| Index | 8 reviews in total |
9 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Based on a bestselling novel, 6 June 2003
Author:
noirfilm from United States
At first, I thought this was going to be a standard murder-mystery story. A police detective doggedly pursues slim clues all over the map to find a murderer. However, when the events which led up to the crime are revealed through flashbacks, the story takes an emotional turn which even brings tears to the detective's eyes. Like most Japanese movies, it starts slowly but comes alive at the end. I recommend it.
10 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Nice to see an (almost) forgotten movie again, 14 June 2003
Author:
caddie1976
This movie has three stories which are skillfully merged together at the
end. One story is about a determined detective who is searching for a
murderer. The second story is about a composer with social aspirations who
is preparing to perform the debut of his piano concerto. I won't spoil it
by
describing the third story which is a flashback 30 years into the past.
The
third story has very little dialog and shows what silent movie fans have
always known: you don't need much dialog to tell a good
story.
The English subtitling on the dvd version I saw is not great, but
passable.
As a minor quibble, the subtitles are not present to translate written
documents when a newspaper article or arrest warrant is shown on the
screen.
There are some nice visual scenes which are quite effective. I last saw
this
movie in the 1970's and although I forgot the movie title, I never forgot
the scene where the two detectives ride silently on their way to arrest
the
murderer. When I viewed this movie again recently, I was surprised to see
how brief this scene actually is.
8 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
This film expands on genre conventions and is cinematic in the best sense, 11 July 2005
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Author:
simonize-1 from Canada
This film CASTLE OF SAND expands on genre conventions and is cinematic
in the best sense. YOSHITARO NOMURA takes what was presumably a best
selling novel in Japan, and creates a fascinating mystery with all the
requisites: the pairing of a veteran and a rookie detective; a murder
with a minimum of clues; an unidentified victim; a journey of discovery
for both detectives when the investigation seems to have come to a dead
end; the seemingly arbitrary introduction of a key figure on which much
hinges, and so forth.
The director tells a story with voice overs and the requisite dialogue
but as often as not his camera tells the story.
I have seen any number of Japanese films in my 50 plus years, but I
still felt I was undergoing the journey and the search that the two
detectives take, through the rural regions of Japan that are in stark
contrast to their operating base, Tokyo.
The story has elements that take it beyond the realms of the mystery
and police procedure genres, and the conclusion is worthy of the time
the director has spent in weaving his tragic tale.
The film is now available on DVD via Panorama; it is in the original
Japanese with Chinese and English subtitles. It is a SINGLE LAYER DISK,
LETTERBOXED and in STEREO, which is paramount because music is central
to the whole affair.
Unfortunately my copy had a sequence when the senior detective is
addressing his colleagues and no subtitling is provided (you simply see
the same line for an awkward length of time). However the viewer should
be able to extrapolate what has been said. All in all, a film and DVD
worth seeking out!
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
2005 NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL SIDEBAR - Special Retrospective, 1 September 2005
Author:
SONNYK_USA from NYC
The Film Society of Lincoln Center Presents
A Special Retrospective of The 43rd New York Film Festival
The Beauty of the Everyday: Japan's Shochiku Company at 110 September
24 October 20, 2005
This project is supported in part by an award from the National
Endowment for the Arts, which believes that a great nation deserves
great art.
This year's New York Film Festival Retrospective The Beauty of the
Everyday: Japan's Shochiku Company at 110 is virtually a pocket
history of Japanese cinema. While some fifteen of the forty-five films
in the retrospective are devoted to Japanese filmmaker masters, such as
Ozu, Naruse, and Mizoguchi, more than two dozen of the films are by
directors far less well-known in the West.
