Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Kazuya Ogawa - Interview - Yubari 2011


Focusing on the people and side-stepping the politics Pink Subaru is a warm breeze of a movie that whisks you through its whimsical story. Set in an Arab Israeli town on the border to Palestine, it brings a very human element to an area we normally only view through the eye of news broadcasts. The film, like its cast, is a diverse melting pot of influences: A Japanese director, Italian Producers, Palestinian writers. It is this spirit of internationalism that lets the film break free of the shackles of its geography.

Director Kazuya Ogawa, originally from Japan、lived in New York for five years and is now based in Italy. Film in Japan had a chat with him about his first feature, his collaboration with Akram Tillawi, and filming in Taibei, on the Israel/Palestine border.


FIJ -So I’ve just got out of the screening of Pink and I completely forgot where we are, in Northern Hokkaido in snowy Yubari! I was expecting the warmth of the middle east.

KO-It’s the complete opposite.

FIJ -Could you describe Pink Subaru to me

KO - It’s a story about human drama, but human drama with a melting pot element. The story is very simple: it’s just a guy who is saving money for twenty years, and finally bought the luxurious Subaru legacy. It was his dream, but the next day it got stolen, and he went to find it…that’s it.

FIJ -When I was reading about the film, I thought it sounded like a very unique project. How did you get involved in it?

KO - So I was in Italy , I met a guy, Akram Tillawi who is the main character. We made a lot of projects together, he is a theatrical actor and director. We worked together and it was a very nice atmosphere between me and him. His wife is Italian, Gilliana Martini, and she is an opera singer. He did the theatre and I did the visuals, collaborating together. We also did a lot of school projects, teaching kids how to act or how to make a film, in Italy.

Finally, he invited me to go to Palestine, well not exactly Palestine, it’s Taibei on the borderline. The culture is completely Arab, but it’s on the border, so they have Palestinian passports. And, he invited me just for fun as a tourist, and so I went.

On the first day, first night, I heard a big explosion….Boom!...But! It was fireworks for a wedding. Afterwards I heard a lot of explosions, but they were always wedding fireworks; the sound of happiness. I never heard a bomb, but I heard the sound of happiness. This atmosphere, I want to bring it.

At the same time, I saw a lot of Subarus on the street. Everyone was looking at me because there are no Japanese, no Asians. I made a joke, “Don’t look at me! I am normal, there are a lot Japanese everywhere! I’m not special”

Then one guy, a friend of Akram Tillawi, told me the story of how Subaru became so popular in Israel and Palestine. At the time in the 70s when Israel was growing up. They needed transportation but there was nothing. And the car is transportation for private needs. Honda, Toyota a lot of companies tried to export cars to the region but they couldn’t because they were working and doing business with Arab countries, if they transport,It’s going to be bad for them. But Subaru, only Subaru, didn’t, and they began exporting. Most of the cars were Subaru’s, and a little bit Volkswagen, but almost 80-90% was Subaru at that time

FIJ -Even now today when you walk around Israel you still see Subarus?

KO - In Israel it’s about 50% now, but in Palestine it’s still about 80-90%. It’s because, they stole the car from Israel or bought it over there. But, things are a bit behind in Palestine, it’s like the ‘70s. Its why Palestine still has a lot of Subarus still.

So this feeling, the sound of happiness, and the Subaru story it's getting together. Me and Akram went back to Italy, and started developing the story. I made about twenty pages of the synopsis. We started developing this, and screenwriting. It took about one year and a half finally. Before screenwriting was finished I made a presentation to the Italian producers, his name is Mario Miyakawa. The primary production is Italy, and secondarily Japan, about 80-20. Mario liked the idea, and we started developing, and so on.

FIJ -When we see a film from this region it normally deals in the problems of the area. It was so nice to see a film just about real life, was that important to you?

KO - Very, very important. The first thing I decided, me and Akram, No Politics! Of course why there are Subaru’s is politics, behind the story is the politics, but we’re not going to show it. We’ve already seen enough. Sometimes…me, I’m not Palestinian, or Israeli, the people from outside try to analyze the problems, and this makes problems, because, it is very difficult to understand all the situations inside Palestine. This land has had wars for thousand and thousands of years. For them, war is just kind of there, it didn’t start two years ago. It’s a very, very beautiful country there; the food is fine, like the Mediterranean, the sun is great, the buildings. The people are very nice, very Latin feeling.

FIJ -You really captured the area, everything was bright and colorful. I felt like I could sort of see what life was like there. How long did you stay shooting there on location?

