The Thieves (2012)

The-Thieves-Poster

Boasting a large ensemble of established and popular stars, and making use of locations in South Korea, Hong Kong and Macau, Choi Dong Hoon’s The Thieves is often spectacular. The plot is packed with incidents and conflicts, twists and turns, rarely lagging before hitting the next mark.  I was glad to see this as part of the 2013 Korean Film Festival as the action is best appreciated on a big screen. (Sidenote: Melbourne is fortunate to have so many excellent film festivals and I like to get along to support them. The Korean festival is brilliant – a small but interesting program and very well organised, with lots of extra events around the films)

Things start to heat up when Macao Park (Kim Yoon Seok) assembles a team of ten thieves to steal a legendary diamond. The Korean thieves know each other, as do the Chinese members, but they’ve never worked together. There is open conflict, and hidden resentments and betrayals. Once the pressure is on, who will stick to the plan and who will look out for themselves? Maybe they don’t know each other as well as they think.

The-Thieves-Team ChinaThe-Thieves-Miracles

The Korean team consists of the leader Popie (pronounced Popeye) (Lee Jung Jae), cat burglar and wire expert Yennicall (Jeon Ji Hyun aka Gianna Jun), technical assistant and token cute boy Zampano (Kim Soo Hyun) and middle aged con artist Chewing Gum (Kim Hae Sook). They are joined by safecracker Pepsee (Kim Hye Soo), just released from jail after a gold heist gone wrong. Her partners in that gig were Macao Park and Popie. In China, Macao Park recruits veteran Chen (Simon Yam) and his sidekicks Jonny (Derek Tsang) and Andrew (Oh Dal Soo) plus another safecracker, Julie (Angelica Lee). The game is afoot!

The characters are clearly defined in terms of type (competent, eye candy, comedy fodder etc.) from the start but the personalities and history emerge throughout the course of the action. Personal and professional rivalries bubble to the surface, and almost everyone has their own agenda.  Often in this kind of film the nuances of characterisation are missing or overshadowed by the action. I was pleasantly surprised by the female characters, most of whom were more developed and complex than the guys. There is some romance between thieves, but not always what you might expect, and it doesn’t seem to distract the ladies from the task at hand.

The-Thieves-Yennicall at workThe-Thieves-Pepsee and Yenni

Jeon Ji Hyun is lots of fun as Yenni. One minute she is trading on her beauty, the next she could be doing a dorky victory dance or coolly rappelling down a skyscraper. Yennicall is often the butt of jokes but she is not as dumb as some might like to think. She just concentrates on what works for her. And Yenni is not just the token hot chick, she is a skilled thief with fairly good instincts even if she does seem a bit dim. Zampano has a crush on her and they have an oddly sweet relationship. She knows he is into her, she is out for herself, but they are friends and colleagues. Her rapport with Chewing Gum and her vague jealousy of Pepsee are well played. It’s a nice performance as Jeon Ji Hyun doesn’t mind playing against her glamour girl image and has good comic timing.

Pepsee and Julie are extremely competent and each has a strong back story that informs their present choices.  Kim Hye Soo gives Pepsee a tough façade over a wounded heart. Angelica Lee is all business and Julie’s sharp eyes rarely miss a trick. They are very different from each other on some levels, and I appreciated seeing diverse strong women in the story. Their rivalry is on a professional level, it has nothing to do with any of the men in the team. They can respect each other but that won’t get in the way of what needs to be done.

The-Thieves-PopieThe-Thieves-questions

Lee Jung Jae plays Popie with almost teenage angst. He wants to be taken seriously, to be the leader, he wants Pepsee to forget Macao Park and why doesn’t she love him instead. It’s a well-judged performance as while some of Popie’s actions and dialogue are incredibly silly, he plays a major part in what happens so needs to be credible. And I appreciated the stick on moustache which no one ever believed was real.

The-Thieves-the handoverThe-Thieves-Macao Park

It’s a long wait to find out what drives Macao Park and exactly how his relationship with Pepsee went sour. The character is a brilliant strategist and thief, and he stays cool in the most trying of situations. That makes him less relatable and human and consequently I was a bit less invested in his situation than I was in the other team members. Kim Yoon Seok does well in the scenes where he can show some of the complexity and emotion under that calm surface, and he underplays most scenes to great effect.  He also gets the best and most explosive action sequence of the film culminating in a vertiginous fight on cables down the side of an apartment building.

