Showing posts with label Japanese movie review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japanese movie review. Show all posts

Saturday, July 20, 2019

In-Flight Film Time: Miko Girl 巫女っちゃけん。(2018) Japanese

Alice Hirose, Taiki Yamaguchi, Megumi, Naoko Iijima, Lily Franky

Movie rating: 8/10     Neck score: A

This might not have been the best pick to watch on a plane. I'm not sure Japanese movies are in general. Well, certain genres, which this fits into, are not the best. They tend to be quiet and slow paced. Because of the noise of the plane, I really couldn't hear what they said half the time. I knew they said something though, because I had the subtitles, so at least I still knew what was going on. But I really could only hear people when they were upset and shouting, and then it was too loud because I kept turning it up trying to hear the tone of their voices as they said something. But, I liked the movie well enough in spite of that. I would have preferred to watch it without all the background noise that made it hard to hear though.

It is about a reluctant shine maiden who got into the business because her father is the chief priest. The shine is also losing money, and somehow her blase attitude makes her a scapegoat. She is constantly being "tutored" by the other maidens and priests which comes off a bit as bullying because of her dissatisfaction in her life in general. She is looking for a new job so she can quit working at the shrine, but she is blase about life in general and doesn't really have any dreams or ambition apart from getting away from the shrine. Then she finds a kid who is clearly lost/a runaway and she ends up caring for him as she is forced to take care of him.

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Harakiri 切腹 (1962) Japanese

Tatsuya Nakadai, Shima Iwashita, Akira Ishihama, Yoshio Inaba

Movie rating: 9/10     Neck score: A

My little brother really wanted to show me this movie, because it was one that he loved, but there are only a few people who he knew who would actually be interested in it. I was one of them, especially since it takes place in the period of Japanese history that I wrote my senior thesis on, so it was extra interesting to me, so I loved it. However, I can see why people might not love it, because if you aren't familiar with the history, it's slow pace and lengthy talking sequences might bore you.

Basically, it is about the Tokugawa period, when the extended period of peace threw off the class structure when all the sudden the warlords lost power to the shogun, leaving hundreds to thousands of samurai without jobs and stable incomes. Because of the class structure they weren't able to get manual labor jobs and were forced to scrap for a living. This show starts when a ronin (or jobless samurai) shows up on a lord's estate asking if he could use their courtyard to perform seppuku (aka harakiri) or ritual suicide where they cut their stomachs open horizontally, then vertically, and then they will have their head cut off by their second. This leads to the revelation of a popular scam of ronin coming to manors and asking for this favor in the hopes of showing their determination and either scoring a job or some money, which is a tricky balance of honor. Should the manor call bluff? Should they honor the request? Or should they potentially be scammed?

The movie is a lot of storytelling, both visually as well as through all the talking, and through the slow unfolding of the story, you get to see multiple sides of the tale, and realize things are not what they seem. It is a commentary on honor, appearances, and the social structure of society in that period. It can also comment on the periods following.

There are some very intense scenes, including some with fighting, made more intense when your trivia knowing brother tells you that it was shot using real swords that were sharp even. The tension is palpable. But besides the few scenes of physical action, the mental action during all the talking is also tense, as each reveal leaves you with some awe, as well as anticipation as to how the story will unfold when you start to connect the dots and realize that there is way more than meets the eye. It was basically some dang good writing, good action, good acting. I loved it.