KO - Shooting was twenty-one days, and I was there for four months, total.

FIJ -How did you communicate with the actors? Did you use English?

KO - Most of them, Israelis speak English very well. Arabs mostly speak English well, sometimes a little hard to communicate, though. But my first assistant director he speaks Hebrew, Arabic, English, and Italian, because his wife is Italian also. He said Kazuya I want to speak Japanese, too. I thought perfect! I can call you to work in Japan, too. I speak Italian and English. English is better for me, but when I speak Italian I can bring more of my feelings. It’s the sound, so sometimes I communicated with him in Italian, when I couldn’t find the correct nuance in English, and that was perfect.

FIJ -How did you choose the cast, how did you find them?

KO - We met at auditions, I met two hundred actors and actresses. When Akram Tillawi was young he was in a school called Nissan Nativ, a famous acting school in Tel Aviv. I think the oldest one. So, he has a lot of connections between the school, and we met a lot of people from there. Michal Yanai who is very famous in Israel, the character from the Subaru dealer. She is very, very famous because she was on an Israel educational program so everyone knows her. After she quit this program there were a lot of scandals, drugs, sex, the complete opposite!

Dan Toren, who is the sushi chef, is also very famous, fifteen years ago he released an album which was a massive hit in Israel. Everybody knows it, but for the fifteen years since no hits! He’s a really nice guy.

FIJ -How did you find out about the underworld in the film? We see a sub-culture of car thieves, how did you research this?

KO - This came from the people in the village of Taibei. I was always in Taibei, for example, the nephew is really a thief. In the film lots of thieves helped us, catering for example. Or ex-theives, should I say. I didn’t need to research it was always there. Adel, the thief in the film, we shot in his house. He built this house with money from thieving.

FIJ -So did this film have a lot of real life in it?

KO - Yeah, at the beginning when they are having the party I tried to make them really party, they were really eating, drinking, cooking etc. The bars, there are a lot of bars in Taibei, everyone thinks Muslims are not really drinkers, but there are six bars in Taibei. We shot the scenes in them. The border between Israel and Palestine, we tried to do this in a documentary style. This is real life, I really liked the atmosphere there, it’s really comfortable. We were shooting, and taking photos there, and everybody says “come come come, drink tea”. It was always so quiet there.

FIJ -Were there any challenges of shooting on location?

KO - The market of Tourca, this a place where there are sometimes things like bombing, about twice a month. At that time there was no problem, but we brought a lot of crew and if something happened it would be a massive problem.Akram found a guy who takes care of everything, police, politics, crime, shops, everything. We’ve got him so it was fine. If somebody tries to bomb he can get the information.

FIJ -The making of the film is as interesting as the film itself! Pink Subaru told a story of a group of people of different nationalities coming together. How was this reflected in working with the cast?

KO - That was very difficult. Maybe that was the most difficult thing for the film, Palestinian, Israeli, Japanese, and Italian altogether. The good thing about the Japanese, always we can be a bridge between them. We don’t have strong religious ideas, we’re kind of neutral. Palestinians like the Japanese because we are very serious people. The serious aspect of our personality, Arabs really like, and Israeli people like the technology of Japan, for us everything is fine. But, four nationalities together is difficult. That is also the film itself, it is really kind of a miracle we made this film!

FIJ -A real melting pot like you said. You’ve lived in Italy, and your producer told me you’d lived in New York. How has that affected you as a director?

KO - Maybe because of that I made this film, itself. For me, of course, I’m not speaking perfect English, or perfect Italian but communication is more important. How to communicate, not how to speak a language; this is what I’ve learned in Italy and the United States. So maybe this idea makes it easier for me to gather people and direct them.

FIJ -The music of the film was very well chosen, Que Sara Sara in Japanese at the start, did you choose it all?

KO - I chose all the music. Que Sara Sara and the last song, Subaru I’d already deceided before making the film. Subaru was going to be at the start but in the end it was switched.I wanted to use the original version, with an orchestra but the version I used was just piano. A bit too much nostalgic maybe, but I really wanted to use an orchestra, boom boom chau chau chau like that! But the musician said, “I like this film you can use my song but not the original” It’s a very famous song. I don’t know why, but maybe he changed the record company, or maybe he just didn’t want me to use it, anyway it was a pity, because the original is better.

FIJ -You used Israeli music, and Palestinian music as well? Is that right?

