduced into a world where men are men and life is uncomplicated by delicate emotion. We are also made witness to long documentary sequences in which it appears that screen legend Ken Ogata is actually hand fishing giant tuna, stabbing at them with hooks and tying them to the side of his boat. Fact and fiction begin to blur, but in a wonderfully watchable way. In many ways "The Catch" feels like an old, hard-done-by enka song come to life. It's also refreshing to see a mainstream Japanese film (albeit one from the early 80's) that is so unashamedly comfortable with its masculinity, so full of bravado. In an age of studio features almost exclusively geared to young female and family audiences male characters have become limited to talent agency-groomed pretty boys and nostalgic "oji-san" characters portrayed by once formidable actors. Still "The Catch" goes a long way in continuing the stereotypical screen violence against women that plagues so much male-centric Japanese filmmaking.

Watching "The Catch" makes us pine for the days when Japanese film had bone and muscle, as opposed to hairspray, twinkle and the occasional bloody transgression. There may be hints of the blue collar heroism of Ogata's lone fisherman in the work of some of Japan's independent filmmakers; although today we are more likely to have our protagonists be beaten down bohemian freeters as opposed to hard-bitten "shō ga nai" pragmatists. In that way "The Catch" may very well fall into the Japanese cinematic love for nostalgia, but when it is this forceful, unflinching and brave it is hard to complain.

Monday, November 21, 2011

Rin Takanashi is New Female Lead in Abbas Kiarostami's "The End"

by Marc Saint-Cyr

Earlier this year, we reported that Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami was planning to cast actress Aoi Miyazaki in his new film "The End," which is set in Japan and revolves around a romantic relationship between a young college student and a man in his 60s. Now, however, it seems that Miyazaki is no longer attached to the project and Kiarostami has found a new leading lady: 22 year-old Rin Takanashi (above left), who has previously appeared in the television series "Samurai Sentai Shinkenger" and Gen Takahashi's 2007 film "Goth." She will be acting opposite Tadashi Okuno, who has been cast as her older love interest. Actors Ryo Kase ("Letters from Iwo Jima," "Outrage") and Denden ("Cut") have also been cast. "The End" is currently shooting until early December and planned to premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2012 with a summer release in Japan to follow.

Many thanks to Tokyograph for story info.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

New York's IFC Centre to Hold Studio Ghibli Retrospective; North American Screenings to Follow


by Marc Saint-Cyr

A very special event for admirers of top-notch anime is set to arrive at the IFC Centre in New York this December. Studio Ghibli, one of the most beloved production companies in the Japanese animation industry, is the subject of a fresh retrospective that is being organized by the distributor GKIDS. Set to run at the IFC Centre from December 16th, 2011, to January 12th, 2012, the retrospective will consist of the fifteen films that came out of Studio Ghibli between 1984 and 2008 - the majority of which, of course, consisting of works from anime master Hayao Miyazaki. Beloved classics like "Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind," My Neighbor Totoro," "Porco Rosso," "Princess Mononoke," and "Spirited Away" will be shown along with notable works from other filmmakers like Isao Takahata's "Only Yesterday," "Pom Poko" and "My Neighbors the Yamadas," Yoshifumi Kondo's "Whisper of the Heart" and Hiroyuki Morita's "The Cat Returns." Thankfully, those who can't make it to New York to see these films on the big screen will get other opportunities throughout early 2012, as the program will be touring around the U.S. and Canada to major cities like Boston, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, Seattle, Washington and Toronto, among others. On top of that, keep an eye open for releases of more Studio Ghibli - some of which will be shown for the first time in the U.S. What better way to alleviate that weighty wintertime depression than a colorful dose of anime magic?

For the full list of titles and a detailed schedule, head over to Crunchyroll.com!

Hideo Gosha's Debut Film "Three Outlaw Samurai" to Receive the Criterion Treatment

by Marc Saint-Cyr

Attention all classic chambara fans! This past Tuesday - the 15th, that special date in each month when the Criterion Collection announces their newest batch of titles to be released three months ahead - attentive DVD collectors will have been pleased to see that we will be getting more Japanese cinema from the much-worshipped disc label. This time around, Criterion is putting out the first feature film from Hideo Gosha, "Three Outlaw Samurai." The disc itself, which will be released in both Blu-ray and DVD formats on February 14th, 2012, seems to be a bare-bones affair, arriving with just a trailer and an essay by critic Bilge Ebiri as special features. But this is still a more than welcome release, if only for a chance to get a fresh look at this period revenge piece starring Tetsuro Tamba, Isamu Nagato and Mikijiro Hira as the three titular samurai. Heck, besides the restoration job that the Criterion staff are sure to give the film, this disc will be worth owning just for the exceptional cover art shown above.

For those inspired by this news to refresh their knowledge of Hideo Gosha's work, take a look at our reviews for such other films of his as "Sword of the Beast," "Goyokin," "The Wolves," and "The Geisha."

"Akira" Remake Update: Ezra Miller Out; Kristen Stewart (Possibly) In

by Marc Saint-Cyr

The wheels of progress continue to turn on the Americanized remake of Katsuhiro Ohtomo's anime classic "Akira," with a fresh development emerging that will likely inspire more polarization amongst those keeping track of this project. Previously, it was reported that Ezra Miller, the young actor currently getting lots of attention with his role in Lynne Ramsay's big return to filmmaking, "We Need to Talk About Kevin," was in talks to join the cast of the new "Akira." However, in an exclusive report from Moviefone, Miller dispelled rumors by confirming that he would in fact NOT be appearing in the film. But it seems another actor may soon be joining the project: Kristen Stewart, the "Twilight" actress who is garnering much attention these days with the arrival of "Breaking Dawn: Part I" and the new trailer for her upcoming film "Snow White and the Huntsman" in theatres. She is apparently negotiating a place in the remake as the lead female character Jei. If this latest bit of casting were to go through, Stewart would be joining a cast that thus far consists of "Tetro"'s Alden Ehrenreich and may soon also include Gary Oldman and Helena Bonham Carter - though those last two big names are currently still unconfirmed rumors. The "Akira" remake will be directed by Jaume Collet-Serra ("Orphan," "Unknown") and is set to arrive sometime in 2013.

Many thanks to SciFi Mafia and Moviefone for the background info for this story.

Monday, November 14, 2011

REVIEW: The Seaside Motel

シーサイドモーテル(The Seaside Motel)

Released: 2010

Director:
Kentaro Moriya

Starring:
Toma Ikuta
Kumiko Aso
Takayuki Yamada
Tetsuji Tamayama
Riko Narumi

Running time:103 min.


Reviewed by Chris MaGee


There are a lot of stories going on behind the doors of The Seaside Motel, a rundown establishment set miles out in the middle of nowhere. It's name makes you think of an idyllic coastal getaway, but in fact it's nowhere near the sea. The closest you get to sun and surf are the identical photos of a couple basking on a sunset beach that hang in every room. The Seaside Motel is the kind of place you stay at out of necessity and never choice, a place to hide, a place to disappear, a dead end place. Describing the setting like this you would think that Kentaro Moriya's film "The Seaside Motel" would be some kind of neo-noir exercise, and if it had been it may have been a better film. As it turned out "The Seaside Motel" is a film that continually pulls its punches and, while delivering some interesting performances, its attempts and goofball comedy mostly falls flat.

