☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
I
Wish (2012) – H. Kore-eda
Deceptively simple, as if Kore-eda
managed to “capture” reality and transmit it to us, but in actuality
meticulously crafted, right down to the soundtrack which may be the key force
in getting us on the movie’s wavelength.
I don’t necessarily mean the music, which is pleasant enough
indie-guitar and j-pop jangling, but instead the way that the voices of the
kids (there are 7 of them in larger or smaller roles) and adults (mostly oldies
in larger roles) tend to overlap and join together and emerge naturally amidst
the other diegetic sounds, saying natural-seeming things. Indeed, the movie could be taken as a 1970’s
Altman-esque affair, rather de-centralized in plotting (although the focus on
the two brothers who wish their parents’ divorce hadn’t separated them provides
the main thrust) and featuring a widening array of characters some of whom have
only bit parts but still provide loads of color and emotional weight. Of course, having been to Japan may help one
to appreciate the film, making it easier to settle into its relaxed grooves, or
perhaps having seen any Hollywood product starring kids will allow even the
least Nihon-aware viewer to realize that this film is as far away from that
cloying, over-acted, sentimental, and artificial claptrap as you can possibly
get. Kore-eda’s other films (After Life, Nobody Knows, Maborosi, Still Walking)
are also worth your time, if this is your jam.
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