KO - Palestinian music, no, it was Tunisian music, but, Israeli, yes. I used two Israeli songs, by Amil, a friend of Akram. Also, he played for me a song which I used.

FIJ -Last couple of questions, visually there were some nice touches. When he was driving to the Subaru place it felt like he was going to heaven almost. What kind of ideas did you have about the film visually?

KO - Like you said to me before, I tried to make a lot of dynamism, to show hope, happiness. This is why always tried to get the colour of some flowers in the frame. I tried not to get too many close-ups in the film, but when I did a close-up I did it very close. The face of the people over there is very strong, so when I used close-ups it was to express a moment that needed something like this. Akram, as Elzobel the main character, I never showed his face clearly before the car was stolen. When it got stolen, I showed the close-up. It’s okay people don’t realize, but intentionally I wanted people to realize the very strong feeling.

FIJ -Do you have any projects for the future? Do you want to stay working in the area, or tackle something new?

KO - I want to do something in Iceland, because Iceland is very similar to Japan; it’s an island, very homogenous, spring water, a lot of similarities. There is one thing very different, in Japan now the birthrate is decreasing, but Iceland is the highest in Europe, and this is the opposite. I want to make a bridge between these two things, I don’t know the story yet, but I really want to do it.

Pink Subaru is on limited release in Japan from April 16th this year. See it in Shibuya's Uplink Cinema.

Contents

Reviews

Ajeossi - Jeong Beom-Lee

Akunin - Sang Il Lee

Autumn Adagio - Tsuki Inoue

The Borrowers - Hiromasa Yonebashi

Battle Royale 3D - Kinji Fukusaku

Dooman River - Zhang Lu

The Dreamer - Riri Riza

Kim Kkot-bi Interview - Yubari 2011

Kim Kkot-Bi first came to international attention with her role in Jealousy Is My Middle Name, which won awards at the Rotterdam festival in the early noughties. She has since been in the acclaimed Breathless by Yank Ik-Joon. She arrived at Yubari with two very different films to promote: Ashamed, a sensual lesbian love story, in which she stars as a pick-pocket who falls in love with with Hyo-Jin Kim's Youn after fate drags them together, and, Be My Guest, a violent, black comedy revenge film. Film in Japan caught up with her at the bottom of the Yubari ski slopes.


FIJ - How are you enjoying Yubari?

KK - As I expected it's snowing, such a beautiful city.

FIJ - Are you going to do any skiing or snowboarding?

KK - I'm not good at skiing, I can't ski, maybe I'll try sledding.

FIJ - So let's talk a bit about yourself, how did you get into acting?

KK - Actually, I began to act when I was about ten years old. I was very young, a kid. I began with the stage at the first. I began to act in films when I was fifteen years old.

FIJ - What was the first film you made?

KK - It was Jealousy is my Middle Name, it won the prize in Rotterdam in 2002, maybe 2006, 2003? I forget.

FIJ - I've seen the two films you were in here, Ashamed and Be My Guest. Let's start with Ashamed, could you explain the story to us?

KK - Ashamed is a story about girls, it's all about girls. It's a story of growing up, and about the love between girls. It's not only about the love between girls, but the sympathy, their lives, and maturing. Various stories are in it as a whole.

FIJ - Your co-star Hyo-Jin Kim are at the centre of the film. What was it like working with Hyo-Jin Kim?

KK - It was a really great experience. Before I met her, I didn't know she was such a great person, I don't mean to say I'd never heard of her but I didn't know that, and during working with her it was just great, I admire her a lot.

FIH - You two had such a natural chemistry, was it like that straight away, or did you get to know each other and it developed?

KK - In acting? Yeah we did some rehearsals before shooting...and we are not, err....we are not really...lesbians! So we needed to find out about this kind of love. We watched some lesbian films and TV shows.

FIJ - For example?

KK - L Word and stuff. Anyway, eventually we found it wasn't working, we weren't really focused on lesbian relations, more on individual characters. Also, it's not so different from straight relationships. I acted , as if I loved someone, not specially a woman. I treated it the same as any straight relationship and I think that was a good choice and it works

FIJ - Yeah, The love scenes were really passionate was that difficult to do, was it a challenge?
KK - [laughter] At first, it was a challenge. In the first place, before I joined this film. yeah, I was a bit nervous about the love scenes because I'd never done any before. So it was kind of a challenge for me, of course. I was over-thinking, worrying about it, but after I made up my mind, I'd decided. Actually, the lesbian scenes weren't too hard, but in the film I do a scene with a boy as well, with a guy it was harder. With a girl it was more natural.

