Genre: Drama/Comedy
Director: Lee Sang-il
Cast: Yasuko Matsuyuki, Etsushi Toyokawa, Yû
Aoi, Shizuyo Yamazaki
RunTime: 1 hr 48 mins
Released By: The Picturehouse
Rating: PG
Opening Day: 30 May 2007 (The Picturehouse)
Synopsis:
Based on a true story, HULA GIRLS is a heartwarming comedy
about coal miners' daughters who take a once-in-a-lifetime
chance to escape their monotonous lives, and become unwitting
heroes in their depressed mining town and the whole of Japan.
It is 1965, old mining towns began their long slow decline
as the country started to shift from coal to oil. A small
town way up north comes up with an idea to develop Japan's
first Hawaiian Village. And what's a Hawaiian Village without
a troupe of Hula dancers? The only problem is, no one knows
how to do the dance, or even knows what the Hula is! In this
hilariously touching comedy, the skepticism and conservatism
of the locals is gradually overcome as their daughters fall
under the spell of one talented and determined dance instructor
from the big city of Tokyo.
Movie
Review:
Winning Best Film and Best Director at the Japan Academy Awards
as well as being Japan’s official submission for the
2007 Oscars’ foreign film category, Korean director
Lee Sang-il’s “Hula Girls” has more charm
than one can shake their tail feathers at and more mileage
than one might expect from another story of underdogs railing
against the establishment. The generational gaps and cultural
reconfiguration and adaptability of the young are examined
through humour and heartfelt observations in the true story
of an ebbing factory town in the north of Japan called Joban,
in 1965.
The
trajectory of the story is predictably bittersweet, but doesn’t
veer into heavy soap or tedious social commentary to earn
its stripes as a film with sufficient gravitas and consequence.
It recalls such Japanese genre gems such as “Swing Girls”,
“Shall We Dance” and “Linda Linda Linda”
with the colourful and carefully tuned characters that we’ve
come to expect and the late, great flourish in the climax
showing all the hard work and strife endured being paid off
in spades. “Hula Girls” earns its emotional output
and goodwill with its characters. There are no villains but
only circumstances to be braved and they level us through
their actions, not their words.
Sanae
(Eri Tokunaga) and Kimiko (Yu Aoi) are teenagers hoping to
leave their oppressive environment see a chance of a way out,
or at least a change of pace from a dreary life when the coal-mining
town finds its lifeblood being siphoned away by the rising
industry of oil. In order to stop the rot, a representative
from the coal company supposes an idea to transform the chilly
town of Joban into a tourist attraction by way of a Hawaiian
cultural centre (remember, this is based on a true story)
that inevitably draws criticisms and reproach from the town
elders. The hula dance, critical to the success of the centre
is cause for concern amongst the conservative townies. They
have everything to lose by not acquiescing with the plan but
what they aren’t prepared to give up are their convictions
and principles, especially not in the face of a world defiantly
changing beyond their control.
With
the onus of the town’s prospects set squarely on the
bold few, they are coached by an apparently blasé Madoka
(Matsuyuki Yasuko) who finds herself in over her head with
the motley crew of naïve but determined young girls ready
to take over the reins of leading their town’s workforce.
These girls are faced with decisions to uphold their families’
wishes or to do what they feel is right for the economically
depressed town, despite the risks being taken. The film brings
to light the role of sexism in small towns through its dramatic
confrontations, where girls grow up to be wives and mothers
instead of individuals with the same respect in the workforce
as men.
There’s
a distinct sense of rebelliousness throughout the proceedings,
especially when the girls finally grow into their own skin
and shake their hips for the world to behold. The camera captures
every titillating movement, relishing in the vindication of
following their beliefs. The didactics of the script, without
the lack of surprises and deviations finds itself with its
own measure of vindication as well in its deftly executed
simplicity when it recently won Lee the Best Screenplay category
at the Japan Academy Awards.
Movie
Rating:
(Charming, and bursting with joyful triumph)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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