Tuesday, 26 July 2016
Sunday, 24 July 2016
SABUTube Part IV - Drive
'Drive' (not the Ryan Gosling one)is SABU's fifth film, coming two
years after his most accomplished film up to that point, 'Monday'. With his
first two films, 'Dangan Ranna' and 'Postman Blues', being full of ideas, yet
inconsistent in execution, does 'Drive' show a director more in control of his
films' final delivery?
A salaryman, parked in his car, minding his own business - apart from eyeing-up
the piece of totty with the umbrella - suddenly has three bank robbers jump
into his car and demand that he follow a fourth robber in another car. What
follows is a comedy moment with the criminals demanding their driver speeds up
to catch the car in front, though they picked the wrong car.
Asakura is a man that sticks to the rules, having never stepped out of
line in his life. Shots of traffic lights turning red and road signs for speed
limits flash on screen to show the cause of passengers' anger, as Asakura
follows them by the book. Having now lost the car they were pursuing, the three
insist Asakura keeps driving as they have now taken him hostage.
Following an amusing moment culminating in a biro to the neck, the four
flee the scene, and it's from this point onwards that things get a little
bizarre. Arai, Susumu Terajima's Buddhist monk, winds up on stage with a punk
band, spouting scriptures to the band's music to a young crowd. This is a very
odd scene, feeling very clunky, with Terajima's words just not feeling natural
as they come out.
Arai now a filly-fledged member of the band, the remaining trio get
back in the car, stopping for food at Asakura's aunt's, before Masanobu Ando's
young Makato has car sex with his girlfriend before getting talent spotted with
some baseball batting, in what can only be described as an Aston Villa-esque
rash decision from the scout.
And then there were two, but not for long: Ren Osugi's Nishi taking his
sick daughter home from hospital. Asakura then finds the fourth bank robber
they had previously chased, lying on the floor after having got his arm stuck
in the ground, having hallucinations throughout the film as he tries to break
free. A bizarre fight scene with a samurai ghost, Asakura then returns the
money to the bank from which it was originally stolen, minus his expenses for
its return, of course.
As you can tell, there are lots of unusual scenes in this film,
throwing in strange and rushed conclusions for each character along the way. Again,
there are some good ideas on display here, but again they maybe don't
completely cohesively work together when trying to make a coherent film. The
use of cutaways and flashbacks works well here in building the characters'
stories, but things just don't feel as well thought out. 'Drive' is another
interesting film from SABU, though a slightly bumpy journey.
So, courtesy of Rare Movies on YouTube, I have now seen four of SABU's first five films - his third film, 'Unlucky Monkey', of course getting a Region 2, English subtitled DVD release, and thus cannot be considered rare. So, I am now fully educated as to his earlier works, almost. So what of them?
Well, there is no doubt that SABU is a writer and director of
interesting ideas, looking at the struggle of the everyday man. I would almost
say there is some Kafkaesque satire of modern society, if I really felt I had
the authority to describe something as 'Kafkaesque'. Man's motivations are
explored, with Shinichi Tsutsumi often cast as the everyman fighting against forces beyond his control.
Though in each film, all the characters have the opportunities to make better
of their lives or avoid the situations that befall them before tragedy sets in:
perhaps SABU's biggest satire of all.
Though these strong ideas are not always fully polished and well-formed
in their execution. 'Monday', probably the strongest of his early films is the
best made, though there is a feeling that any of these films could go in any
direction at any moment.
It would be fair to say that this is quite a 'raw' period in SABU's
filmmaking career, therefore. Having not seen any of his subsequent films, I
cannot confirm if this trend continues. But as Trevor Nelson said of Dr Dre's
production - or well to paraphrase something I've made up he said - when it
becomes too polished, it loses some of its fun.
SABU's early films are quite wild and all over the place; often clunky,
sometimes almost cringe-worthy in the direction they take. But, they are no doubt
interesting, thought-provoking and always with a nice sense of humour. We are
none of us perfect.
Sampling is Fun 7
Two decades of summer...plus one...
Summer jam '75...
サマージャム'95...
Spread on your bread...
Summer jam '75...
サマージャム'95...
Summer jam '16...
Spread on your bread...
Sunday, 17 July 2016
SABUTube Part III - Postman Blues
SABU's second film perhaps doesn't learn from some of the naivety of
his debut. 'Dangan Ranna' starts off with an interesting premise, though as the
film gets towards its conclusion, it starts to fall off. Like 'Monday' coming
after it, the idea is a satire of modern life, though by 'Monday', SABU had
matured into a more rounded filmmaker, whereas with this 1997 effort, there
were still some areas that required some work.