Who will you find if you check into The Seaside Motel? People like Kameda (Toma Ikuta), a traveling salesman who finds himself unable to sell his stock of cheap skin cream. In the midst of his self pity Candy (Kumiko Aso), a prostitute knocks on the door of his room. He didn't call her, but soon he finds himself falling in love. It turns out that it was the guest in the upstairs room, a grocery store manager named Ota (Arata Furuta), who called for Candy but he gave the escort service the wrong room number. Now Ota is trapped in his room wearing a blonde wig and a full face of make-up -- a device used by his Pachinko-playing wife to keep him from cheating while she is out gambling. Down the hall there is another ropmantic liaison going wrong. A lonely man named Ishizuka (Tetsuhiro Ikeda) has become obsessed with a ditsy bar hostess named Marine (Mami Yamasaki) and has brought her to The Seaside to have his way with her. The only thing is she refuses to bed Ishizuka in such rundown surroundings. Rounding out these damaged couples are Yosuke (Takayuki Yamada) and Rui (Riko Narumi). Rui thinks she and her beau are off to attend a local festival, but it turns out that Yosuke, a gambling addict, is running out on a series of dents owed to the yakuza. Soon the mobsters are busting down the door of their room and Yosuke is "persuaded" to pay back the money by a torturer named Pepe (Yoichi Nukumizu).

Describing the intersecting bare bones narratives of all these characters brings to the seedy and booze-soaked songscapes of early Tom Waits, the bent and faded snapshots of author Raymond Carver or, in their darker moments, the pulp misadventures of Raymond Chandler. The big problem is that Kentaro Moriya softens these rough edges, or avoids them all together and instead wraps the lives of these down-on-their-luck motel denizens in the bright colours and broad cartoon stylings of so many contemporary Japanese comedies. Easy laughs aren't allowed to simply be easy. Instead we feel that we are being forced to bust a gut by quick, gimmicky editing, almost circus-style set design and costumes and performances that are worthy of a Warner Brothers cartoon. Okay, this may not be entirely fair. Takayuki Yamada, an actor who can seem to take the most banal material and make it sing, shows his usual charisma and supreme comic timing. Also, actor Yoichi Nukumizu give his middle-aged torturer Pepe an added level of menace that perfectly compliments Yamada's performance. These two bright spots aren't enough to make us forgive the bland performances of Tetsuji Tamayama and Tokio Emoto as a pair of yakuza, and the seemingly interchangeable actresses whose job is to strut around and be sexy. Of course these women, all prostitutes, hostesses and adulterers, are never allowed to actually be sexual, nor is the violence on display allowed to chill us even a tiny bit. The perfect example of this is a scene involving a car crash in which we see that there is no stunt person (not even a mannequin!) in the car that gets smashed. Nothing bad can happen if we're trying to be funny, right?

I must make myself clear -- I have no problem with "The Seaside Motel" being a comedy. I do have a problem, though, with it trying to adapt the aesthetic of earlier and much more successful zany comedies like "Survive Style 5+" and "Kamikaze Girls" to a story, or stories as the case may be, which so clearer demands a different approach. It seems, in fact, that this kind of broad, comic book style of comedy is starting to outstay its welcome in Japan. This is especially true when you have directors like Yosuke Fujita and Daihachi Yoshida either dialing down the zaniness and upping the pathos or not being afraid to abandon the clowning to take audiences into much darker territory when necessary. I do understand that "The Seaside Motel" was based on a manga by Yukio Okada (a work I'm unfamiliar with), but this adaptation is an object lesson in departing from the source material.

I really wished that I had liked "The Seaside Motel" more. Actually, let me rephrase that. I know that I would have liked "The Seaside Motel" more had it been put in the hands of a different director. I'd think a hot young filmmaker like Yosuke Okuda could have brought the right balance of laughs, sexuality and menace to this film. Also, one could dream for a moment and wish this adaptation had fallen into the lap of a genius filmmaker like Jim Jarmusch who proved in 1989 with "Mystery Train" that an ensemble motel-set movie can be both quirky and compelling. Sadly neither of these filmmakers were around to help out with "The Seaside Motel". That being the case you may want to check in somewhere else.

A feast of new anime coming to the 10th Waterloo Festival for Animated Cinema

by Chris MaGee

We really are spoiled here in Ontario, the province we (well, most of us) here at the Pow-Wow call home here in Canada. Not only do we enjoy having the world-renowned Ottawa International Animation Festival on our doorstep, but we also have events like the Waterloo Festival for Animated Cinema to enjoy as well. And we all know that where there is an animation festival there is also animation from japan to be had! This year's offering of the Waterloo Festival for Animated Cinema, the festival's 10th, features two feature length films that fans of anime in Southern Ontario will not want to miss.

First up is Makoto Shinkai's latest feature "Children Who Chase Lost Voices From Deep Below" (above). As we've reported before Shinkai, the man who brought us such beautiful and melancholy films as "Voices from a Distant Star" and "5 Centimetres Per Second", is bringing us a story that lives up to his reputation as "the next Hayao Miyazaki". "Children Who Chase Lost Voices From Deep Below" follows a young girl who spends her time listening to a mysterious crystal radio set given to her by her father. One day she encounters a boy who leaves her life as quickly as he arrives. The girl sets out to not only find this boy, but the source of the radio broadcasts that she has been receiving. You can catch on Sunday, November 20th at 1:00PM.

Next is a film that is new to us here, Jun Shishido's "The Princess and the Pilot" (check out the trailer below). Produced by Madhouse, the same studio that brought us the recent hit "Summer Wars", "The Princess and the Pilot" is set in an alternative reality in which a pilot goes on a 12,000 mile air mission to save a young women, "as beautiful as five thousand beams of sunlight.” The mission is fraught with danger though, as a war is raging across the globe. "The Princess and the Pilot" will be screening on Saturday, November 19th at 6:30PM.

One thing anime fans in Toronto will be interested to hear is that this year's Waterloo Festival for Animated Cinema is opening on Thursday, November 17th at 6:30PM with a film that recently screened at the 15th annual Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival -- "Fullmetal Alchemist: The Sacred Star of Milos".

You can check out all that the 10th annual Waterloo Festival for Animated Cinema, running from November 17th to the 20th at the Chrysalids Theatre (137 Ontario Street North, Kitchener), by visiting their website here.

Powerful new documentary follows the "Ending Note" of a lifelong salesman

by Chris MaGee

I have to admit that I am a huge fan of documentaries in general, and Japanese documentaries in particular. It seems that Japan has seen a recent crop of very talented documentary filmmakers, and their work is finding its way to film festivals throughout the West. One film that screened last month at the 47th annual Chicago International Film Festival that has been gaining a lot of critical attention is "Ending Note: Death of a Japanese Salesman".