FIJ - The two characters are quite different, one is a dreamer, and the other is more down earth. Which one are you more like yourself?

KK - Myself? It's quite a complicated question. I don't know, basically, I think that everyone has every side inside them. I think i have a bit of all the characters inside me. I have a dreamer, and a bit more serious side. I think my performance came from inside, from my feelings.

FIJ - What was your favourite scene from the film?

KK - In acting the last scene when I was crawling in the mud, that was very hard. But, just before that, when I leave Youn [Hyo-Jin Kim] and I hear her shouting, and I run and scream, that point was very strong for me. I'm a little bit sad that we couldn't catch the strength of that moment when we were shooting, it's a bit of a shame. That moment was the strongest moment during shooting, and the most memorable.

FIJ - That bit at the end, where there is that distance between you two, and you're running but your character isn't moving. How did you film that?

KK - It was very very difficult to shoot, I was running on a machine, so we combined them with a blue screen. During the shooting my heel broke, I fell and nearly injured myself pretty bad. It was difficult, hard, and also dangerous! What did you think about that scene, isn't it awkward?

FIJ -It's a nice image, it makes it clear there's this distance between you.

KK - I don't know, I felt the audience can see that the audience can see that I'm running on a running machine. I was worried about that.

FIJ - I guess because it's the only part of the film where you do that, where there's that camera trickery, it just adds a bit of emphasis.

KK - Ah, No, also where there is that gravity-free shot!

FIJ - Oh yeah! Please tell us?

KK - It was also difficult! I was acting with a wire, wire action! When I read the script first, I thought oh! Maybe I could experience a gravity-free zone, but no it was wires.

FIJ - Was it fun?

KK - No! Not at all. I had to pretend I was so happy to fly, but on wires I was [demonstrates]upside down to express the wind. To smile it was so difficult, I didn't feel happy but I had to act like I was. It was physically difficult, it took hours.

FIJ - In the temple, you had to bow 3000 times, could you explain to a foreign audience what that's about?

KK - In Buddhism when someone desires something strongly they bow to Buddha 3000 times. when you wish for something desperately,

FIJ - Ah, I see. I couldn't work out whether it was an apology, or you were praying for something.

KK - Oh, It can also be an apology, it's a punishment, and a purification. It relieves stress, bad feelings, and sins. It's about forgiveness, all our feelings are encapsulated in this.

FIJ - So let's move onto Be My Guest, could you tell us a little bit about that?

KK - It's more about societal issues, that's the message of the film. In Korea we have non-contracted workers, and the film is about a worker like this. He is fired after a year and he decides to get his revenge on the CEO of the company, and his family. He follows them on their way to their family trip. He doesn't kill them but he punishes them by bits of their body off: ear, arm, legs, etc. The CEO represents conservatism. When you try your best there is nothing impossible he thinks. So he asks, did you try your best? No. Because if you tried your best you would have been Okay So the fired employee is very upset, and teases the family, showing them you can try hard but it is not always possible.

FIJ - It's quite a violent film? In one scene you had your head cut off. How did you feel watching that?

KK - Actually, it was very funny! Who can experience that i thought? My head was cut off!

FIJ - So Ashamed is a more serious film, whereas Be My Guest is a dark comedy. With films as dissimilar as these, is there a different atmosphere on set?


KK - Well, the genre does influence the atmosphere. But, I think it depends more on the director, the staff, other actors, and things. The atmosphere isn't really influenced that much by the genre.

FIJ - How were the two directors' styles different?

KK - Kim See Hyun was more sensitive, more into the feelings, and gave the actors more freedom. Park su yung was more organised, more controlling.

FIJ - Which kind of style is better for you?

KK - For me, definitely Ashamed, I have more personal influence on the role? It's more my real ability.

FIJ - I wanted to ask for western audiences, We have this image of Korean films being very violent, OldBoy for example. With Ashamed we got to see a different side, what is Korean cinema about for you?

KK - For me, every culture has every kind of film there is. In Korea there are more extreme films, commercial films, and in between there are independent films. The same as anywhere in the world. I don't really see the differences so much.

FIJ - I guess so, it's just the films that tend to break through in the west are these extreme revenge movies. So, how do you choose films to work on?

KK - The main thing is the script. Although, sometimes I can choose without a script, if the director is great. If Kim Tae-Un asked me to work with him, I'd do it without looking at the script, and Yang Ik-Joon, too.

