A Far Shore

  • Japon Tói tokoro (plus)
Bande-annonce

Résumés(1)

An unadorned perspective on impoverished life in Okinawa, an island in southern Japan whose modern history was tainted by the bloody battle for the Pacific. 17-year-old Aoi works as a nightclub hostess in order to earn rent money and to provide for her little boy. She also supports her lazy husband Masaya, who has no qualms about giving her a few slaps, particularly after he loses his job. What chance does this young family have to scrape their way out of the social mire, where they were driven by poverty and the imprudence of youth? How dark does reality have to get before it stifles the rays of hope that filter through? An intimate story that presents a less glitzy picture of Japan than is customary, demonstrating that social inequality impacts all corners of the globe. (Karlovy Vary International Film Festival)

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Critiques (2)

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claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Ce film m'a semblé tout droit sortir d'un précis sur la façon de construire un film naturaliste. Grâce à lui, j'ai été ramené sur les bancs du lycée, où je dévorais les romans de Zola. C'est que Tói tokoro offre la même chose, mais à la sauce japonaise. Masaya est un représentant typique des Macquart et Aoi, une combinaison entre Rougon et  Macquart, mais dont la direction prise doit inévitablement déboucher sur le destin fatal des Macquart. Je suis très agréablement surpris et m'estime chanceux, ces derniers temps, avec les films nippons. ()

lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Requiem for a Dream, Lilya 4-Ever or even the extreme Slaughtered Vomit Dolls... The list of films that have plunged us into the bleakness of the lives of prostitutes could be long and would include many works that have come up with creative formal ways to grasp this extensive subject matter. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said of A Far Shore, the feature debut of Japanese director Masaaki Kudo. He discusses a serious topic in the most shallow and literal way, and although he does nothing outright wrong, he does not excel at anything. It does have the wit and a certain enigmatic quality of Japanese cinema, but we follow a routine template where exactly what we expect from the first minutes happens. The film has some very nice shots and tries for a symbolic ending, with the ocean tide cleansing a severely tested young mother and her two-year-old son. Otherwise, however, it feels as if Kudo has seen several famous Hollywood films and compiled them into a universal muster, which he simply skims over and adds no personal value. And this applies to both the vacuous dialogue and the dysfunctional balance between the attempt at a more poetic approach on the one hand and naturalism on the other. A few decent nudes certainly don't simulate the journey to hell that the seventeen-year-old protagonist Aoi is about to experience. With a bit of cynicism, one could even write that the biggest positive is that such a dull film could give potential aspiring filmmakers the courage to realize their own festival projects. ()