The film follows first time filmmaker Mami Sunada's father through being diagnosed with terminal cancer. After 40 years as a sales representative Sunada's father must come to terms with the life he's led and the people he will be leaving behind. he does this by creating a video diary, something that has apparently become popular amongst aging Japanese in recent years. Very powerful material indeed. You can watch the trailer for "Ending Note: Death of a Japanese Salesman" below, as well as visit its official website here. Hopefully it will be making stops at more festivals in the very near future.

Weekly Trailers


Phoenix Wright - Takashi Miike (2012)


Takashi Miike continues his run of remakes and screen adaptations with his take on popular video game "Phoenix Wright". In the near future it's the job of defense attorney Phoenix Wright to prove the innocence of his clients during whirlwind 3-day trials. "Phoenix Wright" is scheduled for release in the spring of 2012.




Take Aim at the Police Van - Seijun Suzuki (1960)

One of Seijun Suzuki's many program pictures for Nikkatsu, "Take Aim at the Police Van" tells the story of a prison guard who begins his own investigation into the identity of a sniper who shot two of his cons on route to prison.

REVIEW: I Hate But Love

憎いあンちくしょう (Nikui an-chikushô)

Released: 1962

Director:
Koreyoshi Kurahara

Starring:
Yûjirô Ishihara
Ruriko Asaoka
Izumi Ashikawa
Asao Koike
Tamio Kawaji

Running time: 106 min.


Reviewed by Bob Turnbull


Who knew Koreyoshi Kurahara could make a rom-com? Well, OK, not your typical Hollywood romantic comedy, but a quick look at its plot and structure could easily lead you to believe the resulting film was being targeted at a multiplex crowd. That is, if you also assumed that mainstream fare had a crashing jazz score, in your face handheld cameras and a dynamic editing style that you could never really anticipate. And that it was acceptable to mostly abandon its initial rom-com feel half way through so it could turn into a road movie, bring in melodrama and tackle the subject of media manipulation while examining the idea of true love. Not your average date movie to be sure.

Kurahara's only colour feature included in Criterion's Eclipse Series box set ("The Warped World Of Koreyoshi Kurahara") is a great deal of fun for that first half as we get to know famous DJ and television host Daisaku and his manager Noriko (played by two of Japan's biggest stars at the time - Yujiro Ishihara and the gorgeous Ruriko Asaoko). She's scheduled just about every move of his life for the last two years and, even though they are attracted to each other, has laid down the rule that they will not have intimate physical contact in order to focus all their energies on his career. For Daisaku, this is beginning to be a distraction all of its own as he is getting burned out by the jam-packed itinerary of daily meetings and events while also wrestling with how women fit into his life. He's not in a very happy place and hates the thought of yet another late night of making club appearances when he'd rather just sleep. Noriko keeps him on schedule, though, as she is efficient, very confident and approaches challenges in a positive way. She even keeps track of their "relationship" via a whiteboard - incrementing each day how long it has lasted in different coloured markers. At the 730th day, she outlines the number in a heart to mark the two year anniversary and it's characteristics like this that make her pretty lovable during this first section. Daisaku's sad sack demeanor wears thin, but she delights in things like waking him in the morning and tricking him into a cold shower. Doris Day and Rock Hudson would slot quite nicely into this framework.

That style and pace stays clicking along and rarely lags on either the story or visual fronts. If it isn't laugh out loud funny, it's enjoyably silly and with Kurahara's shot selections and strong use of colour (focusing on the pop of different hues from objects like car seats, blouses and markers), it easily keeps you engaged. At the halfway mark, Daisaku ignores all advice and decides to help a young woman by driving a jeep to the remote area of Kyushu (900 miles away) so that the doctors can make use of it to help the injured and sick. The main doctor in Kyushu and the woman have fallen in love via their correspondence and Daisaku is fascinated by this version of "true love". The road movie idea can fit nicely into the broader realm of the light romantic comedy, but this is where Kurahara veers off route. As Daisaku's determination to finish the task of delivering the jeep on his own becomes stronger, so does Noriko's need to gain control of him and his career. As she chases after him in his Jaguar, it becomes less of a fun-filled excuse to bring the lovers together as it does a heightened melodrama used to explore aspects of how the media exploits the masses and how the concept of "love" is misunderstood.

It handles both of these in reasonably interesting ways, but it becomes difficult to stay as engaged with the characters during most of this journey. Noriko's frantic need to gain the upper hand on Daisaku and make sure that his career (and her well-being) does not suffer begins to wear down the good will she built up with the viewer initially. When she can't physically stop him, she starts to turn his trip into a media circus as if he had planned it that way. When that too fails to dissuade him, she starts to break down emotionally. Daisaku doesn't gain many points either - his single-minded focus on the trip is incredibly selfish as he ignores the impact it has on the many people who depend on him and isn't even doing it for those who will benefit. All he wants to get out of this is a deeper understanding of "humanism". Some of that is achieved by the end (with both couples coming to interesting conclusions about their relationships), but doesn't add much as it goes along. Were it not for the barbed attacks on Daisaku's media image, the effect the reporters and fans have in slowing down his progress (every day the jeep is not available in Kyushu means more people may die) and some very lovely scenery as they wind through a big chunk of Japan, the long journey would become somewhat tiresome. By its end, Kurahara has smashed some oddly disparate genres into an overall entertaining and even illuminating work. Though he loses some of the charm of the characters along the way, it's an interesting and well-crafted enterprise.

Read more from Bob Turnbull at his blog.

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


1. A Ghost Of A Chance* (Toho)
2. Kaiji 2* (Toho)
3. Moneyball (SPE)
4. The Three Muskateers (Gaga)
5. Suite Pretty Cure Take Back! The Heart Binding Miracles Melody* (Toei)
6. Immortals (Toho Towa)
7. Contagion (Warner)
8. Paranormal Activity 3 (Paramount)
9. Source Code (Disney)
10. 1911 (Toei)

* Japanese film

Courtesy of Box Office Japan.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Six Questions for... Go Shibata


The past 15 years has seen some truly innovative work coming from the indie film scene in Japan, films that form a series of street level snapshots of a country dealing with serious social and economic decline. One things about these fearless visions is that many of their creators, first time directors and screenwriters, come and go, leaving us with wonderful individual films, but without satisfying bodies of work. One independent filmmaker who has bucked this trend is Go Shibata. Born in 1975 in Kanagawa Prefecture, Shibata was one of many of this generation of filmmakers who studied at Osaka University of the Arts Film Program. He brought to of his major artistic themes, damaged outsider characters and ear-splitting music and sound design, to his 1999 feature debut "NN-891102", the story of a young man trying to recreate the sound of the August 1945 bombing of Nagasaki. It would be several years before Shibata would bring audiences his best known film, 2004's "Late Bloomer", but this portrait of a serial killer afflicted with cerebral palsy has ensured Shibata a place in the top tier of contemporary Japanese filmmakers. In 2008 Shibata flirted with the mainstream when he directed "Punch the Blue Sky", the story of an indie rock band's attempt to make it big, but he returned to his roots with the astoundingly creative and confounding supernatural comedy/ drama "Doman Seman". Premiering at the 2010 Tokyo Filmex "Doman Seman" went on to win the Nippon Visions Award at this year's Nippon Connection Japanese Film Festival in Frankfurt, Germany. We were honoured to have Go Shibata answer our Six Questions for... survey. CM


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

“Eraserhead”. There is a foreboding feeling of “something” throughout the film. It is filled with this sense of the unknown. I am inspired by any of the scenes. It not only describes fear and anxiety, but it is also very dreamlike; the delusions are linked directly to the image. The way the film expresses itself goes beyond reality. The film is like a prose poem.


