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Be sure to check out my blog over at FlickChart, 'The Depths of Obscurity', where I delve into the most obscure sub-genres and decide which film reigns supreme.

Entries in 1998 (7)

Tuesday
Aug312010

Blues Harp

Release Year: 1998

Director: Takashi Miike

Review: A harmonica and the Yakuza, who knew Blues music and the Japanese mafia would work so well together.  We begin with Chuji(Hiroyuki Ikeuchi), a half Japanese, half black, bartender and part time drug dealer who is a gifted harmonica player.  He happens upon Kenji(Seiichi Tanabe), a badly wounded ambitious low ranking member of the yakuza, who he helps out. The two become friends, despite their loyalties to opposite gangs.  While Kenji takes aim for the top of the Yakuza family Chuji starts to pull his life together, but the two's friendship keep them tied to one another.

Director Takashi Miike has a wonderful sensibility which grounds his film.  He is able to infuse style without losing focus.  The rhythmic blues performance blend seamlessly into the violent mafia underworld.  The mood of the film is pitch perfect.  As much as Miike is a fantastic visual director, he never compromises the story.  He really mixes two  great narratives together.  At it's core it's a personal story about a young man trying to buck his troubled youth and move on into maturity, expressed beautifully through the use of music.  It's an odd medium since you normally don't associate blues with Japanese culture, but this only adds to the uniqueness of the story.  At the same time there is also the Yakuza arch which is fascinating in of itself. Rather than stock characters, Kenji isn't your prototypical mafia henchman, there is a humanity to him that lifts the story out of the ordinary mafia fodder.

The acting is great.  Ikeuchi commands the screen, bursting with charisma.  He manages to seamlessly jump from harmonica wielding blues player to a drug dealer running from the Yakuza all within the span of a scene.  Playing a perfect foil to his cool nature is Tokiko, played by Saori Sekino.  She is the overly bubbly girlfriend, who after their first date brings over a suitcase full of stuffed animals to decorate Chuji's apartment.  They are completely opposite, and yet have a great connection.  The film is full of these seemingly contrasting elements that none the less flow together. 

From beginning to end the film is a well paced, perfectly executed drama. There is the excitement of the Yakuza plot, and heart in the personal story of Chuji. The film is full of great little moments that cumulatively add up to something that's very solid. Two seemingly independent plot lines link together and combine perfectly to make this a great film.

Rating: 4/5

Saturday
Jul312010

Run Lola Run (Lola rennt)

Release Year: 1998

Director: Tom Tykwer

Review: Fast paced, frenetic and highly stylized, this Tom Tykwer gem mixes the feel of a music video with the potency of a feature film.  The plot, is straightforward.  Lola has 20 minutes to procure a large sum of money to save her boyfriend who has lost money for the mob.  This 'run' is actually repeated 3 times, with minor differences greatly effecting the outcome.


The theme of destiny, and our control over that destiny is brilliantly explored here.  Minor characters get flash forwards, detailing the outcomes of their lives.  These outcomes vary greatly just upon when Lola encounters them.  How much control over our fate do we have?  This is one of the many questions the film raises.  But as the title sequence states, its futile to ask these questions as it will only lead to more questions.  There is a brilliant scene in which, sometime in the past, Lola and her boyfriend are in bed asking these kind 'silly' questions to one another.  It accentuates the theme of free will vs. destiny as well as how fragile our life path is.  Is the person we end up with really the best person for us?  What if we never met them?  Again, more circular questions, which have no answers.