The-Thieves-Aerial 1The-Thieves-Aerial 2

In between marvelling at the camera and wire work I was a bit distracted by the ease with which so many airconditioning units were dislodged. Maybe they don’t get really big pigeons in Busan.

The-Thieves-after the robberyThe-Thieves-Zampano and Yenni

Kim Soo Hyun is underutilised as Zampano, the guy on the other end of Yenni’s wire rig. He gets little to do, but makes the best of his limited role and some of his scenes with Yenni are charming. And of all the guys in the cast, the only one you’d really want to see shirtless is him, so that worked out well.

The-Thieves-Chewing Gum and Chen

Simon Yam and Kim Hae Sook stole the limelight when they were sharing their little corner of the subplot. I always like seeing secondary characters with a sense of purpose or dreams of their own, and Chen and Chewing Gum gave the story some welcome uncomplicated affection.

Apart from the main ensemble, there is a sizeable supporting cast. Ki Gook Seo and Ju Jin Mo stand out as the dangerous fence Wei Fong and the dogged policeman on the trail of…well, everyone.  All of the threads lead back to a couple of key factors so as things unfold, some of the peripheral characters move in or out of focus.

Choi Yeong Hwan makes great use of contrasts to set the mood with striking visuals and composition. The shady rooms and derelict factories where thieves do business are tucked away beneath the high gloss of Macau, with casinos doing the work of thieves in parting people from their money. You can almost taste the greed and aspiration. The action scenes are beautifully composed and edited, sometimes giving an aerial view of the moving parts ofa clever scheme and other times plunging into the action and confusion. In some scenes the film speed slows and speeds up to synch with the dramatic ebb and flow. Jang Yeong Gyoo’s soundtrack is perfect for this genre. Bouncy and brassy, sometimes even a bit funky, the music matches the pace and adrenalin of the action and visuals. It’s another very accomplished and confident effort from the team that made ‘Tazza: The High Rollers’.

The Thieves has so much going on that I am impressed the sense of urgency  and consequence was maintained even when the revelations were all out in the open. The blend of action, humour and drama is deft and the characters are well drawn. I enjoyed it immensely. 4 stars!

Library Wars (Toshokan Senso)

library-wars-2013-poster

A law was passed in 1988 allowing all objectionable books to be collected and burned. The Media Betterment Committee was formed to remove from circulation all books that contained banned subjects, or books that could be blamed for crimes committed by people who had read them. Librarians were the last line of defence against this censorship. Sounds a bit dull, doesn’t it? Only the Media Betterment Committee has an armed force at the ready to go and retrieve banned books. It is not often that you hear a line like “Libraries are dens of iniquity. You must pay for your sins.”

Sato Shinsuke’s film isn’t all about censorship or government corruption and hypocrisy in a dystopian alternate history. It’s also an action packed romantic comedy. The MBC initiate a mission to retrieve secret documents that would reveal the illegitimacy of the law that empowers them. The Library Defence Force protects the high security library facilities and safeguards the collections. The documents have been bequeathed to them, and they know that getting them back to the library will be near impossible. Both teams are armed to the hilt, but only one side shoots to kill. One character says something along the lines of “If a government burns books, next they’ll burn people”.

library-wars-Dojo

Instructor Dojo (Okada Junichi) is intense, a consummate professional, and not very tall. Okada is excellent in a fairly stoic role. His fight scenes are crunchingly physical and despite being the butt of many short jokes, Dojo is the alpha male in this crew. He is in charge of new recruits, putting them through a punishing training regime and conducting classes on the history and laws that frame the conflict with the MBC. He also seems to have an intense dislike of Kasahara Iku (Eikura Nana), the first female in the elite Task Force. Okada has a nice touch with the comedy scenes and his squirming reaction as Dojo hears himself described by Kasahara at her selection interview is hilarious. He gives the cynical Dojo a weary vulnerability at times along with his obsessive drive to defend the books.