Sawaki is a postman, hence the title, bored of his life and his role as
society's servant. Working late, he unwittingly stumbles across his former
classmate, now yakuza, Noguchi as he performs that age-old yakuza ritual to
atone for his errors. Noguchi tells Sawaki of how his yakuza lifestyle gives
him daily excitement, which Sawaki has long since lost. Taking heed of
Noguchi's words, Sawaki then drinks himself into a drunken stupor, tearing up
undelivered letters, stealing any money he finds and reading people's most
personal letters. Though unbeknownst to him, Noguchi snuck a brick of naughty
powder into his postman bag, causing the police to follow him, believing him to
be a drug runner. It's from this point that Sawaki's life gets a little daily
excitement back in it.
The first half an hour is relatively dark with brief moments of
laughter, creating the negative portrait of Sawaki's life and the role of the
postman in society. It's all very bleak. Though when the police become
involved, with their over-the-top and unfounded suspicions regarding his dull
life, the film has a more mainstream feel, part-love story, part foolish
comedy. It's here, much like 'Dangan Ranna', with the introduction of further
characters that the film starts to become a little confused and, at times, a
little silly.
I always find that the funniest films are those that are largely
serious, though throw in light moments here and there to show that they're not
taking themselves too seriously. 'Dangan Ranna' and 'Monday' are successful in
being humorous in this way. Though in 'Postman Blues' there are more deliberate
attempts to be funny, and as a result, the film is less funny overall, in the
way that Kitano's 'Hana-bi' is more humorous than his comedy 'Getting Any?'
'Postman Blues', therefore, isn't quite as charming as SABU's other
early efforts, though it clearly tries to be. His love interest in cancer
patient, Sayoko, has moments, but also feels a bit clichéd with musical
montages. The bumbling police and their over-imagination as to Sawaki's life,
are a satire of modern society's jumping to conclusions without any evidence, though
perhaps become a little too much, as criminologists are brought in to suggest
sexual perversions and a possible history of murder. Their actions then start
to become inexplicable towards the end.
Perhaps I'm being a little down on 'Postman Blues' though. Again, this
is a film based on good ideas to explore, with moments of sadness about how the
modern world works, as well as the odd funny moment and references to 'Leon'
and 'Chungking Express'. 'Postman Blues' shows a filmmaker with ideas galore,
though maybe needing a little more tightening in certain areas. From what I've
seen of his subsequent works, lucky SABU is a director that can deliver.
Wednesday, 13 July 2016
Evisbeats - Vietnam
Absolutely, bomb-tittingly loving this at the moment...
...place in your fuzzbox.
...place in your fuzzbox.
Sunday, 10 July 2016
SABUTube Part II - Dangan Ranna
SABU's debut feature 'Dangan Ranna', or 'Non-Stop' depending on your
preference, is a bit of a mixed bag. A film about running, this is both slow
and fast, violent yet humorous, some parts good, some parts bad.
Ironman Tomorowo Taguchi plays Yasuda, an inept man in work, romance
and society in general. Annoyed at the world, he gets himself a gun and plans
to rob a bank. And this is where the small stabs of humour arise. Forgetting to
get himself a mask to cover his face for the job, he jumps into a convenience
store to get one. But with thievery on his mind, he decides to try and steal
one, and the alert clerk picks up on the would-be thief. A stand-off ensues,
with Yasuda firing his weapon and escaping the resulting melee.
Yasuda then runs, pursued by the clerk, whom is then introduced to us
as failed musician and drug addict, Aizawa in the form of flashbacks. Troubled
by a yakuza hassling him for money and high on smack, he runs after Yasuda.
Neither looking to stop anytime soon, we follow their running through the
streets, passing Aizawa's yakuza agitator, Takeda. Also troubled by the recent
murders of his boss and 'aniki', Takeda follows the chase in pursuit of Aizawa.
What then follows is three men running, with seemingly no stopping likely.
SABU chooses to break up the running with flashbacks of the trio's
lives, showing this is not a film about what the three are running after, but
running from. All are troubled, and the endless running is their escape from
their daily lives, acting as therapy as they mull over their problems. Seriousness
though is mixed with humour, with the three all having sexual fantasies about a
random woman they run passed, a free promotion acting as a marathon-style
drinks break and running over Tokyo's Rainbow Bridge, only to run back over it
in the opposite direction.