FIJ - So what is about those two that makes you want to work with them?

KK - Yang Ik-Joon I worked with him before on Breathless. It was a very good experience for me. He is a really nice person, and also a good director. I trust him, so I can work with him in good faith. Kim Tae-Yun is also a really nice person, and he makes really good movies.

FIJ - What Korean films could you recommend?

KK - Obviously Breathless. As I'm an actress, I want to recommend my films! My first film Jealousy is my Middle-Name. Also, my first film as an actress was a musical film, Ghost Theatre. Also any film by Kim Tae-Yun.

FIJ - Do you have any future projects line up?

KK - I have several projects coming up, that are perhaps a bit more challenging. I'm doing a self-video, it's going to be a documentary, I'm recording my experiences at this festival, too. I'm working with a video artist called Adrian Wong. He's very talented, I'm going to film with him. It's going to some experimental film festivals, galleries. It's going to be in London, maybe in the Tate.
The Japanese release dates for Ashamed and Be My Guest are still TBA but both films are will probably be on limited release in the upcoming months.


Friday, February 18, 2011

Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World - 2011 - YUBARI Japan Premiere



Director - Edgar Wright


Rating: 4/5








In a recent interview Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, regular contributors to Edgar Wright, discussed the differing approaches between theirs and Wright's recent projects. Pegg and Frost with Paul went the route of compromise, prepared to make adjustments and play down the more niche-appeal qualities (i.e creationism debate), Wright with Scott Pilgrim went full steam ahead on the film he had envisioned, studio money bursting at the seams. One has since become a massive box-office flop, any guesses? If only there was a way to measure the number of torrents downloaded, perhaps it would paint a different picture, but alas, to many, the commercial line appears to be the bottom line in success. The film is saturated with post-modern referencing, swapping cinema structure for that of computer games, and splices it all with the comic-book origins it is adapted from. Not for everyone perhaps, but this is nothing if not astoundingly unique.

Scott Pilgrim - twenty-something video games geek, bass guitarist for battle of the bands contender Sex Bob-omb, and serial girlf-friend dumper(perceivably a mirror onto the target demographic) - lives in Toronto and is dating a high-school girl, Knives. However, after having his head turned in a chance meeting with Ramona, his true destiny, he begins a surreal adventure to win her heart. The only problem being that she has a past, a past that wants to beat the crap out of him. They come in the form of The Seven Deadly Ex'es, scorned lovers from Ramona's omantic back catalogue. Can Scott make his way through them all, without becoming the eighth member, and still be standing at the end? Thankfully, he seems to be blessed with the fighting powers of his video-gaming heroes, unfortunately so do the seven.

The ex'es that Scott must battle are where the film plugs into the world of computer-games. This is less three acts than seven levels. Each of the duels has a different vibe, ranging from Bollywood, 2D fighting games, The Matrix , to a CGI sound-wave monster vs. dragon. They use the video-game "beat-em up" genre mechanic as a starting point, and anyone with even a passing knowledge will see little references flying at them, left, right, and centre. Wright, however, said that the film takes its structure more directly from musicals, the songs and dances are simply substituted with fights.

When the pixelated Universal globe spins into frame at the start and its classic orchestral opening is done with sketchy eight-bit synth sounds, the film's modus operandus is established. From here to the end, almost every frame is decorated with some sort of retro flourish. Be it the music from old Zelda games introducing Scott Pilgrim as it once did a pint-size Gameboy character, ideas being signified by the kerching of Super-Mario grabbing a coin, or fights ending with a KO and points total flashing up on screen, there are a wealth of nudges and winks here. Apparently, Wright procured the use of the classic Nintendo sounds by writing a letter arguing that they essentially constituted his generation's nursery rhymes. If all of this sounds overwhelming, it never feels excessive, and really helps to posit the picture in this universe of straddled influences.

Despite everything going on, the film gets its feet from the pitch-perfect Michael Cera. Having watched him go from George-Michael Bluth in Arrested Development, to the split-personality of Youth in Revolt, all the while constantly refining his screen-persona, it is a treat to see him turn this into a comic-book hero, and in a strange way feels like the natural conclusion for this uber-geek.

