Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Eiga Sai 2012: A Delightful Feast of Japanese Cinema (published in Manila Bulletin, Aug.20, 2012)


If the only Japanese film you have seen all your life is the horror classic The Ring, or worse, you have not seen any Japanese film at all, then you don’t know what you’ve been missing.

The Japan Foundation holds the annual Japanese Film Festival (Eiga Sai) in Manila, Davao City, and Cebu City. This year, Eiga Sai opened last month at the Shangri- la Cineplex to the delight of a wide audience of cineastes and viewers.

The festival featured 10 critically-acclaimed Japanese films that showcase the diversity and originality of Japanese cinema today.
 
 

For some years now, I have been a faithful and active participant in this annual cinematic feast. And since then, I have seen a growing interest in Japanese cinema among the more discriminating class of Filipino audience. Just last year, crowds of viewers packed the Shangri-la cinema during the special screening of the Oscar-winning Japanese film Departures.

Cultural heritage

There is something about Japanese cinema that sets it apart from the mainstream Hollywood films we have all been accustomed to. For one thing, it draws its material mainly from their rich cultural heritage and by so doing promotes social, cultural, and moral values that are universal in scope but uniquely Japanese in approach.

In the historical film Abacus and Sword, for instance, family honor and tradition are values that are so eloquently portrayed in the house of the Inoyama family. Born into a family of bookkeepers who consider the abacus as the family’s lifeblood, young Naoyuki painfully learns the value of upholding the craft his family fought so hard to preserve and inculcate in the next generation. What you will find interesting in this film, as in most Japanese films, is the fact that there are no stereotypical characters. No villains. No heroes. Just plain human beings with strengths and weaknesses we all can identify with.


 
Labor of love

A passion for work is another trait that I admire in the Japanese people. In the movie Railways, Hajime is a 50-year old executive of an electronics company who quits his job and returns to his hometown to pursue his childhood dream- to drive the local Ichibata Railways. For him, there is no such thing as a small job. He devotes himself completely to his work as a train conductor and driver, personally attending to the needs of every passenger on the train. Again, the conflict does not directly come from the anti-heroes, but from a series of unfortunate circumstances.

Rebirth

The theme of rebirth also resonates in most Japanese films I have seen, particularly in In His Chart and Tomorrow’s Joe, in which one person’s death leads to another person’s rebirth and redemption.

Based on the novel by Natsukawa Sosuke, In His Chart tells the story of a young doctor Ichito who begins to question the profession he has chosen upon seeing his patients suffer and succumb to their deaths one by one. Later, he meets Azumi, a cancer patient who opens his eyes to a new and higher calling. Of all the films in the festival, this one will certainly tug at your heartstrings especially in the last part where Ichito reads Azumi’s letter.

A hands-down personal favorite is Tomorrow’s Joe, an adaptation of the popular boxing manga “Ashita no Joe” by Takamori Asao and Chiba Tetsuya. Set in the late 1960s, it chronicles the life of a delinquent living in the slums and finding hope and purpose in boxing. While in prison, he meets professional fighter Rikiishi and vows to challenge him in what could be the film’s most powerful moments, emotionally and visually. This film proves that, in life as well as in the ring, it’s not over till it’s over.
 

Comedy of Errors

Of course, it’s a myth that Japanese movies are always serious. This year, Eiga Sai provides great laughs with Happy Flight, a comedy about a commercial aircraft bound for Honolulu, and all the interesting people in it – from the co-pilot to the first-time cabin attendant. What began as a peaceful flight suddenly becomes chaos in the air when the plane hits a bird by accident, resulting in a reversal of fate for everyone on board. Of course, airplane comedies of this kind have been done before, such as the Airplane series, but it’s more than just a comedy of errors. It’s a comedy with a heart that brings out the best in us in times of crisis.
 
 

Art and Life

I have yet to see the other five movies in the festival’s line-up, but I am already overwhelmed by what I saw: the technical artistry, poignant narratives, and brilliant performances woven together to create masterful pieces of cinematic tapestry.

Indeed, the long queues of viewers who graced every screening during the festival's first run at Shangri-la Mall clearly represent a voice crying out for more high-quality films that bring art to life, and life to art. This is exactly what every film in Eiga Sai does—all in quintessential Japanese style.

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