May 2nd, 2009
The Golden Rock at the HKIFF, Part III
About 3 weeks ago, I finished sitting through the rest of the 25 films I watched at the Hong Kong International Film Festival. These reviews are not comprehensive, because I only mention the Asian stuff, so don’t panic if they don’t add up to 25:
Rough Cut (2008, South Korea. Dir. Jang Hun) - The basic concept of this Korean comedy-drama is packed with ass-kicking potential - star actor hires gangster so he can get into real fights in his latest movie, except the ass-kicking became more than he could take. However, the script - written by Kim Ki-Duk - is often sidetracked by digression and is essentially off the rails by the third act. Tolerable, but could’ve been better. Maybe I was just tired that night.
Torso (2009, Japan. Dir: Yamazaki Yutaka) - The directorial debut from Hirokazu Kore-eda’s cinematographer is a quiet study of the life of a lonely Tokyo woman and her prosthetic torso that she sleeps with from time to time. The surprise of this film comes from the focus on the woman’s dysfunctional relationship with her half-sister, played out to subtle emotional effect. Shot in the same handheld realism style of a Kore-eda film, the script may be a little too close to real-life to generate any memorable emotional impact, but it does reward more than it punishes with its leisurely pacing.
Citizen King (2008, Hong Kong. Dir: Ching Long, Johnson Lee) - Kozo already reviewed this film when he saw it at the Hong Kong Independent Film Festival, and count me in as one of those who was greatly surprised and impressed by actor/impersonation-extraordinaire Johnson Lee’s directorial debut. Entertaining, funny, biting, and even affecting at spots, this is a rare Hong Kong indie film that actually embraces its indie trappings without being restricted in it. If I had seen this last year, it would’ve ended up on my top 10 HK film list.
Dying in a Hospital (1993, Japan. Dir: Jun Ichikawa) - This rarely-seen film from the recently deceased director is so hard to get ahold of overseas that the subtitles had to be projected under the screen. Even thougha good portion of te subtitles were not displayed properly, these 5 straightforward and heartbreaking tales of people dying in a hospital is a life-affirming gem that got quite a few people crying - including a middle-age foreigner - by the time the lights came back on. Ichikawa employed a Hou Hsiao-Hsien-wide shot style for the stories, but he always make sure different things are happening in the frame, and that all of them are worth focusing on. A great film that should’ve been the masterpiece that put Ichikawa on the map, despite its overly straightforward title.
KJ (2009, Hong Kong. Dir. Cheung King-Wai) - This documentary from the screenwriter of Ann Hui’s latest film hits a homerun when it comes to its titular character, a 17-year old music prodigy that has the attitude of an worn-out veteran with too much ideals. Aside from a clear structure that keeps the film worth following, Cheung successful captures the essence of his subject wonderfully, comparing his attitude at 12 years old and 17 years old. The result is not just the study of an arrogant musical prodigy, but the portrait of all the pains and pressure that torture him underneath.
There will be a full review, as well as an interview with a director coming soon.
Achilles and the Tortoise (2008, Japan. Dir: Takeshi Kitano) - Kitano’s third film in his self-reflexive trilogy is an entertaining look at an artist who collapses while trying to balance commercialism and individualism. Even though the third act goes a little too far in its antics, this is definitely the most enjoyable and the most accessible film out of the three, even though it’s by no means a masterpeice due to its simplistic characters and ideals.
I spent the last two days of the festival with an American and two French films, so I won’t write about them here. With that, another soul-draining year at the Hong Kong International Film Festival is over, and I’ll finally be able to blog regularly starting mid-May until who-knows-when. Even though there were a few underwhelming films, this year’s selection has been fairly solid, and I certainly don’t regret going to almost all of them. Hopefully, I can stay awake for more of them. Maybe they’ll have a cure for whatever I got by the next film festival.
May 3rd, 2009 at 1:33 am
hey great work on those reviews.
can you just give us an idea of er how exhausting the time schedules are? the reason i ask is because yourself and kozo always seem to mention ‘fell asleep during that one’ (sarky or not)?!
do you watch films from the crack of dawn up to midnight? or other factors like you have work in the morning etc?
of course i can understand it’s probably quite mentally draining sitting through so many 2 hour pieces in one day..
May 3rd, 2009 at 12:44 pm
hey, anotherlonelyday,
I watched a total of 25 movies over about 27 days, so that makes it about a movie a day. But some days, I would have two movies at two different places with 2-3 hour gaps (one day I had 3 at 3 pm, 6pm, and 9pm), so I would have to spend the entire day away from home and traveling to several places.
The worst were the 9:30 pm movies, especially on school days, which meant spending 9-5 at school, then hitting dinner, then lining up about half an hour for the movie, and not getting home until midnight. I was ultimately tired not only because of the movies, but all the work I was balancing. Plus, I fall asleep easily at movies, which doesn’t make me a very good critic.
But no, the times were more late than early. I did miss one of the two 10:30am tickets I had (I bought 27 tickets), but there were other factors.
May 3rd, 2009 at 1:05 pm
oh i see, sounds like an hardcore packed month!
ok i’ve got another question/enquiry. as you’ve just said you go to school and reading other comments (kozo said you go to film school etc), can you enlighten me on that course?
i’ve currently a third year at uni and about to finish (hopefully i’ll graduate of course!) a ba honours film and television course. tbh if i was harsh i can say i wasted 3 years; in those 3 years, the course was pretty much 85% theory with very little practical work.
put it this way i don’t even know how to work a camera properly. even on the theory side, it wasn’t as intensive as i hoped and seriously, considering the potential (facilities, lecturers etc), it was a joke of a course.
anyways i’m looking at several options and one of those is studying in hong kong doing a ‘proper’ film course.
so other details that may help my understand my situation:
1) i’m chinese (can speak alright, read little-ish, crap writing knowledge) but hold a british passport and a hk identity card - not sure if i qualify as overseas student i.e fees?
2) i’m not a dreamer (looking for the glitzy showbiz) but i wouldn’t say i’m 100% commited atm - i’m just putting out some feelers.
3) film is something i definitely want to get into. what aspect i’m not sure as frankly i don’t believe i have enough ’skills’ or qualifications to go into any specific area.
ok i’ve probably got more to say but i don’t want to babble on.
i’ve included my real email if you can see it, so if you don’t wanna disclose anything publicly, you can reply to that if you want.
i’m ‘hard’ at work on finishing my dissertation so i’m in no hurry, you can take your time and if you do, i’ll really appreciate it.
i’m planning to go to hk in june, who knows, maybe we could hook up even?
but yeah cheers man.
May 4th, 2009 at 12:00 am
Sure thing, I’ll pop you a e-mail later on.