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Closing Night Gala
ADRIFT IN TOKYO
Touching, funny, outrageous yet grounded in humanity, Adrift in Tokyo is the ultimate road movie in which the two protagonists just…stroll their way across the landscape of the metropolis of Tokyo. It begins with a shambolic and wild-haired loser named Takemura, who suddenly finds himself at the mercy of an uninvited houseguest, the tough debt collector Fukuhara. With Takemura unable to pay back the money, Fukuhara decides to give him an ultimatum: take a walk through Tokyo with him, and he will receive more than enough cash to pay back the debt. Mistrustful and skeptical, Takemura has no choice but follow this absurd plan.
From this basic premise comes richness in characterization and a natural drollness that is intensely sublime. Much of the credit goes to the easy chemistry between the two leads. Japanese heartthrob Joe Odagiri [ Azumi (Reel Asian Closing Night, 2003), Blood and Bones ) portrays Takemura as an unwitting hero—a man down on his luck with little self-confidence and no goals in life. Conversely, Fukuhara, sensationally played by Tomokazu Miura ( Always: Sunset on Third Street, The Taste of Tea ), is seen as a good-hearted thug in an unfortunate predicament. Their continuous bantering evolves into a real relationship, giving way to unexpected depth in their personalities. All the while, director Miki keeps the pace lively with unexpected side gags, witty repartees and the reality of crazy Tokyo. Filled with everyone from girls who dress up in costumes and punked-out electric rockers to a bogus makeshift family, the city offers all a chance to be themselves.
It is the ever-changing Tokyo itself that acts as the third character here. From the bustle and neon-glitter of places like Shinjuku to quiet leafy neighbourhoods of the suburbs, it is a film that lets us explore the city while the characters basically act as commentators. Even when the focus is shifted to the misadventures of the co-workers of Fukuhara’s wife, this only serves to show us a different side of life in Tokyo.
In the end, the sterling humour and the genuine warmth is singularly the creation of Satoshi Miki, whose screenplay and direction make it possible for such a basic concept to become something richer than most films you’ll see this year.
-Heather Keung
Satoshi Miki was born on August 9, 1961, in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. He started out as a writer for hit TV variety shows before directing stage plays, then further expanding into TV dramas and films. His first films In the Pool (2005) and Turtles and Surprisingly Fast (2005) were consecutively released theatrically in the same year. Miki has earned a growing following for his comedies, as he becomes known for his urbane sense of humour in which seemingly unnecessary episodes and dialogues are developed and interwoven into an indispensable part of the story. Adrift in Tokyo (2007) is his fifth feature film.
Canadian distributor: Evokative Films
Please note: allow extra time to arrive at venues due to Santa Claus Parade related to road closures.
Youth Feature Presentation
AKI RA'S BOYS
“Bouncing Betty…Pineapple…Claymore… Every one, ten die,” 12-year-old Boreak explains as he shows off hand grenades, landmines, and a machine gun.
Six years ago, Boreak lost his right arm to a landmine accident and now lives in Siem Reap, Cambodia, at the Aki Ra’s Landmine Museum, where he studies and helps educate visitors about landmines. Despite his physical disability, Boreak is refreshingly mischievous and inquisitive. He wants to be a football player a rap artist and, most of all, a professional wrestler. Singaporean directors James Leong and Lynn Lee follow the daily lives of Boreak and his best friend Vannak as they go to school, tease girls, and explore Cambodia. This charming documentary tells the story of a violent past and hopeful future.
Following Boreak to his rural hometown near the border of Thailand, the film reveals the harsh realities for Cambodian families who must continue to farm on land that is scattered with millions of landmines. Boreak’s mother has eight other children. Even though Boreak’s accident happened just metres from her home, she must continue to raise the family there. Bravely, she accepts this life and tells Boreak he is lucky to live in Siem Reap and to have the chance to study.
Since 1979, more than 20,000 Cambodian children have been crippled by landmine accidents. Aki Ra, the founder of the Landmine education centre and home for child landmine victims, was a child in the Khmer Rouge army who became an explosives expert at the age of 13. Now in his 30s, Aki Ra is trying to make amends with his past and has taken the lead on the removal of over 30,000 landmines. Ultimately, Aki Ra's Boys is a celebration of a child's indomitable will. Boreak may be a victim, but he doesn’t behave like one. His zest for life is infectious, and his ability to laugh is a testament to the courage and strength children have in the face of adversity.
