Thursday, September 5, 2013

Japanese Films at the BFI London Film Festival 2013

The 57th BFI London Film Festival is running from Wednesday 09th October to Sunday 20th October, a mere week after the end of the Raindance Film Festival. The London Film Festival programme was and the Japanese selection is rather good. The big news for me is that Sion Sono's latest film, Why Don't You Play in Hell? has been selected to play! Other entries include Yuya Ishii's Great Passage and Hirokazu Koreeda's Like Father, Like Son. The latter was probably the most obvious choie for inclusion but it's great to see Ishii getting noticed.



Here are the films (click on the titles for more info like dates and times):




JAPANESE TITLE:WHY DON'T YOU PLAY IN HELL?



ROMAJI: JIGOKU DE NAZE WARUI WHY DON'T YOU PLAY IN HELL?



RUNNING TIME: 126 mins



DIRECTOR: Sion Sono



WRITER: Sion Sono (Screenplay),



STARRING: Jun Kunimura, Shinichi Tsutsumi, Fumi Nikaido, Tomochika, Hiroki Hasegawa, Kotou Lorena, Gen Hoshino, Tak Sakaguchi



Why Don't You Play in Hell? is coming to the UK? OHMYGOD! YES! SONOOOOOO is here and the day is won. So does this prove that if I cry loud enough and often enough about something, some big festival will pick it up? Because I postedversions of the trailer before it was screened at and then and finally London. I'm a Sion Sono fan and while I may not be the most eloquent, handsome or talented, I at least try to keep track of what he's doing and covering his titles so it's gratifying to see that in the year of release I get to see it and on the big screen.I get to see the blood slide on screen!



He has had a short run of issue films. The critically laudedandare serious dramas that look at the after-effects of theand radiation in Japan. Now he's back making entertainment films like and , films that play with cinematic techniques, genre tropes, the audience and are bloody fun. The festival page has this descriptive line: "ingenious slice of high-octane insanity that is both a fresh take on the yakuza film and an affectionate tribute to the death of celluloid." It forgot to mention the blood slide and the fact it's probably God-tier entertainment as other reviewers have noted. Check out 's coverage of the critical reaction from the Venice Film Festival for more. Let's go!



Muto (Kunimura) and Ikegami (Tsutsumi) are rival gangsters who despise each other especially since Muto's wife Shizue (Tomochika) butchered a boss in Ikegami's gang. She gets sent to prison and jeopardises her daughter's acting career. Ten years later and days before Shizue is due to be released, Muto is desperate to make his daughter a big-screen star and recruits Koji (Hoshino), a timid passer-by who is mistaken for being a film director.



When dealing with gangsters you don't mess about so Koji gets a cinephile friend named Hirata (Hasegawa) who dreams of being a movie director and has a ragtag film crew named The Fuck Bombers. Hirata seizes his chance and loses his mind as he casts Mitsuko in a fictional gang war but it soon goes wrong when it turns real.JAPANESE TITLE:



ROMAJI: SOSHITE CHICHI NI NARU



RUNNING TIME: 120 mins.



DIRECTOR: Hirokazu Koreeda



WRITER: Hirokazu Koreeda (Screenplay)



STARRING: Masaharu Fukuyama, Machiko Ono, Yoko Maki, Jun Fubuki, Keita Ninomiya, Lily Franky, Jun Kunimura, Kiki Kirin, Isao Natsuyagi



Hirokazu Koreeda's Like Father Like Sonand was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival in September and it's here in the UK in the month of its Japanese release. Awesome. Koreeda is a director I picked up on after watching After Life on BBC Four back in 200and something. I taped it on VHS and it's hidden away. Anyway, when I say Koreeda is a great filmmaker I mean it. I know I'm prone to bouts of hyperbole in reviews but watch After Life, Still Walking, and Nobody Knows and you'll agree. I'm pretty excited at the prospect of seeing a film of his on the big screen. The film stars Masaharu Fukuyama (Suspect X), Machiko Ono (Eureka, The Floating Castle), Yoko Maki (, The Grudge), Lily Franky (Afro Tanaka), Jun Fubuki (, Rebirth) Kirin Kiki (Kiseki) and Jun Kunimura (Outrage, ) and Isao Natsuyagi (, Warm Water Under a Red Bridge).



Successful architect Ryota (Fukuyama) and his wife Midori (Ono) have a happy family life with their six-year-old son Keita (Nonomiya) but a phone call from the hospital informing them of the fact that their child was mixed up with another at birth shatters their happiness. Their birth-son Ryusei has been raised by a poorer but more easy-going family run by Yudai (Franky) and Yukari (Maki) Saiki. Ryota and Midori must decide whether to hand over the son they have carefully raised for the last six years and take back their biological son or not.