The Castle of Sand / Suna no Utsuwa Yoshitaro Nomura, 1974; 140m Two
detectives, Imanishi and Yoshimura, are assigned to the murder of a
60-year-old man whose body was found dumped in a railroad yard. It
turns to be that of a former policeman, Miki; the murder now seems even
more mysterious, as Miki was well liked by all and had been on holiday
when he was killed. The detectives visit all the places to which Miki
has traveled, with little luck, but then they read an account buried in
a lengthy report of how Miki years before had befriended a destitute,
leprous man and his young son. Amazingly, that boy had grown up to
become Eiryo Waga, a rising star in the music world. Could such an
eminent figure have anything to do with the murder? Sadly, Yoshitaro
Nomura passed away this past April; for years one of Shochiku's most
popular and reliable directors, he worked successfully in a variety of
genres but especially made his mark with The Castle of Sand, based on a
best-selling novel. A real delight, the film contains many of the
classic features of the detective film the pairing of a veteran and a
rookie, the investigation as a voyage of discovery, wonderfully
eccentric supporting characters but under Nomura's sure direction
they take on a whole new life.
ONLY ONE Screening: Sun Sept 25: 9:00pm
5 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Doesn't get the attention it deserves, 8 December 2006
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Author:
Drucilla_Black from Australia
I saw "The Castle of Sand" at a Japanese Film Festival this year in
Sydney, and I must say that I'm surprised that this movie isn't better
known as it's so beautifully made and incredibly moving...It's one of
those near-perfect gems that are few and far between. It's a fairly
long movie at nearly 2.5 hours, but the movie is one that draws you in
very quickly and keeps you wondering up until the very end.
The plot centres around the mysterious murder of Miki, a retired
policeman in his 60's who was well-liked by pretty much everyone who
knew him for his kindness and integrity. Two detectives, one a rookie
and one fairly older, are assigned to the case and what at first seems
like three unrelated stories slowly weave together to reveal the
reasons and the person behind Miki's death. Even if you're not a fan of
foreign movies, "The Castle of Sand" is still definitely worth a watch.
Story "coincidence", 19 February 2012
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Author:
Aristides-2 from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
A huge story absurdity takes place mid-film that I couldn't shake for the rest of it. A detective investigating a very complicated murder case with minimal clues, is on a Japanese train and by chance, spots a woman he's never seen before, throwing hundreds of small white pieces of cloth out of the window. The cloth turns out to be the cut-up missing bloodied shirt of the killer he's looking for and the woman is involved in the cover-up neck high! Question: How many multi-millions of people were living in the Tokyo region in 1973? How many of them were riding trains? What are the odds of these two people meeting on the train? But a larger problem for me has to do with the Why of it all. After the movie's very thorough 2.5 hour examination and analysis of why the bad guy killed the good guy, is that I never believed the reason given for the killing. So the bad guy fudged his birth certificate and continued the fiction of his antecedents. So what? (Unless something like that in the Japanese character makes the reveal so hideous that a person could kill to conceal it.)
3 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
A tragedy it ends so badly, 7 October 2009
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Author:
poikkeus from San Francisco
CASTLE OF SAND is an engrossing, laid-back police procedural that
captures your attention even when the plot seems fairly ordinary. A
Tokyo cop (Tetsuro Tamba) is troubled when a retired cop is found
brutally murdered, with no evidence save the vague recollections of a
few townsfolk. At times, the story is reminiscent of a regional
travelogue, but in learning more about Japan, Tamba hones in on a small
set of likely suspects, but everyone is so agreeable that uncovering
the truth becomes like rooting out the one hidden evidence of violence
in a sea of potential data.
Regrettably, the film unravels in the final forty or so minutes, when
the remainder of the story is told with musical accompaniment of a
famous pianist. The plot becomes frankly loses credibility and even
becomes rather nonsensical. The movie changes mood and style, and
dripping with melodrama.
3 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Thoroughly Enjoyable, 25 October 2006
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Author:
Selestial from Melbourne, Australia
I just saw this movie for the first time last night at the Japanese
Film Festival held in Melbourne. It was a re-mastered print and on the
huge screen it was magnificent. The flashback scenes with the father
and son set to the stunning musical score seemed like a completely
different movie to what had preceded. But to me, final scenes are
important - a skillful movie ending turns a good film into a great
film. A bad ending turns an average to good film into a piece of
rubbish. As far as Castle of Sand is concerned, what started out as an
interesting detective story ended as a sweeping piece which left me
walking out of the cinema thinking "That was incredible!!".
Japanese cinema rarely fails to impress me. I keep discovering more and
more gems, usually from years gone by when I was too young to
experience them at the time.
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