Joy of Man's Desiring (2014) Poster

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7/10
After the quake
nmegahey27 January 2018
Masakazu Sugita's debut feature Joy of Man's Desiring takes a surprisingly low-key and intimate look at a huge event that nonetheless gives some indication of the vast implications it can have on people. In this case the event is one that is of considerable concern and the experience of many people living in Japan; the impact of an earthquake. It's an experience that the director has experienced himself as a survivor of the 1995 Great Hanshin Earthquake, and the film's power lies in how it views this life-changing event from the perspective of two very young children.

Haruna and Shoto are survivors of an earthquake that destroys their home and kills their parents. Haruna is old enough to be aware of the horror of what she has witnessed, but Shoto is too young to understand what has happened or why they are now being looked after and brought up by relatives. It's not just the two children who find it difficult to cope with the change in their circumstances. Their aunt, uncle, young cousin and grandfather who they share a home with are taking on more than just the responsibility of bringing up the children now that their parents are dead; they will have to help them deal with loss, with trauma and give them the time they need to adjust to a new life.

The childlike perspective on children having to cope with adult problems is very much in Hirokazu Kore-eda territory, but first time director Masakazu Sugita adopts a more naturalistic approach in Joy of Man's Desiring, particularly in relation to narrative. He allows the subject to dictate the pace of the film, the underlying tragedy of the earthquake and the devastation it causes rarely being specifically referred to, yet remaining always there in the background. You can feel its presence bearing down on the children as they attempt to move on with their lives, unable to comprehend the nature of what has occurred or know how they are supposed to behave in reaction to it. It's slow cinema, but for the reason that these things take time.

The simplicity of the film and the manner in which it treats its subject also takes it far beyond being merely a film about surviving in the aftermath of an earthquake. In Haruna and Shota we can recognise the same kind of difficulties, losses, secret sadnesses and unknown pain that most of us carry around with them and have to learn to live with. Find a way to relate to the world, to take pleasure in it again can sometimes seem impossible with the enormity of hidden dramas that no-one really knows about. It's the wide openness and raw honesty of the director's approach that provides the room, the time and the means to reflect and consider how sometimes we can all need a little help and understanding.
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7/10
Hidden Tears
politic198312 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
There seems to be an increasing need among filmmakers to document a factual event on screen, trying to find the balance between not coming "too soon", but within enough of a time frame to ensure that it hasn't left the general public's consciousness, and thus unmarketable.

Having lived through the Great Hanshin Earthquake of 1995 in Kobe; and obviously in reaction to the Tohoku Earthquake and resulting tsunami three years previous, Masakazu Sugita's 2014 "The Joy of Man's Desiring" focuses on the destruction of one family following an unspecified earthquake.

Her house destroyed, twelve year-old Haruna struggles through the rubble to find her family. But her parents are dead and we are quickly moved to their funeral. Her injured pre-school younger brother, Shota, does not yet know of his parents' fate as he recovers in hospital. Now without their parents, arguments start among relatives as to who shall take them in, resulting in their aunt and uncle inviting them to live with them.

Starting a new life, Haruna strives to fit-in at her new school, while Shota blissfully goes about his carefree days, before gradually starting to wonder as to the whereabouts of his parents. Causing difficulties in their new family home between their aunt, uncle and cousin, the siblings runaway; their survival seemingly more a burden for others than a blessing.

Tackling a sensitive subject matter such as this requires a certain amount of tact from the filmmaker. Sugita's tactic is to take a child's perspective on events: a position that could make things even harder. The irresistibly cute Shota creates nothing but kawaii feelings for the audience, but also acts as the perfect foil for the horribly tragic events that know no sympathy. His ignorance to his situation, only heighten the inevitable heartbreak to be felt at some point in a film such as this.

But Sugita avoids too much over-sentimentality. Initially, none of their relatives seem keen to take them in, and those that do feel the strain of their being there. Their cousin, Katsutoshi, soon resents his kin: Shota inheriting his clothes; and more painfully for Haruna, her aunt sees her as the daughter she always wanted - it just took the death of her parents for her to get it.

With their emotionally-absent uncle, over-doting aunt and resentful cousin, the pair are made to feel a burden, soon finding rejection and treated as someone else's problem. No doubt a comment from Sugita as to some reactions to those whose lives were destroyed in the aforementioned natural disasters.

The deception of her younger brother taking its toll on Haruna - Shota waiting each day by the port for his parents to arrive by boat - the ending sees the pair runaway seemingly to find "home". This creates an awkward moment for the audience, as a twelve year-old girl breaks down in tears, though there is no other way it could be. Things are then left ambiguous as to what is next for the siblings, on both a metaphorical and literal open road.

A debut feature for Sugita, there are some bumpy moments along the way, but overall the filmmaking is strong. Long takes of slow movement allow pauses for audience reflection and the at-times-harsh soundtrack accompanying shots of Haruna feel reminiscent of the much more bumpy "Himizu", but effectively demonstrate her inner turmoil of fake smiles on the surface, hide an eruption of tears.

politic1983.blogspot.co.uk
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