In Japanese with English & Chinese Subtitles
Genre: Crime/Thriller
Director: Kon Ichikawa
Cast: Koji Ishizaka, Nanako Matsushima, Kikunosuke
Onoe, Sumiko Fuji, Keiko Matsuzaka, Hisako Manda
RunTime: 2 hrs 16 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC-16 (Some Violence and Nudity)
Opening
Day: 14 August 2008
Synopsis:
When the wealthy Inugami patriarch dies leaving a huge estate,
their lawyer hires detective Kindaichi as a series of mysterious
murders befalls the family--from attempted drownings, poisonings,
to beheadings. A web of deceit, adultery and greed is revealed
as the family gathers for the reading of the will, and the
race for the inheritance turns even deadlier.
Movie Review:
There are films which you need to do some research and read
up about before whipping out cash from your wallet to pay
for that ticket for entry into the cinema. This 2006 Japanese
film is definitely one of them. If you have no idea who Kon
Ichikawa is, you’d probably treat this picture as one
of the many detective crime thrillers that are out there in
the market. There’s also this white masked man on the
movie poster who looks like a principal character from a B-grade
horror flick. He probably isn’t going to make you terribly
excited the show either.
But
being the culture vultures that we always attempt to be, we
shall trace the beginnings of this important film in Japanese
movie history. In 1976, the legendary filmmaker made a film
about a detective solving murder cases which involve family
feuds, a disfigured soldier who returns from war, a hatchet,
a koto string and chrysanthemums. 30 years later, he remade
the movie, keeping many of the principal actors and added
some new faces. He was 91 when he made this new version of
the movie and two years on, he passed away from pneumonia.
The
movie became his last work.
And
because the 1976 version is regarded by many film buffs as
a cult film (it was a box office success and created a sensational
wave of popularity for detective genre films in Japan), this
2006 version naturally became of interest to the film buffs
too.
To
the younger generation of movie goers, the picture may seem
out of place amongst all the fancy blockbusters boasting of
explosions, car chases, computer generated effects, good looking
actors and all things extravagant. The 136 minute movie moves
at a unhurried and steady pace, with every bit of the well
written script playing out slowly but surely on screen. You
get to know every single character, and the well developed
plot engages you throughout.
True,
the impatient viewer may scorn the straight editing cuts,
the classic camera shots and the straightforward cinematography.
But that was probably how they did it in the past, and this
“old school” approach has served the movie well
enough to make it a cult film.
Koji
Ishizaka plays the famed investigator Kosuke Kindaichi (young
girls who love all things Japanese will know that this character
is played by Japanese boy band member Tsuyoshi Domoto in the
popular TV series) with gravitas and charisma. Nanako Matsushima
(everyone loves her porcelain features) plays a girl who has
to choose between three men, thus deciding the fate of the
wealthy family’s heirloom. Other acclaimed actors like
Kikunosuke Onoe, Sumiko Fuji and Keiko Matsuzaka roud up the
respected cast.
To
today’s viewers, this movie may not be a cinematic feat,
but the themes of family betrayal, human greed, relationship
jealousy and all things dark are present in this homage to
the original 1976 version. And what a fitting piece of work
to commemorate the film’s 30th anniversary. If you step
out of the theatre appreciating Ichikawa’s final movie,
be thankful that you read up about the movie before stepping
into the theatre.
Movie Rating:
(A fine piece of work which proves that a well written script
is essential in movie making)
Review by John Li
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