Tropical Thunder claimed that going "semi-retard" was a sure way for an actor to target Oscar glory, well it appears that there is new rule to add to that tradition; if your career is flat-lining, play a snappy, wise-cracking gay man. Val Kilmer did it in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, and Keiran Culkin does it superbly here. He is brilliant, stealing every scene he is in, and every girl's boyfriend he meets. Gideon, the leader of The League of Ex'es, is played by Jason Schwartzman which surely makes him and Cera the most unlikely super-hero/super-villain pairing in cinema history. Schwartzman channels the angst he has into making Gideon a dislikable, but very watchable nemesis. The dialogue is punchy throughout without falling into over-hipness. There are some great tongue in cheek one-liners as well, "I cashed my last rain cheque."

The criticism leveled at this film is that if this is aimed at you then you're going to love it, but, If you don't have any basis in the cultural landscape being used here then it's going to zoom over your head. There is nothing exclusionary going on here, like Tarantino's Kill Bill, it is not post-modern for post-modern's sake, beneath all the layers this is just a really fun movie. Admittedly, it is a little on the shallow side, but it's not supposed to be anything more. The saddest thing about the commercial malaise here, is that when given the keys to the studio's cheque book, if there's not a sizable return on the investment you won't get them back for awhile. Before Wright can attempt anything on this frenziedly ambitious scale again we might find that he has to prove himself once more.


Sunday, February 6, 2011

Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival 2011


2011.2.24 (Thursday) - 2011.2.27 (Sunday)


The Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival (YIFF) celebrated its 20th anniversary last year and rather than resting on its laurels has decided to make its third decade count. It aims to broaden its appeal without losing what has made it such a distinct festival. The line-up this year has something for all tastes, ranging from the mainstream to film geek fodder. A wide selection of Japanese films, some of the festival big-hitters from around the world, a handful of intriguing Korean films, and some short films in the mix, too, have this looking like a vintage year. Film in Japan will be there every step of the way, with tweets, photos, reviews, and interviews.

The films break down into four sections -


  • Invited films: featuring the pick of the crop from this years international festival circuit.
  • The Off Theatre Competition: 9 films whittled down from over 347 entrants, personally selected by Yubari, will vie for the 2 million yen prize (about 24,000$).
  • The Forecast: A selection of 18 exciting and innovative films from film-makers to look out for in the future.
  • Yubari Choice: An array of Japanese and international films that offer locals a chance to catch films that would never be screened outside of Tokyo otherwise.
There are also events and discussions with film-makers throughout the festival.



Yubari has adopted a new philosophy to take it forwards, Yubarism. YIFF has always had a certain uniqueness being situated in a snowy, isolated mountain town on a ski resort in Japan's northern-most island, Hokkaido. The town is all about film, movie posters of yesteryear adorn the streets of the city and the festival is a massive part of the communities' identity. The central idea is to have a festival with fewer barriers between film-makers and film lovers, working at its own pace. Unlike the VIP treatment of most film events Yubari aims to make everything accessible, even the opening and closing parties are open to the public. Throughout the festival social events are held, like outdoor stone oven parties, fostering a far more intimate festival experience.Hence the term Yubarism, a mixture of the towns name, Yubari and rhythm.


However, it has not been plain sailing for the festival in recent years. In 2007 the event was cancelled for the first time since it began. The financial woes of the town brought proceedings to a halt. The festival, along with all other local government projects, was cut. Thankfully, the citizens of the town rescued it from the brink and now, it is run as a private enterprise with the help of commercial sponsorship. YIFF has had to adapt to circumstance and there has been a noticeable scaling down.The international prize, which saw film-makers of the caliber of the Coen brothers and Tarantino in Yubari, has had to make way. Tarantino, out here for Reservoir Dogs, managed to get Pulp Fiction written while locked away in his room at the events HQ, Hotel Shuparo. In 2004 he even gave the town its own trivia point, naming Kill Bill's psycho school-girl Gogo Yubari after the town.

The result is that Yubari works presently, as an opportunity for homegrown talent to get some much deserved recognition and credit.Yubari more than ever has found its place as a vantage point for new talent to make their mark on the Japanese industry. Among recent winners was Tsuki Inoue, who Film in Japan interviewed in Fukuoka last year, using the prize money to make her most recent work, Autumn Adagio.


Here are Film in Japan's picks of this years offerings:

I Saw The Devil

Korean revenge thriller from Ji-Woon Kim, of Bittersweet Life and The Good, The Bad, and The Weird fame. Tautly paced, shockingly violent, and terrifically acted by two powerhouses of Korean cinema, Min-Sik Choi, and Byung-Hun Lee.