From start to finish, this film is an adrenaline rush.  With almost no time to catch your breath it keeps keeps you running along with Lola, intricately weaving its subtle twists along the way.  While the hyper-sylized feel of the film adds to the visual appeal, it often goes too far and is distracting.  It would have been a better film if it wasn't over stylized and focused more on the meat of the film rather than overdoing the effects.  All the same, it was a blast from start to finish, and beyond being an incredible fun film to watch it had a deeper message, which lasts far longer than any visual trick.
Rating: 4/5

Saturday
Jul172010

American History X

Release Year: 1998

Director: Tony Kaye

Review:  A lot can be conveyed with a movie.  Some films are content with pure 'mindless' entertainment, others with laughs, or just a nice story.  Films like 'American History X' are my favorite breed.  A film which makes you think.  One that's emotionally powerful and resonates to your core.  Director Tony Kaye manipulates your emotions and expectations as if they were clay to a sculptor.  Racial tensions and misconceptions are profoundly dealt with, evoking potent reactions.  To say this is a tense film is an understatement.



Beyond the profound handling of race relations and violence, it's a truly beautifully shot film.  The black and white intro is chilling and is a perfect lead in to the stark, gritty, story that is to follow.  The acting by Edward Norton is phenomenal.  The ranges his character hits are far spread, and without an absolutely resounding performance it would generate no emotional hook and the film would fall apart.  Norton is believable in every stage of his character and simply makes the movie.  The same can't be said by some of the supporting characters who come off as insincere, or forced.  Worst of all is Edward Furlong, who just seemed out of place in thhise role.  Fortunately, Norton was able to pick up the slack and then some.  Another issue aside from the acting is that there did seem to be a bit of the plot that was a little too on the nose, and I'm not sure it earned all of its emotional weight in every instance.  These are minor gripes, however.  It was a truly magnificent piece of filmmaking.
Rating: 4.5/5

Tuesday
Jul132010

License to Live (Ningen gĂ´kaku)

Release Year: 1998

Director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa

Review: Everything that Yutaka knew, everything that he held close was ripped away from him when he was 14 years old and was hit by a car putting him in a coma.  As he lay in a state of suspension, the world around him went on.  Wars were fought, championships were won and his family disintegrated.  When Yutaka(Hidetoshi Nishijima) suddenly awoke from his coma after 10 years, the 24 year old child found himself alone in a world that was completely changed.  There were no joyous cheers, or comforting hugs, only emptiness. it was if his recovery was only a burden.  The man who hit him visits him, but is only full of anger that he had ruined his life too on that day.   



The one companion he does have is Fujimori(Kôji Yakusho), his fathers old college friend who is currently staying at his old house.  But this relationship is a reluctant one.  Yutaka is essentially still a boy, having been denied the opportunity to mature over the last 10 years.  Fujimori is a bit of a recluse, and operates on the edge of the law.  He has no interest in caring for a child.  And yet he does.  He forces Yutaka into adulthood, at times literally dragging him to do certain things like visit a prostitute.  While its not the warmest family, it is all Yutaka has.  His childhood friends have all grown, and view him more as an oddity then a companion. Left completely alone, he is left to deal with his anger, immaturity and pain of losing his past.



Eventually his family members do come back to visit him, but they are no longer a family unit.  Each have gone their separate ways.  The family that Yutaka remembers is decimated.  While they still care for Yutaka, they have no interest in living in the past.  They don't want to reform the family, their pain is too deep.  While his family urges him to move on, and live his own life, Yutaka desperately clings to the past, trying to reassemble the life he knew before the incident.  Central to this plan is rebuilding the family dude ranch, which Yutaka obsesses over.  Unable to deal with the loss of his youth, he focuses on rebuilding what he can fix.  The only thing he can think to do is to rebuild the ranch and hope that his family comes around.  It is a desperate reach to try and regain his youth.



One of the themes that director Kiyoshi Kurosawa is known for is to have a protagonist obsessed with an eccentric project, completely blind to the absurdity of the endeavor, and usually at odds with the rest of society.  In 'Charisma' there was the special tree, in 'License to Kill' it is the ranch.  Yutaka clings to this idea of salvation.  He puts everything he has into it, not because it really matters, but because it is a diversion.  This connection, is realized wonderfully in an emotional, yet comical, climax.  It's not about the ranch, its about letting go, and his stubbornness or his fear to do this.



