Improving on last year's poor performance of making just one single
screening at the Terracotta Far East Film Festival, I made it to a whopping two
of the various offerings this year. Seeing a Korean film last year, this year I
decided to complete the 'Holy Trinity' (not Browns, The Griffine and The Flying
Scotsman), by seeing one Japanese and one Hong Kong/China production.
Avoiding convention and putting second things first, the closing film
of the festival was 'Judge!' by debutant director Akira Nagai. Kiichiro, our undoubted
hero, is a hapless employee at a Japanese advertising agency. Loathed by the
majority of those he works with, the ad concepts he works on repeatedly fail to
impress and his future with the company is endlessly in doubt. With pressure from
a major client to fix the voting at an international
advertising grand prix, one of the agency chiefs decides to send Kiichiro the
California, knowing his failure will justify his desired dismissal. Finding
nothing but dishonesty and corruption (what?! in advertising?!) within the
judging, Kiichiro is left disillusioned with the industry he chose as a career
path.
But, this is a comedy, so everything works out well in the end...of
course.
Nagai and script writer Yoshimitsu Sawamoto both work as advertising
directors, with the vast majority of what happens claimed as being 'based on
true events.' But on watching 'Judge!', it's clear that both exaggeration and
artistic license are added to this reality. What this is is an enjoyable
mainstream romp of a film: there is nothing here to be taken seriously, despite
its attempts at moral messages, with a cast of big names and enough laughs
throughout.
Perhaps the film's failings are in that it is a film about advertising,
directed by an advertising director. Advertising relies on stereotypes and
exaggeration, with which this film is chock-full. National stereotypes are played
up, with manga-esque characters flirting with the farcical. But this isn't
meant to be anything more than it is - it has Yoshiyoshi Arakawa and Lily Franky
in it.
First things second, the other film viewed was poor-man's kung-fu
megastar Donnie Yen's 'Special ID'. This is very much standard Donnie Yen fayre
for me: a lot of action, little real need for plot and leaves you feeling
entertained, not deep in contemplative thought.
Playing an undercover policeman who has been written by someone who has
seen 'Infernal Affairs', Yen travels to the mainland from Hong Kong to track
down an old acquaintance and essentially bring him down. Cue some pretty impressive fight scenes (some
interesting mixed-martial arts action) and some nicely filmed action scenes and
you have your lot. Much like many action films you can watch these days, there
is a sense that you can feel desensitised to what you see before you. But,
every now and again, I do get the sense of having seen some well done stunt
work that does need some applauding. This has that: while not exactly
groundbreaking, it does deserve some recognition in parts. With Donnie Yen, you
get what you pay for.
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