James Leong and Lynn Lee are an Asia-based filmmaking team. Passabe , their first feature documentary, was awarded a grant from the Sundance Institute Documentary Fund. Aki Ra's Boys is their second film and won a Golden Panda at the Sichuan TV Festival and Prize of the Encyclopedia Society at the Almaty International Film Festival 2008.
REEL ASIAN YOUTH PROGRAMME PRESENTING SPONSOR: Canwest
COMMUNITY PARTNER: Toronto Singapore Film Festival
Short
The National Film Board of Canada and Reel Asian invite student groups from the Greater Toronto Area to participate in hands-on workshops to create short animations that will be screened at Reel Asian’s Youth Presentations.
Short
Sweet raindrop shapes, growing leaves, and dandelions in the wind are amazingly animated through embroidery. While Wong’s needle and thread follow an intense labour process, this animation delicately contemplates the passage of time.
Stefanie Wong graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Alberta College of Art + Design, Calgary. Her practice combines seemingly disparate media such as new media/technologies and textiles to examine our relationship with technology and its impact on human intimacy and interaction.
Short
An Audience sits and enjoys watching a movie, except for one increasingly impatient man.
David Eng is a Toronto-based filmmaker, actor, musician and writer. He studied music (Mus.Bac. and A.R.C.T.) and taught high school before deciding to pursue his love of film. He has been described as a Facebook whore but is otherwise pleasant and harmless.
Special Feature Presentation
THE BLESSING BELL
Laid off with the unexpected closing of a local factory, a laborer opts to take a walk rather then join his co-workers in protest. Hands in his pockets, wearing an aimless gaze and never uttering a word, his walk takes him to various places and people, including a ghost played by Seijun Suzuki. When he can go no further, he turns around and walks home.
Having established himself with energetic screwball crime capers like Postman Blues and Unlucky Monkey , SABU’s The Blessing Bell is a markedly distinct work. The bumbling of Yakuza, the lamentations of murderers and the Rube-Goldberg machine plotting that SABU is so elegant at constructing persist from previous works, but what differs is how SABU approaches these episodes visually. For the most part, SABU has the camera capture the action on a proscenium. Like the unfurling of a tapestry the protagonist walks from the left to right across a series of shots, only to pass through them all again on his way home. The effect is an extremely absorbing cinematic representation of Zen philosophy.
In the pivotal role of the wanderer is veteran Japanese actor Susumu Terajima. A familiar face from both Takeshi Miike and Kitano, but rarely assuming anything more then a supporting role, SABU takes advantage of Terajima’s wonderful face and its seemingly perpetual grimace for his patient protagonist. It is a deadpan, but moving performance of exquisite subtlety.
The Blessing Bell , winner of the Netpac Award at the Berlin International Film Festival (2003) and the Grand Jury Prize at Cinemanila International Film Festival, is a wonderfully accomplished film that manages to inspire a contagious sense of optimism despite its brushes with life’s tragedies and suffering.
- Eric Cazdyn and Peter Kuplowsky
SABU was born in 1964 as Hiroyuki Tanaka, He began his film career as an actor. His performance in Katsuhiro Otomo’s World Apartment Horror (1991) won him an award at the Yokohama Film Festival 1991, and he went on to appear in several other films, working under Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Hideo Nakata and Takeshi Miike. In 1996, he debuted as both a writer and director with D.A.N.G.A.N. Runner . Celebrated for his inventive style and humorous storytelling, SABU quickly became a highly regarded director in both Japan and overseas, particularly in Europe.
SPONSOR: University of Toronto Munk Centre for International Studies at Trinity College, Asian Institute
COMMUNITY PARTNERS: Gendai Gallery, Canada Japan Society of Toronto
Short
At the onset of her brother William’s schizophrenia, Kate feels the pressures to live up to her parents’ heavy-handed expectations. Castle in the Sky is a story inspired by life experiences and is an adaptation of Lena Lee’s theatrical play.
Lena Lee and Dean Vargas are Toronto-based filmmakers. Lena’s practice is strongly driven by concepts of the human psyche. Lee and Vargas were the recipients of the 2007 Reel Asian and Charles Street Video Hear Me, See Me, Pitch Me Contest.
Short
In a playful collage of mid-1970s fashion and catalogue items, Catalogue makes a comparison between shopping through retro magazines and searching through contemporary personal advertisements online. With the convenience of social websites such as Facebook, Fukumura questions whether or not it is any easier to find what we want today.
Blair Fukumura was born in Winnipeg and studied stage design and theatre at the University of Winnipeg. Of Japanese, Scottish, and Irish descent, Blair’s background is in stage design and performance.
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