| Index | 5 reviews in total |
18 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
A slow-paced sober film about family, life & love in a Japanese provincial town, 28 July 2004
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Author:
C. Duckhunter from Netherlands
Shara is about a family living in a (beautifully shot) Japanese town,
which is a bit devoid of the modern culture we'd expect from Japan. The
people live in a traditional way, and prepare for the annual
Shara-festival. The film begins with a beautifully long shot running
through the city. Some years ago, the family has experienced a trauma,
which they still cannot come to terms with. Everyone is still in denial
and shock, and tries to put away their emotions by diverting their
attention to something else: making a painting, organizing the Shara
festival, etc. We follow the main protagonist, teenager Shun, through
life and love after his traumatic youth. He's in love with Yu, who has
to deal with her own family problems.
The turning-point in the film is the opening procession of the festival
itself. It's really exciting to watch the dance with its clapping and
shouting, especially in the torrential rain that suddenly starts
halfway through. The contrast with the 'restrained' first hour of the
film is enormous. After rain comes sun, which is symbolical for the
family, maybe even in a cliché way. But it works! It's great cinema.
Near the end of the film, a happy family event takes place, which
brings hope for the future.
It's not an easy film to watch, it's very slow-paced, and some scenes
with little activity take some patience to watch. But I think it brings
you more on the level of the family and daily events in Nara (it's
actually the birthplace of the director). And some beautiful long takes
of the city are a joy to watch.
Don't be in a hurry, and maybe you'll experience a beautiful, quiet and
spiritual film. (If you are in a hurry, please leave the cinema
quietly.)
7/10, I'm not really sure yet
14 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
The moving beauty of rain on the parade, 2 May 2005
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Author:
bartman_9 from Belgium
Ten years ago, the brother of the then seven year old Shun disappeared
without a trace. Today, every member of the family, Shun, his father
and mother, lives with the trauma and deals with the loss in their own
way.
Shara is a movie with an intimate knowledge of grief: it understands
how it never really goes away but stays with you like background noise,
sometimes inaudible, sometimes shattering.
It's a slow film and director Kawase takes time to let her camera
linger on these characters going through their daily routines, but the
viewer's patience is rewarded with a festival scene which is beautiful,
sublime and extremely moving.
6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
A Nutshell Review: Shara, 28 August 2008
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Author:
DICK STEEL from Singapore
First and foremost, I thought the camera took on a life of its own, and
drew a lot of attention to itself. It's free-wheeling, panning,
tracking and zooming into noises that call out for notice. In some
sense, it took on voyeuristic elements as it seemed we're right there
with the characters and witnessing incidents as they unfold in the
movie at first person's perspective. Not only that, Kawase has a
penchant of incredibly long takes, not slow moving all the time though,
but having scenes reveal themselves in one continuous shot. I would've
imagined the nightmare during production should someone mess up, and
the need to start over. Shots following characters also seem to be
favourites, where it felt like we had to perpetually chase after the
characters to follow on every plot development.
The story's nothing to shout about, as it looks at the lives of a
household in Nara, Japan, after a member of the family mysteriously
disappears, leaving behind mom Reiko (Naomi Kawase), dad Taku
(Katsuhisa Namase) and their son Shun (Kohei Fukungaga). The opening
shot's quite peculiar as well, as a slow moving camera rotates about in
a room, as we hear continuous background chimes from the neighbourhood
temple, with the voices of Shun and brother Kei conversing, and finally
seeing them through window reflections, before a game of "follow me"
turns into mystery, one which never gets resolved conclusively in the
movie, unless you deem that the eyes from which we watch the movie, is
from the eyes and perspective of Kei's.
Kei's disappearance is classic X-Files, just as how Fox Mulder had to
deal with Samantha's own, and here we follow the family and how they
each dealt with this - as one of the unseen characters puts it - case
of "spirited away". Taku immerses himself in organizing the annual
Basara street festival as its chairperson, while mom Reiko cultivates
green fingers. Shun, blaming himself for losing sight of his brother,
exorcises his demons through painting, and from the care given by
girlfriend and neighbour Yu (Yuka Hyyoudo), who turns out to be living
with her aunt. Even then, the theme of loss doesn't get forgotten, in
another long talkie scene where Yu learns of how she came to live in a
foster home under the guardianship of her aunt, in a rather incestuous
tale that sounded a wee bit incredible, though surprisingly moving.
All's not doom and gloom though in Shara, in case you're wondering if
this movie's slow pace would be your cup of tea, or whether you'll feel
down after watching a sad movie. The movie ends off with a rather
uplifting note of hope, where the anticipated birth of a child with a
fine penis (yes, it was from the movie, OK?) lies in stark contrast
with the mysterious loss of one in the beginning. In fact, things start
to pick up (in pace even) after the Basara street festival scene, where
before the narrative dealt with the mulling over Kei, and had generous
allowance to set up all the principal characters.
