Nominee
for Grand Jury Prize World Cinema Drama at Sundance Film Festival
2005
In
Japanese with English and Chinese Subtitles
Genre: Drama
Director: Jun Ichikawa
Starring: Issei Ogata, Rie Miyazawa
RunTime: 1 hr 25 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: PG
Opening Day: 31 August 2006 (The Picturehouse)
Synopsis:
A simple, undemanding mechanical draftsman who lives a lonely
existence meets a young and beautiful girl who he falls for
her instantly, despite their 15-year age difference. He soon
discovers that his new wife is a shopaholic who cannot stop
buying clothing and when tragedy strikes, he is forced to
look at his life in a whole different way.
Movie Review:
Many
great movies are made with a singular message. This is not
one of them.
Tony
Takitani (Issey Ogata) is a product of a loveless marriage
and cursed with a gaijin name in xenophobic Japan. As his
mother died young and his father (also Issey Ogata) was always
traveling with his jazz band, Tony grew up to be a very old
and very lonely technical illustrator without the ability
to feel and emote for others. Things seem to turn for the
better when he met young Konuma Eiko (Rie Miyazawa), a self-confessed
shopaholic who, in the convenient world of symbolism, gives
in totally to her emotions. For the first time in his life,
Tony was not alone and he was able to cultivate some empathy
for his father’s music. Tragically, Tony’s attempt
to persuade Eiko into his emotionless world by reining in
her shopaholic tendencies resulted in both a literal and metaphorical
u-turn in his life. Eiko met with a traffic accident while
agonizing over the return of a coat and silk dress and was
killed.
Unable
to cope with his loss, Tony tried to forget Eiko gradually
by hiring a doppelganger, Hisako (also Rie Miyazawa), to wear
her clothes to work. However, Hisako was overwhelmed by the
sheer quantity of clothes left behind by Eiko and was turned
into a slobbering heap of tears. Tony realized that Hisako
resembled Eiko too much and was unable to continue to with
the plan. Instead, he sold all of Eiko’s clothes. When
his father died, Tony sold his records too. This showed that
Tony is really incapable of feeling and is truly a loner.
The man doesn’t get it.
Having
reverted to his staid state of existence, Tony could not understand
how a stranger like Hisako was able to experience such strong
visceral emotions in the presence of his wife’s possessions
when he is unable to. Why is this so? Because, just like it
was mentioned very early in the movie, “loneliness can
be a prison”. Cut to black. End of the 75-min movie.
Film
reviewers usually do not outline the entire plot of a movie.
Nevertheless, this movie is so sparsely scripted and requires
the audience to actively fill in so much of the blanks that
someone has to attempt it here. Make no mistake – the
audience member should be able to grasp the movie’s
theme of loss and solitude right from the start (from the
dawdling third-person narration, the excruciatingly slow pace
of the movie and the first two notes of a meager score) –
it is the details of the story that needs to be fleshed out.
Trust us to appreciate social alienation – we have people
like Eric Khoo and Royston Tan doing nothing else but portraying
that particular well-worn theme. Unfortunately, the movie
succeeded in being so stark and insipid that I simply was
not inspired to investigate what has transpired. In fact,
my movie partner came up with the interpretation of the film
while taking her long ride home.
Director
Jun Ichikawa tries to express the theme of isolation explicitly
by using just about four actors (including the narrator and
young Takitani), sets of muted colours and shots composed
on notions of nothingness. The actors also take turns to complete
the narrator’s sentences for him, probably because they
cannot stand his droning voice going on and on about their
lives. I guess this lyrical interaction is supposed to elevate
the movie into the realm of the metaphysical. This movie also
showcases great character acting by Rie Miyazawa’s painted
toenails and Issey Ogata’s forlorn eyebags. I guess
shots of the aforementioned body parts are meant to convey
a sense of remoteness and quiet contemplation as well.
All
in all, this movie is well-crafted and focused, but just like
the reed-thin figure of Rie Miyazawa and the brusque attempts
of Tony Takitani at forgetting, this movie cast no shadows
and ultimately leaves no lasting impression on the audience.
Movie
Rating:
(Much
as I would love to love this movie, please read the book instead)
Review
by Lim Mun Pong
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