
musicismygirlfriend
Joined Feb 2006
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musicismygirlfriend's rating
Saw this at TIFF on Saturday night. Packed theatre, sadly the director and none of the actors were in attendance. This was the first Naomi Kawase film I've seen, and I really enjoyed it. She's taken a relatively common film story line - an unlikely friendship between two people - and turned it into something quite authentic and memorable. One person is struggling with profound loss (blindness - he's a photographer) and the other is offering help while also working out her own issues (her father's death and her mother's senility). Kawase treats this subject matter very delicately, with lots of camera playing with light and several long- held close-ups of faces. The sound editor of this film should win a very big award, by the way. Sounds clearly play a big role in this film, and it's recorded and handled very well.
Kawase shoots her actors in a strange way, and I haven't figured out yet if it was intentional for this film only, or if it's something she's done in her other films. She often cuts off the tops of heads when framing her actors. It's so obvious it must be intentional, and maybe it relates to a line in the film when the photographer says he can see better when he looks down. I'm not sure, but it's definitely noticeable and something to consider.
Beautiful film...I was glad to get tickets to see a film from a director I was not familiar with, and also a film that will likely not be easy to see in a theatre outside of the festival circuit.
Kawase shoots her actors in a strange way, and I haven't figured out yet if it was intentional for this film only, or if it's something she's done in her other films. She often cuts off the tops of heads when framing her actors. It's so obvious it must be intentional, and maybe it relates to a line in the film when the photographer says he can see better when he looks down. I'm not sure, but it's definitely noticeable and something to consider.
Beautiful film...I was glad to get tickets to see a film from a director I was not familiar with, and also a film that will likely not be easy to see in a theatre outside of the festival circuit.
APTN and TVO have a really good TV show with Hard Rock Medical, and it's a shame that it's not watched by more people, because I guarantee you it is better than 95% of the stuff that's out there. Real characters and real stories that don't involve implausible situations. We've had hundreds of medical-themed television over the past several decades, and most of them follow the same formula. The only part of that tired formula that Hard Rock Medical uses is the part where you have medical staff helping patients. Otherwise, it follows its own unique path. The men and women on HRM aren't uber-attractive and they don't say ridiculous lines of dialogue. They look like the kind of people you'd actually find working in a hospital and they say the things you'd expect and react truthfully. Really cool to see this refreshing change in a medical show.