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

Mike Patton [lead singer of Faith No More, Mr. Bungle]


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

Writer.


4. Which three people (besides film-makers) have had the biggest influence on you?

Musician Ai Yamatsuka
Photographer Oliviero Toscani
Takeshi Kitano


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

“The Wheel Of Time: The Shamans Of Mexico Their Thoughts About Life Death And The Universe” by Carlos Castaneda. I have read this book so many times… well actually, I just look through the pages. It was like tarot cards. I think that I just look through pages when I need it. It was very helpful for my image training. I do not have a copy any more, but I will buy it again when I need it.


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

When I shot and edited Osoi Hito (Late Bloomer), including meeting Masakiyo Sumida. And also, when I received the dream digital award at the Hawaii Festival. This is a great memory in 2005.

Translation by Chikako Hirao Evans

The Japan Foundation Toronto brings four free films to The Royal Cinema in December

by Chris MaGee

Looks like the folks at the Toronto office of The Japan Foundation have a Christmas present for all the Japanese film fans here in our hometown. From December 8th to 10th the Japan Foundation will be holding free screenings of four popular films at The Royal Cinema (608 College Street).

Like historical epics? Then you'll want to catch "Mt. Tsurugidake (The Summit: A Chronicle of Stones)" on Saturday, December 10th at 2:45PM, directed by Daisaku Kimura. This film tells the true-life story of the 1907 exploration of the 2,999 metre tall peak in Toyama Prefecture, and boats an all star cast including Tadanobu Asano, Aoi Miyazaki, Koji Yakusho, Ryuhei Matsuda and Teruyuki Kagawa.

Like your history with a little more of a nostalgic bent? Director Takashi Yamazaki has what you need with "Always Sunset on 3rd St. 2" on Saturday, December 10th at 6:00PM, the sequel to his blockbuster family-friendly drama. Set during the post-war 1950's the film follows the lives of the Suzuki family and their Tokyo neighbours, and stars Shin'ichi Hatori,Maki Horikita and Kazuki Koshimizu.

How about musical drama? Then you won't want to miss Koji Hagiuda's under-appreciated 2007 film "Shindo (Prodigy)" on Thursday, December 8th at 7:00PM. The film, about the lives of two teenage classical piano prodigies, features a pair of amazing performances by Ken'ichi Matsuyama and Riko Narumi.

Maybe you like you musical films with a few more laughs? Then you will absolutely not want to miss one of the best and most funny feel good comedies of the past decade, Nobuhiro Yamashita's "Linda, Linda, Linda on Friday, December 9th at 7:00PM. The film stars Korean actress Bae Doona as the leader of a group of high school girls who form a rock band and attempt to learn 80's pop punk group The Blue Hearts' hit song "Linda, Linda".

All you need to do to attend one or all of these films is simply head to the The Royal Cinema, walk in and enjoy. Remember, these are FREE SCREENINGS! For more details on this great event head to The Japan Foundation Toronto website here.

Koki Mitani's latest comedy "A Ghost of a Chance" rides high at the Japanese box office

by Chris MaGee

A favorite film around the MaGee household is Koki Mitani's 1997 comedy "Welcome Back, Mr McDonald (Rajio no Jikan)". My girlfriend and I have seen this story of a live radio drama gone hilariously wrong dozens of times and it never fails to make us laugh out loud. Mitani is also responsible for one of the most insightful and universal comedies I've seen in year. In 2004 director Mamoru Hoshi adapted Mitani's stage Play "University of Laughs" to the screen with Koji Yakusho and Goro Inagaki as a censor and a playwright battling it out. This one comes very highly recommended. Why am I going on about my love for the wildly popular 50-year-old Mitani? Because it looks like this playwright, actor, screenwriter and director has become even more popular in his homeland... if that's possible.

Mitani's latest directorial effort, "Suteki na Kanashibari (A Ghost of a Chance)" continues his trademark screwball comedic stylings, but this time in a courtroom setting, and a haunted one at that. The film stars Eri Fukatsu (above left) as a defense lawyer whose client is accused of murdering his wife. He says he didn't do it, and he says he has a witness to prove it. The only thing is the witness is a 500-year-old ghost, played by Toshiyuki Nishida (above right).

"Suteki na Kanashibari" opened in Japanese theatres on October 29th and in only 12 days it has grossed nearly ¥1.6 billion , making it one of, if not the biggest box office hit in Japan this year. With 313,000 people flocking to theatres this past weekend alone to catch the film it looks like this hot comedy will be cooling down any time soon.

Thanks to Tokyograph for this news.

Japanese Weekend Box Office, November 5th to November 6th


1. A Ghost Of A Chance* (Toho)
2. Kaiji 2* (Toho)
3. The Three Muskateers (Gaga)
4. Suite Pretty Cure Take Back! The Heart Binding Miracles Melody* (Toei)
5. Rise of the Planet of the Apes (Fox)
6. Paranormal Activity 3 (Paramount)
7. 1911 (Toei)
8. Source Code (Disney)
9. Love Strikes! (Toho
10. Cowboys & Aliens (Paramount)

* Japanese film

Courtesy of Box Office Japan.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

The Shinsedai Cinema Festival starts its 2012 online fundraising campaign

by Chris MaGee

As you know from our spotty posting as of late, we at the J-Film Pow-Wow, along with author and film historian Jasper Sharp, have already been involved in some serious planning for the 4th annual Shinsedai Cinema Festival taking place at Toronto's Revue Cinema between July 12th and 15th of next year. As part of our prep work for this showcase of new independent film from Japan we have begun a 60-day online fundraising campaign via IndieGoGo, the world's largest global funding platform.

Running until January 3rd, film lovers like you will be able to help fund what The Toronto Star has called "one of the city's youngest and most original movie events". Our fundraising goal is $7,000, money that will go not only go towards guest relations costs (food, beverages, sightseeing, etc.) for the festival, but most importantly to pay for roundtrip airfare for our Japanese guests to come and personally present their films to a Toronto audience. For filmmakers, who in many have to support their filmmaking by working various jobs, this is a huge opportunity.

