Barren Illusions

  • 95'
  • Japan
  • 1999
The latest film by Kurosawa Kiyoshi was made on a modest budget and with a young crew from the small Film School of Tokyo. The story is situated in the near future. Michi works at the post office where she is responsible for packages to be sent abroad. One day she steals a package containing seeds that she plants on the roof of her apartment. Her boyfriend Haru works in music, but he lacks enthusiasm. All his desires are tiny, including the desire for sex. In the outside world, a bleached skeleton is washed ashore on the coast. Maybe there's a war going on somewhere. Michi and Haru are both unmoved. The reality affecting the protagonists is not shown in terms of cause and effect, but scattered: a characteristic of Kurosawa's narrative style is that he lards his films with incomplete 'narrative' fragments, and here more than ever. Michi keeps wondering out loud: 'Where are we?' Haru doesn't know. But despite his awareness of the rarity of his life, he says: 'I'm here with you.' By showing events, information and even physical experiences that lack any sense of reality, Kurosawa sketches a picture that looks a lot like the present world and confirms the rarity of this existence. In the end, it focuses on the question of whether love is possible. (K.O.)
Director
Kurosawa Kiyoshi
Country of production
Japan
Year
1999
Festival Edition
IFFR 2000
Length
95'
Medium
35mm
Original title
Oinaru genei
Language
Japanese
Producers
Euro Space Inc., The Film School of Tokyo, Hiroku Matsuda
Sales
Euro Space Inc.
Screenplay
Kurosawa Kiyoshi
Director
Kurosawa Kiyoshi
Country of production
Japan
Year
1999
Festival Edition
IFFR 2000
Length
95'
Medium
35mm
Original title
Oinaru genei
Language
Japanese
Producers
Euro Space Inc., The Film School of Tokyo, Hiroku Matsuda
Sales
Euro Space Inc.
Screenplay
Kurosawa Kiyoshi