sobota, grudnia 29, 2012
piątek, grudnia 21, 2012
Ren'ai Shashin
A renown photographer, man going by nom de plume Shizuru Satonaka, tells the story behind him adopting a woman's name.
They met a few years back, while Makoto Segawa (Matsuda Ryuhei) was still a student, aspiring to become a professional photographer. From the first sight, he fell for the eccentric Satonaka Shizuru (Hirosue Ryoko), a persona of some notoriety on the campus. She moves in with him and begins sharing his passion for photography. It soon becomes evident that she has an innate affinity for it - her imperfect amateur shots show and tell more than Makoto's technically sound, but cold and impersonal photographs. Makoto is jealous of her which leads to them breaking up when Shizuru receives an award in a photography competition they take part in together.
Three years later Makoto receives a letter from Shizuru. She's gone to New York where she continues to hone her skills as a photographer. Soon he learns of a rumour that Shizuru has been dead for some time now, killed by an unknown assailant. Faced with this contradictory pieces of information, he travels to NY himself to ascertain the truth. What are the chances he'll find a missing person in the 10 million crowd?
While the intrigue thickens in New York, the movie takes a slump there, with lackluster performances by some of the foreign cast, over the top finale and at least one serious plot hole - the movie would end quite a bit sooner if someone was able to put two and two together. The more toned down Japanese part is of a notch higher quality.
In a fashion typical for the director, serious themes are freely mixed with comedic scenes. On a few occasions, the director uses satellite image zoom-in shots that will feature heavily in his SPEC series. I don't remember seeing them in Tsutsumi's earlier works, they might originate here.
The performances from Matsuda and Hirosue are solid, minus Matsuda's narration in English, which gets tiresome sooner rather than later. The movie is composed as an account of the events described during an interview, hence Matsuda uses English, however there is no apparent reason why the interviewer couldn't be Japanese. It would make life easier for both the audience and Matsuda himself.
Interesting watch - an uneven movie, strangely refreshing due to nonconformist plot - a story sad in a brutal way, quite unlike the typical Japanese melodrama. And a proof that a nail that sticks out gets hammered down - considering the 2006 remake.
My point for this movie
If watching this movie left you with a feeling that you have seen it somewhere before, you might be right. The movie's script was novelised by Ichikawa Takuji in Renai Shashin: Mō Hitotsu no Monogatari. The novel was remade as a movie in 2006 and released under the title Tada, Kimi o Aishiteru. The movie, starring Tamaki Hiroshi and Miyazaki Aoi as respectively Makoto and Shizuru, is known as Heavenly Forest in the west. Apart from the names and a very general outline of the story, both movies share little common ground.
Although I assumed the movie's Japanese title is a reference to Ima, Ai ni Yukimasu, another novel by the author which had its successful movie adaptation in 2004, it reportedly comes from a verse in its theme song, Otsuka Ai's Ren'ai Shashin.
Now, if you google for "Renai Shashin", you will mostly get references to the song and a single link to imdb site of Tsutsumi's movie. There's something half-profound, half-ironic in seeing a derived work based on a derived work based on a derived work outshining the original.
środa, grudnia 19, 2012
Liar Game: Reborn
When a fresh graduate Shinomiya Yu (Tabe Mikako) recieves a box full of banknotes and a black envelope, we don’t need any further explanation. The Liar Game starts again. Along with her, the notorious swindler and psychology prodigy Akiyama Shinichi Matsuda Shota), now a university professor, is pulled into the game.
But hey, where is Kanzaki Nao?
After two seasons in TV and a movie, the eponymous game is back in Liar Game: Reborn. Once again we will witness how twenty or so players risk heavy debt in a game of complex rules, shifting alliances and backstabbing. The rules seem simple at first, but carry hidden implications - finding and exploiting them will allow an underdog to turn the tables and break out of a seemingly losing situation. And rest assured, the tables will turn more than once, this one aspect of Liar Game did not change. Yet this movie does not live up to its promise.
As much as I like Tabe Mikako, she's no Toda. With her gone, it's now clear how much did the show depend on her character. Shinomiya Yu was announced to be a different, more able person than the stupid-naive Kanzaki Nao. Yet it doesn't show - she's just as naive and when she finally appears to act out of her own initiative, it soon ends up in a train wreck, just the right situation for Akiyama to come in and save the day.
A similar case can be made for Makiko Esumi and Ashida Mana, who play Omega and Alice, the masterminds behind this Liar Game. Ashida's appearance was another hyped one - she featured prominently in the trailer and had a dedicated short spin-off drama before the movie. With that much publicity one could expect that they'll be taking a major role in the events of the movie together with a large chunk of the screen time, at the very least giving Yokoya from the series a run for his money. And how did it end up? They have a total of maybe four scenes and play no active role in the game. They might just as well not have been there.
And the rest of the cast? We have series regulars Fukunaga (Suzuki Kosuke) and "Gold Tooth" Tanimura (Watanabe Ikkei) - another pair of sideline commentators. On the bright side, among the players we'll see Hamada Mari reprising her role as Sakamaki Mai from The Final Stage and Koike Eiko in what probably was the most decent performance among the main cast.
The movie features only a single game, "Modified Musical Chairs" and at two hours time it feels drawn out in the middle and ending prematurely in the finale. It seems as if they have originally planned a second game and a different finale, but ended up having to revise the script and had trouble tying up the loose ends.
Is it a worthwhile watch? If you saw the earlier Liar Games and are hungry for more - go ahead, it is ultimately more of the same. A little under-cooked, but most of the ingredients are in place - the games, the mood, the music and most of the cast. Otherwise, you're better off watching - or rewatching - the series. In my eyes, The Final Stage was a satisfying closure. Reborn doesn't bring anything new to the table. It doesn't bode well for the future of the series.
Food for thought
I'm not familiar with the manga and to what extent the drama storyline stays true to it, so I'm basing what I'm about to write on a Liar Game Wiki post. In the manga, "Modified Musical Chairs" was the fourth round of the original Liar Game Tournament. It was held after the "Contraband Game", and had Akiyama and Kanzaki Nao competing against Yokoya and Funakoshi Eiichiro's cult leader character Fukunaga was the leader of extras instead of Ikeda Tetsuhiro's character.
While the producers might have had little choice but to replace Toda's character, there seems to be no apparent reason for keeping Fukunaga out of the game he originally appeared in. I am no less puzzled as to why Yokoya was replaced - he appears in at least one scene in the movie (it may only be a flashback though).
Looking at the game's resolution makes the fact that this game is recycled from the original series story-line most visible. While "Modified Musical Chairs" was replaced in the drama series, its resolution was adapted and used in one of the replacements. Now hearing almost the same lines spoken out for the second time makes it feel distinctly out of place to anyone familiar with the drama series. You simply can't make the same Grand Revelation twice.
What are your thoughts? Am I being needlessly critical here?