FESTIVAL COVERAGE Load & Play RSS Feed

Thursday, November 6, 2008
TOKYO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
By Nicholas Vroman 



Following on the heels of the Pusan International Film Festival, the Tokyo International Film Festival (Oct. 18-26), ever wanting to position itself as the "go to" festival for new Asian cinema, seems to get sloppy seconds. Even the newcomer, the Bangkok International Film Festival, programmed an edgier Asian section, scooping the new Naomi Kawase film, Nanayo, a few weeks before TIFF. Long the rollout fest for Japanese fall theatrical releases, the Tokyo International Film Festival still carries its weight for Japanese distributors. This year’s opener was John Woo’s Red Cliff and closing was Wall-E.

The festival is flush, centered in Roppongi Hills, the high-class mega development in central Tokyo which boasts countless cafes, shopping galore, an art museum, apartments and offices and a toney new six-plex cinema. An environmentally friendly green carpet opening night brought out the star power with the likes of John Woo, Fernando Meirelles, Jerzy Skolimowski, Julianne Moore in town for their Tokyo premieres and John Voight as competition jury head. They even had a special fly-in on the last weekend of the fest with Chen Kaige and Nikita Mikhalkov for lifetime achievement kudo, the Akira Kurosawa Awards.

Tokyo is a festival that brazenly programs epic schlock along the lines of Kim Tae-kyun’s The Crossing, Feng Xiaoning’s SuperTyphoon and Journey to the Center of the Earth; theater-bound quality pics like Hunger and Mike Leigh’s Happy Go Lucky ;and festival faves along the lines of Jose Luis Guerin’s In the City of Sylvia and Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Three Monkeys along with various rejects from Pusan and Bangkok. But still there were a few diamonds in the rough and discoveries that made the festival worthwhile.

TIFF’s Japanese Eyes section started four years ago in reaction to the challenge mounted by Edo’s other big film festival, Tokyo Filmex, which from its beginning has embraced the mission of breaking new Japanese films and talent. TIFF’s always had a bit of a problem finding and competing for such films. Nonetheless, out of a rather dreary lineup, there were some genuine winners. Taking the Best Picture Award was Buy a Suit, the last film by the woefully neglected auteur, Jun Ichikawa, who sadly passed away a month before the scheduled festival debut of his film. It’s a wonderful no-budget chamber piece that’s part city symphony and part Ozu-channeling family drama -– a moving denoument to an amazing career. Kaizo Hayashi’s The Code, a clever thriller spoof featured a remarkable Joe Shishido, Seijun Suzuki’s favorite star, showing that minus cheek implants and at 74, he still is a commanding presence.

The competition section was a mixed bag of offerings from the truly questionable, to several lackluster Japanese, American and French entries, to the new Skolimowski and some premieres by very talented unknowns. Among the best were Planet Carlos, the debut film by German filmmaker Andreas Kannengießer about a dirt poor Nicaraguan teenager trying to make a go of life in gigantona, a sort of street poetry/dance/performance art. The Tokyo Sakura Grand Prix winner went to Tulpan (pictured above), a first feature by Kazhakstani filmmaker Sergey Dvortsevoy. It's a wry ethnographic social comedy that fits into a new genre of films defined by the likes of The Story of the Weeping Camel. Winner of Un Certain Regard at Cannes this year, the film is making the rounds, winning prizes nearly everywhere it goes. Skolimowski walked away with the Special Jury Prize for 4 nights with Anna. Though perhaps not his greatest film, it’s good to see him back after 17 years. The audience award went to a Japanese oddity, Tetsu Maeda’s School Days with a Pig, an awkward adaptation of a TV documentary about a class that spends a year raising a pig from birth to the dinner table.

A new section was added with the Toyota Earth Grand Prize, part of an eco-friendly promotion by one of the festival’s major donors. The winner was the amusing but clichéd Ashes from the Sky, a Spanish anti-nuke Local Hero.

Like Roppongi Hills itself, TIFF is big, sprawling and very commercial, but there are many nooks and crannies where one can find some great things.

Labels:


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/06/2008 02:13:00 PM
Comments (0)


This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?



RECENT POSTS

LOS ANGELES FILM FESTIVAL By Justin Lowe
CINEVEGAS By Jon Korn
NEWFEST By Conor Fetting-Smith
TORINO INTERNATIONAL GAY AND LESBIAN FILM FESTIVAL...
TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL By Jason Guerrasio
GEN ART FILM FESTIVAL By Alicia Van Couvering
MIAMI INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL By Rob Nelson
DUBAI INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL By Jason Guerras...
ROME FILM FEST By Caveh Zahedi
VANCOUVER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL By Rob Nelso...


ARCHIVES

Current Posts
January 2007
February 2007
April 2007
May 2007
July 2007
October 2007
November 2007
January 2008
March 2008
April 2008
July 2008
September 2008
November 2008
January 2009
May 2009
June 2009
August 2009
September 2009
October 2009
December 2009
January 2010