Ashamed

What with all the revenge films and extreme violence in contemporary Korean cinema, you would be excused for thinking there was anything else. Three women dissect the relationship of Youn, a life model, and her ex-lover Kang, a pick- pocket.



Pink Subaru

To buy a car is the ultimate goal of sushi chef Elzobar, who works in Tel Aviv. Having realized his dream, in the form of a black Subaru, it is promptly stolen. His friends, family, and community begin the hunt for the stolen car.


Hell Driver

A splatter zombie film, with Romero-esque social commentary from Japanese gore maestro Nishimura, best known for Tokyo Gore Police. Filmed in Hokkaido, this is Yubari's local produce.





Polar Circle Presents: Unknown Creatures

An omnibus of Japanese short films that attempts to explore the boundaries of cinema, looking at humanity through unknown creatures. It could be very interesting.




Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World

Post-modernism is ramped up to the max in this adaptation of an indie graphic novel with a video-game structure. Michael Cera stars as Scott Pilgrim, 21st century super-hero.




Of Gods and Men

Winner of the Palme D'Or at last years Cannes festival, the story of the kidnapping of monks in Algeria in 1996 has attracted plaudits all over the world.




Boku to Tsuma no 1778 Monogatari - 1,778 Stories of Me and My Wife - 2011



Director - Mamoru Hoshi



Rating - 2/5


Mixing surreal elements with the tearjerker formula, this ends up less than the sum of its parts.

Weepy movies based on true stories have the prerequisite of being sad, and this is in bucketloads. What marks this out from other films that demand a box of kleenex on hand, are the main character's short stories and their surreal visualization. However, confines of the genre ensure, though there are some nice ideas, the melodrama is cranked up to 11.


Sakutaro or "Saku" is a head in the clouds creative type, who is obsessed with robots that look straight out of 1950’s TV serializations. He writes odd fiction for a sci-fi periodical, and lives with his high-school sweetheart and wife Seiko, who acts more like his mother than his partner. When they receive the tragic news that Seiko has contracted terminal cancer Saku embarks on a mission to write a short story for her every day . He hopes that giving her something to smile about will help her fight back against the cancer. The film follows the two, and his writing, as her condition gradually worsens.


Japanese popster and TV celebrity Tsuyoshi Kusanagi as Saku is hard to warm to. Attempting to work the charming eccentric angle he comes off, largely, as irritating. There is this childlike quality to him that is unnerving. Seiko, Yuko Takeuchi (The Ring) is generally just the foil to her wacky husband. She does handle Seiko's decline in health convincingly, but the couple's dynamic is hit and miss. There is an excess of soap opera acting going on; in close-up someone will smile to themselves, give an exaggerated look of determination, or have a eureka moment and grin up at the sky. Someone involved was reading too much "acting for dummies". The two both have quality when allowed to perform, this much is clear. An argument between the two suddenly snaps a painful sense of realness to the screen, yet these brief moments are decidedly in the minority. Ren Osugi puts in a shift as the hospital doctor who deals with the couple and is, as always, very good.


The short stories link in meaningfully with the real-world, working sometimes as allegories for the plot. They have a nice quirkiness about them, if a little on the insubstantial side. Saku lying on his back in a park stares upwards as the clouds begin to transform into spaceships and the local buildings turn into lumbering robots. One about a group of old androids being run out of their artic world by the flashy new models stands out. These moments are interestingly done and work nicely, and the shots of sci-fi memorabilia cluttered around Saku's house establish a tangible link between this fantasy world and reality. Ironically though, it is the cold close-ups of the black blots on Seiko's cancer scanse that are the most arresting and alien images.


1778 really starts hammering on the tear ducts in the last 45 minutes. Needless to say there were not many dry eyes in the screening I attended. In fact from about the 90 minute mark there was a perpetual background sob, and only those as cold as ice will remain totally resolute to the credits. Yet, this is one of the fundamental issues with the film, it is so relentlessly sad that it becomes exhausting to watch. Not helping is the fact that it's on the flabby side as well. The third act particularly, goes on for an age. There are a few unexpected turns but, unavoidably there is an inevitability with that number 1778 looming over the film. A bit more conciseness and subtlety would have been a massive improvement.


The basic premise reminded me a bit of Michel Gondry’s The Science of Sleep, which in turn made me wonder what kind of film this could have been. Whilst it is impossible to remain unmoved by the melodrama, there is a clinical nature to its tear jerking that feels emotionally manipulative. It is quite sad really when you think that films have the ability to make an inherently decent, and true story come across as sentimentalized and gushy. The originality of the parallel world in Saku’s stories is not enough to save this from mediocrity.


