Before We Vanish *** /
*****
Directed by: Kiyoshi Kurosawa.
Written by: Kiyoshi Kurosawa and Sachiko
Tanaka based on the player by Tomohiro Maekawa.
Starring: Masami Nagasawa (Narumi
Kase), Ryûhei Matsuda (Shinji Kase), Hiroki Hasegawa (Sakurai), Masahiro
Higashide (Pastor), Kyôko Koizumi (Doctor), Kazuya Kojima (Detective Kurumada),
Atsuko Maeda (Asumi Kase), Ken Mitsuishi (Suzuki), Shinnosuke Mitsushima (Maruo),
Takashi Sasano (Shinagawa), Mahiro Takasugi (Amano), Yuri Tsunematsu (Akira
Tachibana).
I
have never quite understood people who always seem to complain that any movie
over two hours is too long (especially since they also seem to be the people
who brag about binging a TV series in a weekend, but I digress). Films are more
than just a plot delivery device that should try and get it over with as
quickly as possible. But if you are one of those people, I’ll say right off the
top that Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Before We Vanish is not a film for you. It runs two
hours and ten minutes, and spends much of that time meandering from place to
place, content to take its take, even repeat itself if necessary, and simply
hang out with these characters. There are moments of explosive violence to keep
things interesting – but in many ways, this movie is content to meander with
its big ideas and flawed execution. It’s actually one of the more charming
things about the film.
The
concept of Before We Vanish is fascinating. Three aliens have crashed landed on
earth, and each has taken over the body of a person (all of them in Japan,
oddly enough). The aliens cannot understand humans – and are particularly
interested in concepts. The way they learn these concepts is to basically steal
them from people by touching their foreheads – the aliens then understand the
concept, but the human no longer does. Two of these aliens end up with human
guides – Shinji (Ryuhei Matsuda) is returned to his wife Narumi (Masami
Nagasawa), who doesn’t understand why the husband she thought had abandoned her
is acting so strange – but their bond strengthens over time. The other two end
up with Sakurai (Hiroki Hasegawa) a cynical reporter who first sees these two
as a good story, until he realizes they’re not joking. Unlike Shinji, these two
aliens don’t really develop an emotional connection with their guide – they’re
more like psychopathic children.
The
concept of the movie is fascinating enough that it really does keep you
interested in what’s happening for probably longer than it should. As we see
people relieved on concepts like family, ownership and work, they all basically
act the same – they have been unshackled from the drudgery of their lives, and
the things holding them down. When Sakurai tries to rally people to his cause
late in the film – giving a big speech to a square full of onlookers, who look
at him with blank eyes, you may well wonder if perhaps the aliens are not
right, and we need to be wiped out. But Kurosawa doesn’t feel that way – and
although the end of the movie gives way to cheap sentimentality – it’s
effective just the same.
Ultimately,
I don’t think that Before We Vanish is quite as clever or original as it thinks
it is – or then it feels like for part of its runtime. We are enslaved by our
beliefs, and would be happier if we threw them off, and lived more freely, we
get it. And yet, in the end it is another concept – love- that will eventually
save humanity – a concept that even a seemingly emotionless alien can relate
to. No matter how much this movie meanders (and boy does it) it ultimately end
up precisely where you expect it to. It’s another interesting film from
Kurosawa, who has been somewhat adrift the past decade or so, since moving away
from his earlier J-horror (with Cure and Pulse, among others) with Tokyo Sonata
– which was essentially the same thing, without the horror. His output since
then has been all over the map. This is one of his strangest films, and while I
don’t think it’s one of his best, it may well be one of his most memorable in
that time. Even if the destination is well known, the journey is interesting.
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