All we need are 350 film fans to donate $20 each. That's just the cost of one night out at the movies, or the purchase of a single DVD! Those of you who are in the position to donate more are invited to do so, and you will either be able enjoy special perks in exchange, such as free passes for our 2012 festival, or you can choose to receive a tax deductible receipt for the amount of your donation. Regardless of the amount you are able to give all backers of the 4th annual Shinsedai Cinema Festival will be given personal thanks as "Friends of the Festival" on our website and in our printed festival program.

So, please give and tell your friends about how they can give so that the 4th annual Shinsedai Cinema Festival will be the best festival we've had yet! Check out the fundraising campaign HERE.

The early films of Sion Sono to be compiled in DVD set by Pictures Dept.

by Chris MaGee

It's often overlooked, due to his present status as King of Japanese Extreme Cinema, that bad boy director Sion Sono was once an influential and controversial underground poet and experimental filmmaker. Just this past spring audiences at the 11th annual Nippon Connection Japanese Film Festival in Frankfurt, Germany were reminded of this when its programmers pulled together a full retrospective of Sono's early 8mm films and features, including 1984's "I Am Sono Sion!!!" (above) and 1990's award-winning "Bicycle Sighs". But now there is news that these films will be available for home viewers to dip into in the very near future.

Japanese distributor Pictures Dept. has announced that all of Sono's early work from "I Am Sono Sion!!!" to 2001's crossover cult hit "Suicide Club" will be compiled into a DVD set to be dubbed "Sion Sono Early Works: Before Suicide". No specific date has been announced for a the release of the DVD set yet, or if it will feature English-subtitles. One thing that is safe to assume is that the set won't show up before these early Sono films get their second retrospective treatment at this year's Torino Film Festival, which runs from November 25th through December 3rd.

Thanks to Film Biz Asia for this very welcome news.

CORRECTION: Pow-Wow friends Marc Walkow and Don Brown both brought to our attention that Pictures Dept. does in fact hold the rights to these early Sion Sono films, but that they are not releasing a DVD set themselves. Instead they are looking for a company to release these films on DVD. Our apologies for this error.

REVIEW: Children of Soleil

ソレイユのこどもたち (Soreiyu no Kodomotachi)

Released: 2011


Director:

Yoichiro Okutani






Running time: 107 min.





Reviewed by Nicholas Vroman


Among the New Asian Currents section of the 2011 Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival, Yoichiro Okutani’s “Children of Soleil” received a special mention award.

It’s the middle of the night. A harsh spotlight reveals a couple of mongrel dogs settling down for a uneasy night in and among detritus filled plastic crates and miscellaneous junk strew across the deck of a small boat. Rats also prowl amongst the old machine parts and marine cast-offs. The restless midnight camera soon reveals the subject of the film, Yasuo Takashima, also referred to as Ojichan (a diminutive form for “uncle”), prowling the quayside. An irascible and eccentric old alcoholic - nearly homeless – he lives on a boat. He’s an archetypical example of human jetsam, cast off, ignored and left unspoken about by Japanese society.

Much to the chagrin of the neighborhood, he’s moored his boat, along with several other stray boats he’s collected, illegally on one of the old canals that still run through the southern and eastern kus of Tokyo. With the massive amounts of junk he collects and the handful of stray dogs he keeps for company, he’s become a bit of a neighborhood nightmare with his ever-growing floating trash heap.

Director Yoichiro Okutani keeps in close proximity, following him on foraging runs. In one notable scene, Ojichan proudly shows off a plastic garbage bag full of fish – no doubt found in dumpster. He proceeds to gut the contents in the dark of night at a public water spigot in a small park. He deftly eviscerates them to make himono, air-drying his catch by the canal’s side. The viewer can almost imagine the stench.

When he does purchase something, it’s a gigantic bag of dog food.

He has a few interactions with other lonely old guys hanging out at the local pocket park. He also mugs to the camera with his frequent asides and commentaries about life on the canal. But by far his most loving, touching and sometimes disgusting moments of genuine contact with the living beings is with his dogs. In their presences he dotes on and babies them, cooing with childish delight at their every action. In one scene, the big old hound, Jackie, gets sick, defecating runny stool on newspapers strewn across the deck of the boat. Ojichan gleefully scoops up the soiled newspapers, nonchalantly throwing them overboard, all the while shooting out a stream of loving patter about how much poor Jackie stinks.

A bit of background seeps into the film as Ojichan takes the filmmaker on a canal cruise, pointing out the site of a small shipyard where he once worked, now a particularly faceless office/residential building. He tells stories of his old days on the water. We see police trying to evict him for his canal spot. We see him working on a boat engine. He appears a savvy smart repairman past his prime, getting a few odd jobs. The boat he fixes barely functions as he goes on a test run.

By the end of the film, Ojichan, coughing and sick is evicted from his moorages. The camera trucks through some reeds onto a muddy spit where a single boat stands on blocks. Guarding the cabin door is the faithful Jackie. Inside lies poor Ojichan, surround by a couple of other dogs. He complains that he’s’ too sick and tired to even get up. The camera pans in the cramped quarters to a cardboard box. Inside the box is another dog, Soleil, and her newly birthed litter, squirming to find the teats of their skin and bones mother. Ever the mother himself, we hear Ojichan’s voiceover expressing concern for the health of Soliel.

“Children of Soleil” falls into a contemporary humanist strain of documentary practices, most influenced by the groundbreaking work of Sato Makoto, Makoto’s best remembered for 1992 masterpiece “Living on the River Agano,” in which he and his crew lived with a community for several years, documenting their daily lives. Makoto opened up a new form of documentary – for Japanese filmmakers – that while not being explicitly politically committed, allowed for deep commentary on Japanese society through a sort of embeddedness. Looking at the Japanese documentaries highlighted at the Yamagata International Documentary film festival over the past years, one gets the impression that the Makoto style is the reigning way of making docs in Japan. What makes the good ones shine is the development of the narratives, identification with the subjects and their issues and most importantly, the questions raised by the documentary practices themselves. “Children of Soleil” covers all these areas – in spades.

Takashima-san, Okutani’s subject, supplies all the audience identification one needs. Sure, he’s a bit crazy and not particularly environmentally correct, but his lifestyle and independence offers a particular nostalgia and longing that may be belied by his poverty-stricken existence. His story develops with a passionate and non-judgmental eye.
Bigger questions come up - particularly, with the final scenes of old Ojichan suffering, perhaps near death. Where is the point where a documentary maker/journalist should intervene? Where’s the line where a documentary keeps its humanist eye or becomes exploitive of an otherwise trusting subject? What about Ojichan’s complicity in getting his life documented? What are the real motives of the maker and subject? Shouldn’t they be explored during the making of the film?