Library_Wars-Eikura Nana

Eikura Nana is the enthusiastic but klutzy Kasahara. She was inspired by a Library Defense officer who came to her aid during an MBC book raid. She never saw his face but he changed her life.

library-wars-Kasahara and her mystery hero

She joined the force to try and find that ideal man and to be just like him (guess which him!). At first I was a little irritated by the scenes that repeatedly highlighted her incompetence and inability to keep up with the guys. But it emerged that brilliant technical skills might not be the only qualification for the job. Knowing what was right and putting yourself on the line to do it was as powerful in some instances. Eikura is charming and portrayed her character as impulsive and warm, with a sturdy resilience that kept her from giving up.

library-wars-Tezuka and Kasahara

Her sparring with Dojo and fellow recruit Tezuka was sometimes harsh, and I was a bit put off by the institutionalised bullying and the macho BS. But Dojo challenged Tezuka to be honest about why he was picking on Kasahara. He also reproached himself for not being strong enough to trust her, and for impeding her career because of his own weakness. Kasahara became a more valued individual and earned her place on merit. It’s still a man’s world but she made her own place in it.

Library-wars-2013-Dojo and Kasaharalibrary-wars-Okada and Eikura

Despite all the action and violence, this is often a very funny film. Characters play it pretty straight and lines like “The commander’s leg is transmitting” had the cinema audience in stitches, as did the librarians shushing each other while they gossiped. Okada and Eikura have a nice dynamic. Dojo and Kasahara’s relationship starts as just a student and (demanding and surly) teacher but develops and becomes more personal as they understand more about what drives each other. She brings out his vulnerability (which freaks him out) and he makes her realise that the LDF is no game and she needs to focus. When Kasahara says to Dojo that her ambition is to be as good as him he is touched.  Then she pauses and adds, “Or better”. Their reactions and the pace of their dialogue bring a lot of the heart and the humour into the story.

Tezuka (Fukushi Sota) and Shibasaki (Kuriyama Chiaki) are Kasahara’s rival and best friend respectively. They provide the outlet for less formal commentary and venting, and allow Kasahara’s comedic bumbling to the fore. Both actors do well with quite one dimensional roles and make the most of their big scenes. Tanaka Kei is lots of fun as Dojo’s sidekick Komaki. He respects his boss but has zero reverence and his ribbing and knowing expressions are a hoot, leaving Dojo exasperated and with nowhere to go.

library-wars-extreme-censorship

The combat scenes are full on, from the hand to hand fighting to the massive scale gun battles. This is a military style conflict and essentially the MBC and LDF are at war. The LDF are to defend only, and the tension in their ranks as they wait, knowing what is coming, is palpable. Kawazu Taro’s cinematography is excellent at drawing us into this bureaucratic and dangerous world,  and the film makes the most of both technology and skilled actors and stunt performers for the action sequences.

I read reviews criticising Library Wars for not being enough of a message film, but I think the censorship and public apathy theme is strongly presented and integrated into the storyline of Dojo and Kasahara’s relationship. The romantic elements were more about idealistic love than actual entanglements but the growing closeness of several key characters makes it easier to invest in the conflict. The film ends on a positive but open note, perhaps signalling future adaptations of the remaining novels in the series.

I found the subject and the characters engaging. The cast are good , especially the leads Okada and Eikura, and the warmth and laughs were a nice foil for the mayhem and destruction. Worth a watch, especially if, like me, you remember reading Fahrenheit 451 in primary school and thinking that was a fantasy.

Girl in the Sunny Place (Hidamari no Kanojo)

Girl in the Sunny Place - poster

I knew little about Takahiro Miki’s Girl in the Sunny Place (Hidamari no Kanojo) other than it is a love story with a hint of mystery and the lead actor is one of the dudes from Arashi. I wasn’t expecting much more than a timepass but this is one of my favourite films this year. I’m not going to include any major spoilers but there is a lot to like apart from the plot.

