In Japanese with English and Chinese Subtitles
Genre: Drama
Director: Lee Chi Ngai
Cast: Meisa Kuroki, Miku Sano, Ara, Yuta Hiraoka, Ken Maeda, Toshio Kakei, Kaori Momoi
RunTime: 1 hr 54 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris
Films & Mediacorp Raintree Pictures
Rating: PG
Official Website: www.subaru-movie.com
Opening Day: 28 May 2009
Synopsis:
Adapted from a popular Japanese manga (comic book) of the same title, Dance Subaru! is a motivating tale about the self-realization of a young ballerina under adversity. Subaru tells the story of genius ballerina Subaru Miyamoto with a special emphasis placed on the harsh training she undergoes and the immense social and psychological pressure she experiences. Subaru overcomes these issues to give a performance that leaves her audience crying for more.
Movie
Review:
With Hollywood churning out dance flick after dance flick,
usually centered around the street-dance genre with the likes
of Make It Happen, and the Step Up franchise, it's time Asia,
and a Pan-Asian effort at that (Hong Kong-Japan-Korea and
Singapore even), hit back with something a little more classy
and elegant, such as Ballet and the legendary Swan Lake being
one of the key features.
But wait! If you're thinking Ballet and Swan Lake aren't your
cup of tea, think again. Dance, Subaru! is more than just
your average dance movie that has the protagonist perfect
some obscenely difficult to master steps, then trouncing the
competition with an ensemble mass choreographed dance. This
film is more character driven, with the study of Subaru (Meisa
Kuroki) and her dogged pursuit to hone her talents for dance,
not only in a competitive arena, but as a metaphor toward
self-actualization.
Based on a manga series, the film has ample content to draw
from, and took some time to get off from first gear. We follow
Subaru's rather tragic childhood where death and disease form
early companionship, and the family finances and the grounded
hopes of a father meant "trivial" dance lessons are nothing
but a dream for little Subaru. But in defiance, she dashes
off and becomes the unofficial protege of a fallen ballet
star Madam Isuzu (Momoi Kaori), whose cabaret become the surrogate
home where Subaru grows up in, performing some pieces over
the weekends under Isuzu's tutelage.
What I thoroughly enjoyed in the film, are the life lessons
summarized in under two hours. It's about the positive, persevering
mindset one has to take to survive in today's world, with
the challenge of bettering oneself through continuous education.
One has to be flexible to learn and unlearn, and adapt when
the situation calls for it. What we observe in Subaru, we
can also observe in everyday life. At times we are star players
and others follow in our example, while in others we have
to learn how to be team players, and feed off the vibes of
teammates in order to excel. There are times which call for
individual brilliance, and times where team play is more important.
I'm no dance expert, but never had I understood the little
unsaid intricacies that happen behind the scenes, until this
film opened them up.
Then there's the cat fights and rivalry, sometimes amongst
friends even, whether you are aware of the pettiness and envy
openly, or become victims of the scheming ones. In this film
we see friends/fiends of Subaru in childhood friend Mana (Sano
Miku), and contemporary critique in Liz Park (Korean model
Ara) amongst others, and there's this constant tussle of not
knowing who is most forthright in their intentions. If you've
watched the anime film The Piano Forest, you'll understand
that deep, sometimes inexplicable emotional struggle, and
possibly the bump to the ego, of anyone having put in their
best years in training, only to be overshadowed by a young
upstart because of an innate talent that's being honed through
access to the very best of instructors.
That bit should already engage you in trying to figure intent
to the super cool heroine, whose played to perfection by Meisa
Kuroki, skin tight leotard notwithstanding. There's this rebellious
quality bordering on the arrogance of ego in Subaru that Meisa
brought out effortlessly, and as such the character became
more than just a 2D cardboard. Ara too portrayed her America-trained
ballet dancer looking for new inspiration in her craft, with
that confident glint in the eye, almost constantly showing
her teeth in her chirpy smiles. Sano Miku also showed that
she's no pushover, having background in dance to add realism
to her moves, but I suppose the training for the other two
ladies paid off handsomely as well, because to the untrained
eye (like mine), they were believable and credible enough
to pass off as professional dancers waiting to stamp their
mark in the dance arena.
However, the narrative had a number of subplots thrown around,
and never fully developed, such as the bit of romance between
Subaru and Kohei (Yuta Hiraoka), the parental relationship
between father and daughter, and that between mentor-protege
or even the daughter-surrogate mom angle between Subaru and
Madam Isuzu. There were touched upon but never did really
shift into second gear, opting instead to pepper the in-between
scenes with plenty of steep melodrama, or saccharine sweet
moments found especially in the prologue act, providing that
little touch of childhood fantasy.
Dance, Subaru! should appeal to fans of the dance movie genre
not only because of the moves that one can watch and probably
learn from, but more so the strength in character and everyday
lessons that is reinforced through a dance film that surpasses
those found in the same genre Hollwood productions. That said,
the eye-candy galore helps too!
Movie
Rating:
(More than just your typical dance movie with charismatic,
good looking
leads leading the audience on tackling life's challenges)
Review by Stefan Shih
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