Thursday, February 3, 2011

Akmareul Boatda - I Saw the Devil - 2011 YUBARI Japan Premiere



Director - Ji-Woon Kim



Rating - 4/5





Whenever a film starts with inoffensive background music on a quiet, dark, snowy road, alarm bells start ringing in your head. Especially, when said film is Korean, where the revenge flick is a refined art form. I Saw the Devil, misogynistic maybe, grotesque definitely, is pulsating, unrelentingly absorbing, heart in the mouth cinema from the off.

A young woman is waiting on the side of the road for a pick-up truck, on the phone to her fiancee, special agent Kim Soo Hyeoon, played by Byung-Hun Lee. Kyun-Chul passes by and offers her assistance with the flat tyre, which she politely declines. As she sits waiting, with the wind screen-wipers occasionally breaking the ominous silence, he comes back with a hammer to get her. He takes her to his underground kill-room where he proceeds with his ritual. The next day a young boy stumbles across a dismembered ear and informs the police. Kim, takes two weeks off work, starting his own vigilante mission, equipped with four photos of suspects. Having ruled out the first two, after beating them to a pulp, he finds his man and begins to exact his revenge. That old adage, to catch a criminal you have to think like one, is taken one step further as Kim decides to achieve, "a real complete revenge" you have to be 10,000 times as sadistic and cruel. Having forced Kyun-Chul to swallow a GPS tracker Kim hunts his prey, bringing him to the point of death, only to set him free to and start all over again.


At the heart of this film are the two immensely physical performances from Byung-Hun Lee (A Bittersweet Life) and Min-Sik Choi (Old Boy) as Kyun-Chul. Byung-Hun Lee is magnificent, controlled and brutal. The metamorphosis he undergoes from vengeful hero to morally gray psychopath is thoroughly believable. After catching Kyun-Chul and suffocating him until he loses consciousness there is a quasi-post-coital moment as he relishes in the relief. The pent-up rage of Kim is contrasted by the terrifying buck-shot performance of Choi. After Old Boy Choi comes to any film with baggage, and the moment his face looms up to the car window there is clearly only one direction this is heading. Choi gives Kyun-Chul the survival instincts of a trapped rat. In one incredible scene in a moving taxi he unleashes a stupendously bloody outburst, all the time the camera is revolving around the action. It is quite mind-boggling in its own right before you start to wonder just how Kim managed to shoot it. Choi is seethingly aggressive throughout, in one scene in a doctor's office the violence that emanates from him is heavy in the air. In his unbreaking glare there is a venom that sits just behind his eyes, it is emotionally draining just to watch. Kim begins to lose control and the two become flip-sides to the same coin, as the boundaries between good and evil are seriously muddied.


There are no lapses in pace so to speak, but the film sequentially snaps into action as the two leads lumber up for another round. These moments are laced with a tension and intensity other films struggle to get near to. When Kim interrupts Kyun-Chul mid-kill in the greenhouse it is a tour-de-force, visually stunning and blisteringly violent. It seems almost the norm for Choi to have seven bells beaten out of him on screen, but he is really put through the grinder here in scene after scene of unflinching, savage attacks. These battles are electrifying and push the film ever onwards, eyes glued to the screen you can't avert your gaze.

Ji-Woon Kim's previous work skips from genre to genre, horror, neo-noir, and what has been termed the Kim-Chi Western, however, he gives every film a unique sleekness that it is instantly recognizable.The film lurks in the darkness, neon-lights fizzing in the background, ominous red lamps dotted about. So engaging is the film that the darkly comic moments that turn up every so often jolt you briefly out of your trance; A knife handle slips off, a door-bell rings mid kill.There are some nice visual touches, too; Kyun-Chul lying on his back in the hotel staring up at the stuffed deer's head as a reminder of his predicament, or after having had the back of his head smashed in, waking up in a tunnel with light beaming through at the end of it. The illuminated angel wings that are attached to the rear-view mirror are particularly creepy.


When you compare this to the artistically bankrupt output of Hollywood, in the genre, Hostel for example, you realize what a thin line must be tread in order for a picture like this to refrain from degenerating into mere torture porn. Well directed, cerebral, and stylish, this is not one for the ultra-violence Asian movie ghetto. It is the product of a film-maker in complete control of his medium. Kim, in defence of his actions asks, "Do you know how it feels to have a huge rock in your chest?" For 2 hours, I did.