Okuda Kosuke is a junior marketer for RailAD, selling advertising placements in railway stations. At a client presentation he meets his childhood friend, Watarai Mao. She remembers him too and it isn’t long before love blooms again. They are happy together but there is a cloud hanging over the couple. Mao was found wandering naked down the road when she was about thirteen, and has never spoken of her past. Her foster parents are worried that she may have health or psychological problems later in life, and are not sure Kosuke will still accept their girl if things go bad. Kosuke is deeply in love and no obstacle seems big enough to derail his happiness. But when it looks like Mao is getting sick, he starts to ask questions. Things all lead back to their childhood on pretty Enoshima. Is the answer on the island? And who is the old lady who lives up on the hill?

Girl in the Sunny Place - Mao and Kosuke at home

I guessed correctly, and it was a guess, at Mao’s secret past almost immediately. It didn’t detract from the story at all. Clever direction ensures that scenes work beautifully whether you’re wondering “Does she do that because of (the reason)?” or if you’re just thinking she is a bit quirky, or if you don’t notice at all. Once the answer is revealed, the signs and clues planted throughout the film all come together and make sense. The story is really about relationships and how, long after we forget the details, emotional memories can remain. Triggered by a song, an old memento, a glimpse of an old friend, feelings can come flooding back even if we don’t know precisely why. There is also a hint of the supernatural and an otherworldly atmosphere in the island scenes that I found very appealing. The ending is satisfying and moving, but not too neat or predictable.

Girl in the Sunny Place - the cardigan

Matsumoto Jun gives a very appealing and natural characterisation. Kosuke starts off as awkward and apologetic; his charm is derived more from nerdy earnestness than his boyband good looks. His happiness in love is endearing and funny as he can’t hide his infectious smile. Growing more assured as the relationship deepens, he opens up to Mao but she is hiding something from him.

Girl in the Sunny Place - Mao and Kosuke

As Kosuke’s anxiety and concern grows, Matsumoto shows the sadness and fear in a well calibrated performance. The romance is shown rather than talked about so the chemistry and emotional range of the actors is paramount. I really wasn’t expecting subtlety and exquisite timing from someone who generally works at the cheesier end of the entertainment spectrum. He was afflicted with some hideous knitwear, but even that seemed kind of sweet since it was Kosuke wearing it.

Girl in the Sunny Place - Watarai Mao is smitten

Ueno Juri looks like a live action anime orphan, with huge eyes and slightly retro clothes hanging off her tiny frame. And like many a film orphan she is resilient, cheerful and a tad offbeat. Her energy and unaffected warmth is a lovely foil for Kosuke’s reserve, and she never overdoes the whimsy. The scene when she and Kosuke meet again is almost silent and feels both romantic and gently playful. They both have such beautiful eyes! Kosuke used to protect and teach Mao and now she helps him. She fixes an error in his budget proposal and works with him on a submission. And she made the first move. The ladies in the festival audience gasped and giggled when Mao called Kosuke by his first name! Ueno Juri is convincing both as the lively independent young woman and the one who doesn’t want to admit what she is afraid of. Her rapport with Matsumoto is charming and I could completely believe in the strength of their bond.

Girl in the Sunny Place - Mao and Kosuke at school

The supporting cast are all excellent. The minor characters add pathos, humour, exposition and drama to the story and director Takahiro Miki balances everything to perfection. I particularly liked Tamayama Tetsuji as the cool Johnny Depp styled Shindo, Mao’s colleague who harboured a crush on her. Kitamura Takumi as young Kosuke and Aoi Wakana as little Mao were also very good, and matched the adult actors closely in appearance and mannerisms.

This is one of the prettiest films I’ve seen in a while. The set interiors are detailed and look lived in by the characters. The lighting is atmospheric and the exterior scenes on Enoshima are gorgeous. The Beach Boys song “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” underpins some key moments and voices the yearning of young love. Silence and ambient sounds are also used to excellent effect, placing the actors to the fore but enhancing the sense of place. The dialogue is heartfelt but not predictable. Rather than saying “I love you” over and over, characters show their intimacy in small things like cleaning their teeth at the same time, or talking about their goldfish, or just snuggling up to talk about stuff.

Apart from the romance there is also a thread of endings and beginnings, of things turning full circle only to open in a new loop. It may sound sappy but I found Hidamari no Kanojo really moving and totally beautiful. Yet another DVD release I’ll be waiting for!

The 17th Japanese Film Festival is running in Melbourne until 8 December – details here:

http://japanesefilmfestival.net/location/melbourne/