Film Review
A tongue-in-cheek commentary on how the west exploits Japanese culture
for its own shallow ends or a Nippon-flavoured film noir that is
intended merely to divert with its lurid eroticism and sado-masochistic
thrills?
Inju, la
bête dans l'ombre
is a multi-faceted little oddity of a film that somehow manages to slot
in all the clichés about Japanese culture without itself
appearing clichéd. The film is one of the more unusual
offerings from director-producer and one-time critic on the
Cahiers du cinéma Barbet
Schroeder, one that allows him to indulge his longheld fascination for
all things Japanese whilst proving that, at 66, he hasn't yet lost his
knack of turning out imaginative and stylish genre
flicks.
The film was inspired by the 1928 novel
Inju by the celebrated Japanese
thriller writer Edogawa Ranpo. The mysterious reclusive
writer in the film, Shundei Oe, is closely based on Ranpo, an author
who, whilst greatly admired if not adulated by the public, was
something of a monster in real life. An obvious fan of Japanese
cinema, Schroeder pays homage not only to
chambara (the sword-fighting genre
of Japanese cinema) with a stylish and suitably gory opening sequence
but also to Western and Oriental variants of film noir, achieving a
synthesis of styles that is both eye-catching and eerily atmospheric.
The only area where the film falls down is its plot, which drags us
down an all too predictable course, before collapsing wearily with the
typical B-movie denouement. It doesn't help that the central
protagonist (a pretentious young writer who loves himself far too much)
fails spectacularly to gain our sympathies, partly because Benoît
Magimel's portrayal is so lacking in charm and substance that you
really don't care what happens to him. Fortunately, the
contributions from the Japanese cast members are far more nuanced and convincing
(Lika Minamoto is stunning as the ex-Geisha) and this, along with
Schroeder's unfalteringly slick mise-en-scène and some moody
cinematography, prevents us from dwelling too much on the mechanical
plot. The end result is not entirely satisfying but it is
strangely compelling, one of the most haunting and visually alluring
examples of French film noir in recent years.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Barbet Schroeder film:
Amnesia (2015)
Film Synopsis
Alex Fayard, a successful writer of crime fiction, arrives in Japan to
promote his latest book. He takes advantage of this visit to look
up Shundei Oe, the celebrated Japanese writer who inspired him in his
career. Oe is a renowned recluse, a strange man that
virtually no one knows, although his books suggest he is someone with a
perverse and dangerous imagination. In Kyoto, Alex is
irresistibly drawn to beautiful Geisha named Tamao, who has received
death threats from her former lover...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.