Summer vacation has emptied a Japanese boys' school of all but three boys: the junior Norio & the seniors Kazuhiko & Naoto. They have no families to return to for the summer, so they spend t... Read allSummer vacation has emptied a Japanese boys' school of all but three boys: the junior Norio & the seniors Kazuhiko & Naoto. They have no families to return to for the summer, so they spend their days in the empty school. A darkness hangs over the three however: the suicide, three... Read allSummer vacation has emptied a Japanese boys' school of all but three boys: the junior Norio & the seniors Kazuhiko & Naoto. They have no families to return to for the summer, so they spend their days in the empty school. A darkness hangs over the three however: the suicide, three months earlier, of classmate Yu. Norio blames Kazuhiko for Yu's death, because it was wel... Read all
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It looks as though there is no DVD of this film available but at the moment used copies of the VHS are available starting at 2 bucks on amazon... and you you and YOU should get one!
I have to add more lines: I got mine!
It's not quite that simple, though -- for us. The narrative is set up so that each section is a dream sequence of the section that came before it -- like a Japanese Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie without the black humor. It's a boy's school, but the majority of the four boys is played by girls (probably to accentuate the homoerotic subtext of the film). And for some reason that remains obscure, it's set in 1999, with the students using weirdly anachronistic tech gadgets that would almost seem amusing if the film had any room for humor.
When a boy, Yu, commits suicide, their small group never quite gets over it. But when a boy named Kaoru -- the virtual image of Yu -- appears at their doorstep as a new student, no one's certain if it's a sham or some fantastic coincidence. He's certainly more aggressive than meek Kaoru, and his presence awakens romantic stirrings in the boys that will lead to conflict and even violence.
The setting is pretty, the photography is pretty -- even the boys (rather, girls) are pretty. They talk about feelings and deep emotional things that are off-territory even for most girls. It's not surprising that somehow the film itself comes off as false.
Since then i've payed close attention to the japanese academy awards, Juzo Itami(and his death),,being in college and having suicidal ideation made it all the more comforting in that one particular director. Minbo&Tampopo along with Taxing woman.This lead to Qiu Ju, Raise the red lantern and Ju dou, all by director Zhang Yimou. Lastly was Why has the Bodhi-Dharma left for the east, by korean director Bai Young-Kyun.
I owe it all to the memorable visual eye candy and myself coming out and coming of age, as to the reason that i love this film. Also for the fact that seeing it for the second time was like the first time. Seeing it with my aunti who was an avid film freak, not keeping in touch with her so thinking that i would never see it again. Then to just come upon it one day in a required fine arts assignment in college. The task was to see all the films of all the film series, run by both the fine arts dept and the language and cultural depts. Seeing animations from the eastern block countries of a political nature and then the high art surrealistic movies of 1970's germany, and various films that reminded me of Baraka.Reintroductions to Maya Arden. All this inspiration from one source.
I love film, but hollywood 90+ percent of the time missed the mark. Sure a few good scenes here followed by some good lines there with lots of advertising savvy to get you there in the first place. Though if you want good movies that get you to think outside of your comfort zone,the whole world is out there. Hollywood movies and their formulaic approach is like apple sauce for the aged when they have teeth.
The yearnings of a group of schoolboys for one another at a palatial but deserted house where they attend summer school one particularly fetid year suspended somewhere between the past and the future, could be called homoerotic were it not for the obvious fact that the boys are all played by girls. The usual Japanese obsessions with unrequited passion and suicide are filtered in against the backdrop of the mysterious house and grounds. But nothing is resolved, except perhaps the suspicion that it is all only a dream.
Yuriko Nakamura's lovely piano music accompanied by Hajime Mizoguchi's cello contribute to the altogether captivating and haunting atmosphere. I only rate it above average because it doesn't amount to much more than a pretty curio. But a curio that lingers in the memory long after (more than a decade after) I first saw it.
Did you know
- TriviaAll the boys in this film were played by girls.