After a few days in Yamagata watching hours of human misery, as an audience member I began to think of the 3rd point of view – the viewers. From my (relatively) comfortable theater seat, I wondered if there’s a sort of perverse tourism on display. The somewhat exotic and old-fashioned lifestyle of living on the canals is certainly tempered by the genuine tragedy that Ojichan suffers. The viewer easily walks away to his/her middle-class life, perhaps touched by the story, but ultimately left with the feeling of smugness and superiority. A sort of “I’m-glad-I’m-not-in-that-position/situation” may lurk under the veneer of pathos.

I’ll be exploring these questions with Yoichiro Okutani next week and will give a full report on J-Film Pow-Wow over the coming weeks.

Read more by Nicholas Vroman at his blog

Koji Wakamatsu manages to bring us not one but two films for 2012

by Chris MaGee

One veteran filmmaker whose career seems to be just as vital today as it was 40 years ago is Koji Wakamatsu. The 75-year-old "grandfather of pink films" enjoyed awards and critical acclaim for his two most recent productions, 2008's "United Red Army" and 2010's "Caterpillar". Both films were controversial looks back at Japan during the 20th century, the former being a dramatization of the far left United Red Army who terrorized Japan during the early 70's, and the latter an adaptation of Edogawa Rampo's short story about a war veteran who has been terribly disfigured in battle. For this film Wakamatsu shifted the period from Japan's Taisho Era to that of the Second Sino-Japanese War and WW2.

Back in May we reported on how Wakamatsu was going to be following up "United Red Army" and "Caterpillar" with a cinematic chronicle of the last days of author and right-wing activist Yukio Mishima. Titled "11.25 Jiketsu no Hi: Mishima Yukio to Wakamonotachi" the film stars Arata as Mishima (above) as he prepares for his attempted coup d'etat in November of 1970. That film is set to be released in Japan and on the international festival circuit in the spring. It seemd like Wakamatsu was tying up his recent films as a loose trilogy. Now, though, Wildgrounds is reporting that Koji Wakamatsu has another film in the works.

Either while he was shooting "11.25 Jiketsu no Hi: Mishima Yukio to Wakamonotachi" or afterwards Wakamatsu had the energy to bang out "Kaien Hotel Blue", a contemporary drama about an ex-con whose plans for revenge are complicated after he meets a young woman. Once again Arata stars, and this film is also slated for a 2012 release. You can check out the trailer for "Kaien Hotel Blue" below (although watch out -- one shot is NSFW). All we can say is that we wish we have half the energy of Koji Wakamatsu once we reach 75-years of age!

Ezra Miller and Alden Ehrenreich in talks to play leads in Warner Brothers' "Akira"

by Chris MaGee

It was just a couple weeks back when word finally came down from the folks at Warner Borothers that their long percolating Hollywood live-action remake of Katsuhiro Otomo's anime classic "Akira" was going forward. Many of us were hoping that the previous departures of directors Ruairi Robinson and Albert Hughes from the project were signals that it would be shelved, but now with director Jaume Collet-Serra (House of Wax, Orphan, Unknown) on board it looks like "Akira" will be moving forward.

Japanese film and anime fans have dreaded this remake for years now. This incarnation of "Akira" will transplant the story of teen bikers Tetsuo and Takeda from the post-apocalyptic metropolis of New Tokyo to that of New Manhattan. There have been numerous actors attached to the roles of Tetsuo and Takeda, but all of them have seemed utterly inappropriate -- James Franco, Keanu Reeves, Andrew Garfield, etc. Now word has leaked over at Anime News Network and the Hollywood Reporter that two new names are now being seriously considered to play Tetsuo and Takeda.

18-year-old Ezra Miller (above left), who has been gaining critical acclaim for his role in Lynne Ramsay's psychological thriller "We Need To Talk About Kevin" is now attached to the role of Tetsuo, a young biker who develops catastrophic psychic powers. Meanwhile, 21-year-old Alden Ehrenreich (above right), star of Francis Ford Coppola's "Tetro", is in talks to play Takeda, who must save New Tokyo... or I guess we mean New Manhattan... from his friend's new found powers.

I guess the best thing that can be said about these two potential leads is that they're a little bit more age appropriate than previous stars who have been attached to "Akira". We're still not holding out a lot of hope for Warner Brothers' remake, but at least now we don;t have to worry that we'll see James Franco trying to act like a teenager.

REVIEW: Black Sun

黒い太陽 (Kuroi taiyo)

Released: 1964

Director:
Koreyoshi Kurahara

Starring:
Tamio Kawaji
Chico Roland
Tatsuya Fuji
Shogen Shinda
Yuko Chishiro

Running time: 95 min.



Reviewed Bob Turnbull


"Black Sun" is an odd beast...While it has all of Koreyoshi Kurahara's typical chaotic energy and style and it reaches for a grander message about the disenfranchised, it struggles to keep its characters interesting and stretches some scenes to their breaking point. It focuses on two outcasts from society - a homeless thief and a black American G.I. - who are at odds with each other for the majority of the film due to language barriers and various misunderstandings. Akira tries to shelter Gil in his ramshackle abode (a half bombed out church where he squats) while Gil nurses a bullet wound to his leg. As their predicament worsens, their relationship grows not only more volatile, but closer as well. You could easily be forgiven for sensing a bit of a "The Defiant Ones" feel in spots as they begin to understand each other and realize they need to stop their in-fighting, but will you care anywhere near as much about these two characters as the ones from that classic 1958 film? It's doubtful.

When we meet Akira at the beginning of the film, he appears in a desolate junkyard of a field that could easily be a freshly bombed out city bulldozed to the ground. He steals some of the few possessions that belong to the bums who scavenge there and sells them off to get money to buy a jazz album. He's a huge fan of the music (his dog is even named after Thelonious Monk) and considers any black man to be his friend. On the way out of the store, he almost gets run over by a rich man and woman who barely even notice his presence. The woman crushes his album and when the man half absent-mindedly waves some money to pay for it, Akira becomes enraged. He demands that they apologize to the respected black man on the album cover (drummer Max Roach - performer of the film's music) and will not stand to be ignored by them. He has a highly emotional disposition that can be quick to anger, but is also typically bright and happy-go-lucky - especially as he listens to his beloved jazz music in a freshly stolen car. After driving by the scene of a murder, he realizes when he gets home that the suspect has hitched a ride in the back of his jalopy. Though the wounded G.I. brandishes his machine gun at Akira, all he can think about is that a black man stands before him and therefore he must be a great man too.

Gil has been accused of killing a fellow G.I., but the only additional piece of information we ever get about it is that the victim was white. No details as to whether there was prior intent or whether it was justified - just that Gil is desperate, in pain from the bullet in his leg and feels everyone is against him. Unfortunately - and this is a big problem - Gil is portrayed with zero subtlety and is all bluster, anguish and breathless statements. Since he speaks English, none of what he says is translated via subtitles and so it's very difficult to understand anything he says the entire film. As it turns out, most of what he says can be deciphered from context or it simply isn't relevant, but it's frankly still a very annoying aspect of the film and combined with Akira's constant highly melodramatic mood swings ("I love you!", "I hope the G.I.'s find you and kill you!"), it's a bit straining to spend any time with these characters at all. And there lies the problem - the film stays almost entirely with the two of them. There are excursions into the real world - Akira's favourite jazz bar, a few driving expeditions and a final, wonderfully filmed chase sequence - but there's a lot of time spent between just the two of them.