Another theme that is evident in the film is the process of aging, maturing, and the blurring of the line between adulthood and childhood.  Yutaka is essentially a boy that is forced to live in a mans world.  His friends are now adults far from the carefree days of their childhood when Yutaka last saw them.  They get to relive a bit of their youth when Yutaka shows up straight out of their childhood. However when they rob a comic book store like they did in their youth it no longer has the same joy.  They are adults now and the thrills of youth are in the past.



The idea of maturity isn't rooted in stone.  Maturity is generally associated with age and responsibility.  However, Kurosawa plays with this and shows that adults can be just as immature, scared and petty as the juvenile minded Yutaka.  When we are young we look up to adults as wiser and more mature than we are, but as we age we realize this is not always the case.  Yutaka gets this experience all at once.  His father doesn't want anything to do with him, or any part of responsibility at all, choosing to travel the world for a volunteer organization.  His sister is with a dim witted man, and both have no money or ambition, simply roaming about in their sports car.  The parents of one of Yutaka's friends squabbling over parental rights of their grown son, while he is fine being on his own.  Ironically Fukimori, the irresponsible low life who made it clear he had no intentions of ever being a father, is really the only one who shows maturity and at least attempts to look after Yutaka.  There are no reliable figures for Yutaka, he is forced to take care of himself, and this is what maturity is.



While dealing with many heavy themes there is a lightness and comical side to the film which makes it easily digestible.  Kôji Yakusho is a scene stealer, with his expressions alone conveying so much.  Not only is he the comical catalyst but he is the emotional center of the film.  It's not flawless and there are some moments which don't seem to add up, but its a very solid effort, and one which I'm enjoying more the longer I think back on it.  Its more a comedy than a drama, but it isn't afraid to throw down the emotional hammer from time to time.  There were times when I wished things were just a bit tighter as there were makings of a very powerful film.  All the same it is very effective in its delivery of complex emotional themes in a light weight candy coded capsule.
Rating: 3.5/5

Friday
Jun252010

Ever After

Release Year: 1998

Director: Andy Tennant

Review: 'Ever After' is a nice retelling of the classic Cinderella fairy tale, and works nicely as a romantic comedy.   Striping it of its fantasy and rooting it in a more realistic setting doesn't diminish its whimsey, the film certainly doesn't take itself too seriously.  Drew Barrymore actually plays the Cinderella role well, and is a perfect fit for the tone the movie sets.  Given the set up and actors involved, you'd expect a run of the mill, forgettable romantic comedy, but 'Ever After' manages to be interesting enough and smart enough to sneak into the realm of quality film making.
Rating: 3.5/5

Sunday
Jun282009

The Up Series

Release Year: 1964-2005
Review: A documentary following the lives of fourteen children from Britain coming from various walks of life in attempt to measure the impact of social class on their lives. The series starts introducing the kids at the age of seven, and revisits them every seven years for updates on their lives. The series is a fascinating, voyeuristic, view on how average people live, work and age. It is engrossing to be able to watch the lives of these people unfold. Expectations from the childhood are either realized or go tragically awry. The every day struggles that face everyone, such as the struggle to find steady work, marriage problems, and raising a family are all explored in the film simply by taking a look into these people's lives. The 'Up Series' is an important documentary which sheds light on human growth, the impact of class background and a slew of other human behavioral issues. Besides its importance, the documentary is also sheer entertainment. Once you watch one you will want to watch the entire series out of curiosity. The participants are all unique and interesting in their own way, its hard not to have a favorite. This is a monumental documentary and should be required viewing as so much can be learned about life from it.
Rating: 5/5

Sunday
Jul272008

Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels

 


Release Year:
1998
Review: Very similar in style and feel to Guy Ritchies Snatch. The movie is a fast paced joy, full of dark humor and twisted fate. Its a good watch and Id recommend it to anyone who can stomach the graphic violence.
Rating: 4/5