JAPANESE TITLE:



ROMAJI: FUNE WO AMU



RUNNING TIME: 133 mins.



DIRECTOR: Yuya Ishii



WRITER: Shion Miura (Original Novel), Kensaku Watanabe (Screenplay),



STARRING: Ryuhei Matsuda, Aoi Miyazaki, Joe Odagiri, Haru Kuroki, Misako Watanabe, Kumiko Aso, Shingo Tsurumi, Chizuru Ikewaki, Hiroko Isayama, Kaouru Kobayashi, Go Kato, Kaoru Yachigusa, Ryu Morioka, Shohei Uno, Kazuki Namioka



This is a surprise entry since it hasn't appeared at any other major festivals but from what the film offers it totally fits in with the festival. I'm a fan of Yuya Ishii based onand this looks like more of the same, namely a film full of smart observations and intellectual humour and warmth for its characters. It has a cast list which is full of stars: Ryuhei Matsuda (), Aoi Miyazaki (Eureka), Joe Odagiri (, ), Haru Kuroki (), Kumiko Aso (, License to Live), Kazuki Namioka (), Chizuru Ikewaki (Josee, the Tiger and the Fish, The Cat Returns) and Shohei Uno (The Drudgery Train).



The eminent critic Tony Rayns describes this as "entertainment on a Dickensian scale, crammed with interesting characters and amusing details. Ishii delivers!" I said I wanted to see this when I placed it in a trailer post and I'm going to watch this at the festival.



Mitsuya Majime (Matsuda) is has the talent to comprehend different languages and is the most important member of the editorial team of a dictionary but he struggles to tell Kaguya Hayashi (Miyazaki), a cook and the granddaughter o the owner of Majime's boarding home, how he feels about her.



JAPANESE TITLE:



ROMAJI: SAYONARA KEIKOKU



RUNNING TIME: 117 mins.



DIRECTOR: Tatsushi Omori



WRITER: Shuichi Yoshida (Novel), Tatsushi Omori (Screenplay)



STARRING: Yoko Maki, Shima Onishi, Nao Omori, Arata, Hirofumi Arai, Anne Suzuki, Jyo Hyuga



This was another film I said I wanted to see. It was released on a (two of which I'll see at Raindance) but thisThis is a drama! The trailer screams it out loud. It comes from a novel by Shuichi Yoshida, the man who wrote and It is directed by Tatsushi Omori, brother of the actor Nao Omori () who stars n this. Tony Rayns describes it as a "superbly acted mystery turns on female empowerment and male guilt."



In a valley dense with trees a baby is killed and it's mother, Satomi Tachibana (Suzuki) is the primes suspect. As the police are investigating the murder they are informed that Satomi is romantically involved with her next door neighbour Shunsuke Ozaki (Onishi) by Shunsuke's lover Kanako (Maki). Magazine reporter Watanabe (Omori) digs into the case and discovers that Kanako was the victim of a rape 15 years ago and Ozaki was involved in the case SHORT FILM COLLECTIONS:



This is described as exploring Juxtapositions, interpretations, interpolations, modulations. The films are all about how form and content "merge to create natural forms from dots, make substance from absence, speed up natural processes, make the abstract concrete, play with observation, challenge perception and - ultimately - vanish."



Sounds groovy. The Japanese entry is called BETWEEN REGULARITY AND IRREGULARITY and it is directed by Masahiro Tsutani and it lasts eight minutes.



This is a collection of eight short films examining "an assortment of expressions of affection, from first love to unrequited love to unconditional love. With additional heartbreak, lust and resentment thrown in for good measure." The Japanese entry is



KICK-HEART



DIRECTOR: Masaaki Yuasa



RUNNING TIME: 13 mins



The Japanese entry is Kick Heart by Masaaki Yuasa (Mind Game, The Tatami Galaxy) and animated by Production I.G (Patlabor, Ghost in the Shell). This was because it was successfully funded by the public via Kickstarter, a first for an anime title since the traditional route is to use corporate investors.



Romeo is a successful pro-wrestler. Juliet is a nun who lives a secret double-life as a female pro-wrestler. Romeo's secret is that he enjoys taking a beating in the ring, while Juliet feels invigorated when facing her opponents as a wrestler. When the two meet in the ring, the fireworks fly.



There will also be by the highly regarded film rebel Stom Sogo.
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