Granted there are valid points to be made here - both men have felt isolated from their environments and typically are judged quickly by others due to their outward appearances (even Akira assumes Gil can play and sing jazz music simply because he is black). Kurahara uses some flashbacks in Gil's head to bring these points to the fore while allowing the visuals to do the rest (the film is beautifully lensed). He brings such a dynamic feel to their world using handheld cameras, attaching them to moving vehicles and using a few timely freeze frames that there really does seem to be a high level of chaos in their lives. Particularly when the score crashes in with Roach's thundering drums and vocal/horn sounds that feel as cathartic for the musicians as they are for the listeners. A blues tune called "Six-bit Blues" plays several times and contains lyrics that Gil can certainly understand as he contemplates any form of escape: "Gimme six bits worth o'tickets, on a train that runs somewhere". Kurahara also uses the same names (and same actors) for his characters as the ones in "The Warped Ones", his 1960 film about rebellious youth with nothing to fear. Since Akira and Gil knew each other in the previous film, this obviously isn't a direct sequel, but it sure has that feeling sometimes due to the style and where Akira's life is currently headed (a direct line from the previous film). Even his prostitute friend Yuki feels like a perfect map to her character in "The Warped Ones" (again, played by the same actress). The jazz bar is the same set as their hangout from 4 years previous too, but it also is not the "same". Many of these touches add a great deal to the "world askew" feeling of the film, but even Kurahara's stylistic choices can't quite pull enough of an entertaining yarn out of this message movie. He certainly grabs your attention at times though.

Read more from Bob Turnbull at his blog.

Director of "Maiko Haaaan!!! and writer of "Hula Girls" team up for new film

by Chris MaGee

I have to admit that I'm not a fan of Nobuo Mizuta's purposefully madcap 2007 comedy "Maiko Haaaan!!!" I do know, though, that there are a few of you out there who are (and we can agree to disagree on the film), so here's a news item that will definitely be of interest to you, especially if you're also a fan of Sang-Il Lee's feel good film "Hula Girls".

Mizuta (above left) is currently shooting a new film titled “Tsunahiichatta!” from a script written by Daisuke Habara, the man behind the screenplay for "Hula Girls". The story follows a civil servant in Oita city named Chiaki Nishikawa, portrayed by actress Mao Inoue (above right) who is asked to form a women's tug-o-war team, but due to a lack of candidates ends up on the team herself. Her teammates are being portrayed by Naomi Nishida, Naomi Watanabe, Yoko Asaji and screen veteran Keiko Matsuzaka, who will play Chiaki Nishikawa's mother.

Like the screenplay for "Hula Girls", "Tsunahiichatta!” is based on a true story. Oita City is home to tug-o-war champions, The Oita Cosmo Ladies; and Mizuta's film will be entirely filmed in Oita in order to promote the city. So, it looks like there will be more feel good laughs on the way when "Tsunahiichatta!” hits Japanese theatres next year.

Thanks to Tokyograph for this news.

Weekly Trailers


Tokyo Playboy Club - Yosuke Okuda (2011)


Nao Omori stars as a man whose life gets very complicated very quickly after he wanders into a suburban Tokyo bar. "Tokyo Playboy Club" marks the feature film directorial debut of Yosuke Okuda, the award-winning director of the "Hot as Hell" films. "Tokyo Playboy Club" will debut at Tokyo Filmex this month.




Blind Beast - Yasuzo Masumura (1969)

Japanese New Wave director Yasuzo Masumura adapts Edogawa Rampo's classic story of a blind sculptor who kidnaps a young woman in order to make her his muse. Psychedelic sets, sadomasochism and a nasty case of Stockholm Syndrome ensues.

REVIEW: Lupin the 3rd: Missed by a Dollar

ルパン三世1$マネーウォーズ (Rupan Sansei: 1$ Manê Uôzu)

Released: 2000

Director:
Hideki Tonokatsu

Starring (voice talent):
Kanichi Kurita
Goro Naya
Kiyoshi Kobayashi
Makio Inoue
Eiko Masuyama

Running time: 91 min.

Reviewed by Marc Saint-Cyr


First aired on television in 2000, "Lupin the 3rd: Missed by a Dollar" is the most recent film I’ve seen thus far that features the popular character created by manga artist Monkey Punch (Kazuhiko Kato). The rascally thief and his band of accomplices have appeared in several animé films over the years, among the more notable ones being 1979’s "The Castle of Cagliostro," an early effort from Hayao Miyazaki. This particular outing offers the kind of antics that audiences have come to love and expect from the franchise, yet because of the more recent timeframe in which it was made, it contains some themes that possess an all-too-eerie relevance – yes, in a Lupin III outing - when viewed today.

The story kicks off with a large auction in the heart of New York where a seemingly trivial ring attracts unusually high bids. It eventually sells for $1000,001, thwarting a disguised Lupin’s attempts to claim it for himself with just one dollar. The ring supposedly points the way to yet another treasure: a prized brooch that has given good luck to various significant leaders over the years, including Napoleon, Lenin and Hitler. Along with his friends – the fedora-clad, revolver-packing Daisuke Jigen and the ever-serious samurai Goemon – Lupin sets out to find the brooch and winds up facing off against some formidable foes: the mysterious Cynthia, head of the massive Bank of the World, and her former KGB hit man and love interest Alex Nabikov. And every step of the way, there is Inspector Zenigata of Interpol, persistently continuing his long-running pursuit after the wily Lupin.

Perhaps more so than previous Lupin III adventures, "Missed by a Dollar" directs a fair amount of attention to the old-fashioned, wildly romantic nature of the master thief. At several points, he is reminded of how new and different the world has become – it is, after all, a whole new millennium now. Even though his familiar love interest, Fujiko – who appears here as a savvy businesswoman – warns him that the real way to make money is through the economy rather than burglary, Lupin proudly carries on with his ambitious schemes. During a heist, he proclaims, “Analog’s the way to go” to beat the digital world, and sure enough, he later expresses disappointment at the underwhelming convenience that technology grants him. Other elements of the story come across as strangely prophetic, one of them certainly being the focus on big corporations, the oil industry and the super wealthy – all sore subjects for today’s recession-weary viewers. Coupled with this is the film’s attention to war. Between the brooch’s influence on some of history’s most influential figures, the story of Cynthia’s father – a dictator who was overthrown by revolutionaries – and a plot designed to launch the world into mass conflict, one certainly can’t help but be reminded of the tumultuous recent events in the Middle East. The final chilling touch is the repeated appearance of the World Trade Center’s looming twin towers. All of these things charge Lupin’s cheery jaunts with a sad irony, which reaches its height with his triumphant statement that “the century of war is over.” About a year later, the terrible frailty of such a statement would be made all too clear.