As the film develops, however, more characters are brought in. A yakuza
war develops as a subplot and a group of four bored policeman exchange dialogue
about their favourite guns. It's the introduction of a wider story where the
film gets a little lost and confused in trying to build toward the conclusion. And
that's maybe the film's problem: While a nice set-up with the reasoning for the
three men running from life, how to bring it to an end is difficult, with the
film's alternate title 'Non-Stop' maybe wishful thinking for SABU.
This could have been kept as a short, ending with the characters simply
running and running. But obviously as this is a feature, some sort of conclusion
is required. This may be where some naivety for a debut director comes in, but
the film's end is not a total disaster.
A strong idea, with a good balance of humour thrown in where necessary, this is filmmaking for the fun of it. Released two years before Germany's 'Run Lola Run' - a film also short and undecided on its conclusion - it shows SABU is a filmmaker with lots of interesting and playful ideas to work with, though as a then novice, maybe this idea just ran out of a little steam.
Thursday, 7 July 2016
SABUTube Part I - Monday
I hate streaming. 'Netflix n bollocks,' as far as I'm concerned. I want
to watch things on a proper screen, without any buffering, loading or nonsense;
tilting your bloody laptop screen to get an angle that makes darker scenes momentarily
visible. But without distributers releasing films that I actually want to see,
either at cinemas or on DVD/Blu Ray, I do have to seek things out online.
Typically, my YouTube feed is bad Japanese hip hop, bad Japanese
football and worryingly bad 'vlogs' of Japanese men putting Coca-Cola (actual
Coca-Cola) up their nose in their bedroom. But every now and then I'll get a
suggestion - that isn't 'just kill yourself now!' - a suggestion to watch
slightly grainy versions of full length Japanese films from yesteryear, with
English subtitles.
Typically, it goes against my principles - I'm Jeremy Corbyn, me - to
watch things for free online, knowing that these are made by lowly directors
working with small budgets, putting a lot in for little reward. But sometimes
there just isn't any other way of seeing them: These are films that are close
to two decades old, would have received little attention on original release,
and now serve only for film nerds like me to hark on about when filmmaking was
more raw.
Recently, the 'Rare Movies' YouTube page has been offered to me in the
form 'recommendations' of 'Monday (2000) full movie english subtitles',
'Postman Blues (1997) Eng Subtitles' and 'Drive (2002) eng subtitles'. All of
these 'rare movies' have the pleasure of having been written and directed by
none-other-than Tanaka Hiroyuki: the man known as SABU. You remember SABU, he
was the ex-cop-turned-yakuza-bodyguard in 'Ichi the Killer'. He also directs
his own movies, rare movies apparently.
So, given that I was being offered the opportunity to see his
hard-to-come-by films for free (excluding monthly broadband costs, electricity
bills and buying a laptop), I decided to make my way through his early
offerings offered in slightly dodgy form.
Being that it was the first day of the working week, I started with...
Takagi is your everyday (especially on Mondays) Japanese salaryman. Yet
on this particular Monday, instead of heading to the start of the working week,
he finds himself waking in a strange hotel room at the conclusion of a manic
weekend. But there's one problem: he has no idea how he got there. Going
through his personal artefacts, he gradually starts to piece together the story
of what happened.
Starting off at a funeral where he inadvertently causes the corpse to
explode, he then alienates himself from his girlfriend with some strange
behaviour, before ending up at the wrong bar. Alcohol soon proves to be his
downfall with each additional drink seeing his situation grow worse and worse.
Turning on the television, he sees the reality of what happened to him, finding
himself the centre of attention with no way out.
'Monday' is a stylish film, with good camerawork for some tasty angles, but is laced with humour throughout, particularly Tsutsumi Shinichi's dance scene as the drunken Takagi descends into drunken madness. Jaunty editing blurs the line between sophistication and stupidity nicely. This is a satire towards the film's conclusion, questioning the right to murder, hold a gun, but most importantly, the right to use being drunk as an excuse - one I am particularly fond of.
There are some clunky moments throughout the film. The speed of the
descent, the slow-acting police at the film's conclusion; though these do add
to the sense of surreal humour in the film, in a slow-paced, distinctly
Japanese brand of cinema, where unbelievable scenarios are met with a very everyday
sense of disbelief.
Tsutsumi Shinichi - often the lead in early SABU films - gives a
charming performance as Takagi, who goes through every emotion going on his
weekend rollercoaster, with cameos from everybody's favourite supporting actors
in Japanese cinema, Susumu Terajima, Ren Osugi and the beautifully named
Tomorowo Taguchi.
Drinking like there's no tomorrow will only lead you to not like what
the morning will bring, and this is what SABU explores in 'Monday'. Stylish and
satirical, this is one Monday you won't not like.
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