And what a spectacle the Basara street performance was! Though it was
highly repetitive, you can't deny the exuberant energy that the camera
captured from the performers, entertaining all in a mesmerizing dance
on the streets, which turned into a wet rain dance sequence under heavy
downpour. If any scene would've stuck in your mind after you leave the
theatre, this would be it, with a little wry scene where Shun had in
his crowd control duties, inadvertently blocked the view of a cute
knee-high tall child with his palm.
Shara turned out to be surprisingly enjoyable, and I now look forward
to the documentary by Tetsuaki Matsue titled Summer Vacation with Naomi
Kawase.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Maverick Japanese filmmaker Ms.Kawase Naomi shows that a family is a great source of joy !!!!!, 11 June 2010
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Author:
Film_critic_Lalit_Rao from France
A family will always remain a sacred institution for cinema if we take into account the depiction of families on silver screen.It is believed that American cinema and European cinema are known for their spontaneous portraits of family life.However,most national cinemas in Asia including Japanese cinema prefer to sketch a highly restrained description of family life.All erudite viewers have witnessed that in films by Ozu Saan.This is exactly something which viewers can experience in Japanese film "Sharasojyu" directed by renowned Japanese director Kawase Naomi.Her film can be termed as an extremely exquisite portrait of family life.Most filmmakers would evoke a birth and a death in their films to talk about human lives.However,Kawase Saan has gone a step further by choosing to depict in a charming reverse order a death /a disappearance and a birth to present her views about simple life in a small Japanese town.Her film appears admirably genuine and refreshingly honest as family tensions have been consigned to an inferior position to extract best performances from actors to effectively portray other human qualities such as community living and friendship.Many a times all viewers wish that a film must not remain a film but become life.This wish comes true in a particular scene when an entire town is dancing.One is not human if that dance sequence does not stir noblest of feelings in your heart and sad tears tinged with happiness on your cheeks.PS : Film critic Lalit Rao would like to thank a good friend Mr.Philippe Pham for having gifted a DVD of this film for detailed analysis.
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Exquisitely photographed but emotionally detached, 29 March 2008
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Author:
ksandness from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This film starts like a mystery or possibly a J-horror flick. Twin
boys, Shun and Kei, are washing up after getting ink spilled on them,
when suddenly Kei takes off like a rabbit without explanation. He leads
Shun on a chase through the narrow, winding streets of their
neighborhood in the ancient city of Nara, and vanishes literally within
the few seconds that he is out of Shun's sight. Shun wanders around
bewildered, and when he finds his parents, he seems unable to
articulate what has happened.
Fast forward ten years. Shun is now in high school, a quiet young man
who has a platonic friendship with a girl named Yu. Life at home is
quiet and subdued to the point of isolation. In fact, the movie
contains surprisingly little dialogue. Shun's father is a blue collar
craftsmen of some sort (he has a workshop inside the family's sprawling
old house), and his mother is in an advanced state of pregnancy. Each
member of the family moves around the house as if not aware of the
others, and meals are silent affairs.
The only vitality in the film comes from scenes in which Shun's father
is involved with the neighborhood's Basara festival. The discussions
with the neighbors are spirited and believable.
In a subplot, Yu learns that the woman who has raised her is not her
mother but her aunt. This earthshaking news is revealed
matter-of-factly as Yu and her putative mother are walking down the
street.
At one point in the film, Shun overhears his father talking to a
policeman. Kei has been found, and the father is supposed to come and
identify him. He is dead, not abducted and kept prisoner, as has
happened in a couple of cases that were in the news recently in Japan,
but the viewer knows that only because he never comes home. We are
never given any details, not even at the very end, when the soundtrack
of the disappearance scene is replayed while the camera moves ever
farther away, culminating in an aerial view of Nara, which is
exceedingly frustrating, since we saw his disappearance from Shun's
point of view.
Learning that Kei is dead does nothing to raise the emotional
temperature inside the house. Everyone is locked into themselves, and
despite occasional outbursts, everyone seems to be hurting silently and
alone. Even the birth of another son seems to excite the neighbors and
the midwife more than it does the members of the family.
As another reviewer said, the festival scenes are truly wonderful, as
is the cinematography in general. You see the life of a typical
traditional Japanese neighborhood, sense its small-town atmosphere,
with everyone knowing everyone else's business, and even feel the muggy
heat of summer. I've lived in Japan, and those scenes made me
"homesick." However, because I've lived in Japan, I know that the
emotional detachment portrayed in the film is extreme even by the
standards of that culture. The emotional flatness and the unresolved
plot detract from what could have been a moving study of a family
adjusting to the certainty of grief after years of uncertainty.
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