Showing posts with label 1988. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1988. Show all posts

11 June 2022

My Neighbor Totoro (Japan, 1988)

In 1950s Japan, university professor Tatsuo and his two daughters, Satsuki and Mei, move into an old house to be closer to the hospital where the girls' mother, Yasuko, is recovering from a long-term illness. The house is inhabited by small, dark, dust-like house spirits called susuwatari which can be seen when moving from bright to dark places. One day, Mei discovers two small spirits who lead her into the hollow of a large camphor tree. She befriends a larger spirit, which identifies itself by a series of roars that she interprets as "Totoro".

Given its monumentally huge popularity throughout the world and animation cinema, few people have missed Hayao Miyazaki's My Neighbor Totoro. Even though the praise for it seems non-stop, it's still damn near impossible to be left disappointed. Miyazaki has created many fantastical and alluring worlds, but few such as inviting as the scenes in Totoro. The backgrounds of lush forests, sunsets over grassy hills, impossibly huge trees with explorable trunks turns the rural village into something truly magical. 


It's also been said a million times but to place it in the category 'For kids' would be a sin. The appeal and the sense of wonder Miyazaki can evoke through his films is so strong that it doesn't matter if you're eight or eighty. What I found during my later rewatches was the masterful tempo Miyazaki sets for the film. There's several powerful 'pillow shots', where in-between scenes of action or emotional heaviness there's a cut to some mundane object or tranquil landscape to "soften" the impact of the scene, also known as being a trademark of Yasujiro Ozu (Late Spring). Seeing it here makes it clear Miyazaki is far above the aim of just wanting to entertain the smaller ones.


Genre: Animation/Comedy/Family. 1h 26min.

18 January 2016

Men Behind the Sun (Japan, 1988)

Story of a Japanese terror camp in the end of WW2, where the Japanese are using the Chinese as guinea pigs in terrible experiments to develop deadly bacterial-plagues.

This is a film I easily can imagine being passed around as a bootleg in the 90's between gore and horror film aficionados. Men Behind the Sun (a.k.a. Camp 731) doesn't impress too much in terms of special effect quality but it's the thought of how accurate the events are depicted that's most sickening. The director did years of research and wanted to show exactly what kind of cruelties went on inside of Camp 731. Due to the fact that a special effect industry didn't exist when this film was made a lot of the gore had to be improvised in other ways, for example using real corpses (yes, seriously) and real body parts from recently deceased people. A certain controversial "cat scene" was also a primitive way of making it look like a cat is being eaten by hundreds of rats when it in fact was perfectly safe for the cat. 

So, a lot of disturbing scenes that shows the inhumane experiments the Japanese carried out, and not a happy moment in sight. Though it's an impressive retelling of what happened in one of WW2's darkest moments.

 
Genre: Drama/History/Horror

21 November 2013

Evil Dead Trap (Japan, 1988)

Nami hosts a late night home video program. She receives a tape which appears to be a real snuff film. She and her crew investigate the location where she meets a man looking for his brother who warns her to stay away. As she gets closer to the truth, she and her friends are subjected to a brutal nightmare.

If you've seen a lot of gory and bloody slasher flicks, then Evil Dead Trap will not be the one that finally makes you puke, but it's a decent entry in the world of horror. B-horror, anyway. Some brutal scenes and a couple of nasty special effects makes it definitely worth your while. 

Genre: Horror

3 September 2013

As Tears Go By (Hong Kong, 1988)

A low-level triad "big brother" has a hot-tempered "little brother" who can't keep out of trouble, and consequently is in constant need of being bailed out by his protector. The "big brother" is super cool, but lacks the ambition to rise in the ranks of the triad societies - and once he meets his cousin from Kowloon and falls in love with her, he even thinks about leaving "the life".

As Tears Go By was the directorial debut of Wong kar-Wai (2046) and shows his first use his trademark color palette. It also starred a very young Andy Lau (Infernal Affairs), who did a great job portraying a small time gangster.

Genre: Crime/Drama/Romance

21 December 2011

Tetsuo: The Iron Man (Japan, 1989)

A strange man known only as the "metal fetishist", who seems to have an insane compulsion to stick scrap metal into his body, is hit and possibly killed by a Japanese "salaryman", out for a drive with his girlfriend. The salaryman then notices that he is being slowly overtaken by some kind of disease that is turning his body into scrap metal.

Tetsuo is the film that introduced me to the mind of famed director Shinya Tsukamoto, and after that, it's been one long, happy love story. If the description above doesn't make you want to watch this movie, then I don't know what will. Though certainly not a film for everyone, being filmed in black & white and a little slow in the beginning, but those who stay will discover a twisted, disturbing story with surprisingly enjoyable practical special-effects and body horror madness. Some scenes really are among the most insane things that ever have happened in the history of cinema.

Genre: Horror/Sci-Fi

14 November 2011

Akira (Japan, 1988)


Kaneda is a bike gang leader whose close friend Tetsuo gets involved in a government secret project known as Akira. On his way to save Tetsuo, Kaneda runs into a group of anti-government activists, greedy politicians, irresponsible scientists and a powerful military leader. The confrontation sparks off Tetsuo's supernatural power leading to bloody death, a coup attempt and the final battle in Tokyo Olympiad where Akira's secrets were buried 30 years ago.

A landmark in animation. Akira influenced a whole generation of film-makers and would come to be one of the movies that popularized anime outside of Japan. Based on a manga, Akira is set in a dystopian Neo-Tokyo, 2019. The story focuses on the young biker Kaneda, and his friend Tetsuo who gains destructive psychic powers.

Filled to the brim with glowing neon cyberpunk and sci-fi, this movie is gorgeous every second. Fluid animation and solid sound-effects makes this a masterpiece that still outshines many anime movies made today.


Genre: Action/Animation/Sci-Fi