Traditionally, Lupin III films act as highly entertaining and fun testaments to adventure for adventure’s sake. While the abovementioned points may make this sentiment seem a little too naïve for comfort these days, at the same time "Missed by a Dollar" provides a comforting dollop of innocent escapism. Fans of the classic characters certainly won’t be let down, as ample time is devoted to Lupin’s incurable womanizing habits, Goemon’s unmatched sword skills, Jigen’s fixation with his gun and Inspector Zenigata’s hilarious and frequently unsuccessful attempts to capture his ever-elusive quarry. With very good animation and such other delights as cars that transform into aircraft, fast-paced chases, Lupin’s marvelous array of disguises, a winding treasure hunt and a remarkably melancholy ending, "Missed by a Dollar" makes for a very satisfying Lupin III romp.

Read more by Marc Saint-Cyr at his blog

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Los Angeles gears up for LA EigaFest

by Chris MaGee

The J-Film Pow-Wow inbox has been getting flooded during our brief period of down time by fans of Japanese film in Los Angeles... and rightly so. The city is gearing up for a do not miss event -- The LA EigaFest, a celebration of Japanese film taking place between November 11th and 13th at LA's Chinese Theatres (6801 Hollywood Boulevard).

This 3-day event is bookended by two of the most talked about films on the international festival circuit, Yoshimasa Ishibashi's "Milocrorze: A Love Story" will open the festival (with star Takayuki Yamada in attendance) and LA EigFest will close with Takashi Miike's jidaigeki remake "Harakiri: The Death of a Samurai" (above). In between, though, the programmers of the festival have brought together some real treats of J-film fans. These include Yuya Ishii's latest quirky comedy "A Man with Style", Yoshihiro Nishimura's gorefest "Helldriver", Junji Sakamoto's drama "Someday" (The last film by veteran actor Yoshio Harada), Su-yeon Gu's gangster film "Hard Romantiker (starring Shota Matsuda) and Reiko Ohashi's indie favorite "Door to the Sea". The fest will also be holding a free screening of Hiroshi Nagashima's hour-long documentary "Remembrance of Tohoku Earthquake – Our Gratitude for Bonds of Friendship of the World".

Of course there will be more going on at LA EigaFest than we can outline in a short news item. Do yourself a favor and head to their official website here to get all the details... and if you're in Los Angeles then make sure to get out to see some great film!

The 24th Tokyo IFF wraps with two Japanese films picking up awards

by Chris MaGee

An intense period of work on the 2012 Shisnedai Cinema Festival and some personal matters derailed the blog for a week, and during our very brief hiatus some big news came down from Tokyo. The 24th annual Tokyo International Film Festival wrapped up with an awards ceremony that saw two Japanese films being given honours.

In the Japanese Eyes program Keiichi Kobayashi's teen drama "About the Pink Sky" (above) picked up the top prize. In a plot that sounds a little like a variation on Satoru Hirohara's indie drama "Good Morning to the World!!", "About the Pink Sky" follows a high school girl who is trying to find the owner of a wallet full of money that she has found. Unlike Hirohara's film "About the Pink Sky" goes for a subtle art house feel by being shot entirely in black-and-white.

Meanwhile, in a Special Jury Prize was awarded to Shuichi Okita's heartwarming comedy "The Woodsman and the Rain". This story of a lumberjack who gets caught up in a young indie filmmakers zombie movie stars Koji Yakusho and Shun Oguri. Many of you will remember that director Shuichi Okita brought us another crowd-pleaser last year with "The Chef of the South Pole".

Our congratulations goes out to Kobayashi-san, Okita-san and all the winners at the 24th Tokyo International Film Festival. For a full list of who won what head to Tokyo IFF's official website here.

The stars and director of "Shall We Dance?" reunite for an untitled medical drama

by Chris MaGee

One film that continues to capture the hearts and minds of Japanese film fans 15 years after its release. That would be Masayuki Suo's romantic comedy "Shall We Dance?" This film (above), about a Tokyo salaryman who escapes his dreary day-to-day existence by secretly taking ballroom dance lessons, became the highest grossing Japanese film to screen in North America in 1997. Much of the film's success is due to its lead stars, Koji Yakusho and actress Tamiyo Kusakari. While both have gone on to great success they have never appeared on screen together since Suo's landmark film. Well, now that's about to change.

According to Tokyograph the two stars will not only reunite with each other, but also with director Masayuki Suo for Suo's upcoming yet-to-be-titled medical drama based on the short story “Tsui no Shintaku” by author Tatsuki Saku. In the film Kusakari stars as a doctor who is faced with caring for a seriously ill patient, played by Yakusho, who insists that he not be given life support. Yakusho and Kusakari will be joined in Suo's film by Tadanobu Asano (as a doctor romantically involved with Kusakari's character) and Takao Osawa as a lawyer.

You may recall that Tamiyo Kusakari reunited with director Masayuki Suo last year in his dance film "Dancing Chaplin" (read our original report here), but this news of Yakusho joining the two for another project will definitely make this untitled project, set for release in Japan next year, one of 2012's biggest buzz films.

CORRECTION: A very special screening celebrating the remarkable life of Beate Sirota Gordon

by Chris MaGee

Beate Sirota Gordon. If you haven't heard the name you are forgiven, but if you want to understand the Japan of today Sirota Gordon's is a name that you should become familiar with. Now a new documentary, which screens November 17th at the Japan Society New York, explores not only the life of Beate Sirota Gordon, a woman who shaped the ideological and political life of modern Japan.

Sirota Gordon (above circa the1940's), the daughter of pianist Leo Sirota who taught at Tokyo's Imperial Academy of Music during the early 20th century, was only 22-years-old when she was enlisted by U.S. General Douglas MacArthur to assist in drafting Japan's post-war constitution. It was Sirota Gordon who was responsible for drafting the clause that would give Japanese women equal rights, including the right to vote.

Now the life of this fascinating and important woman is the subject of a 93-minute documentary titled "The Sirota Family and the 20th Century" directed by filmmaker Tomoko Fujiwara. If you are lucky enough to be reading this in New York City then you not only have a chance to see the film on the 17th, but Beate Sirota Gordon, now 87, will be introducing Fujiwara's film personally and be in attendance at a post-screening reception. You can find out more details on this very special screening of "The Sirota Family and the 20th Century" at the Japan Society Film Program website.

Japanese Weekend Box Office, October 29th to October 30th


1. A Ghost Of A Chance* (Toho)
2. The Three Muskateers (Gaga)
3. Suite Pretty Cure Take Back! The Heart Binding Miracles Melody* (Toei)
4. Rise of the Planet of the Apes (Fox)
5. Source Code (Disney)
6. Love Strikes!* (Toho)
7. Cowboys & Aliens (Paramount)
8. My S. O. Has Depression* (Toei)
9. Hara-Kiri: Death Of A Samurai* (Shochiku)
10. Fast Five (Toho Towa)
* Japanese film

Courtesy of Box Office Japan.