Dolls (film)

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Dolls
Directed by Takeshi Kitano
Produced by Masayuki Mori
Written by Takeshi Kitano
Starring Miho Kanno
Hidetoshi Nishijima
Music by Joe Hisaishi
Cinematography Katsumi Yanagishima
Editing by Takeshi Kitano
Distributed by Office Kitano
Release date(s) 2002
Running time 114 min
Country Japan
Language Japanese

Dolls (ドールズ Dōruzu?) is a 2002 Japanese film written, edited and directed by Japanese director Takeshi Kitano. A highly stylized art film, Dolls is part of Kitano's non-crime film oeuvre, like 1991's A Scene at the Sea, and unlike most of his other films, he does not act in it. The film has been praised for its cinematography (Katsumi Yanagishima) and features costumes by Yohji Yamamoto.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The film features three primary sets of characters, each within their own distinct story:

  • A young man (Matsumoto, played by Hidetoshi Nishijima) who rejects his engagement to his fiancée (Sawako, played by Miho Kanno) to marry the daughter of his company's president. When his former fiancée attempts suicide and ends up in a semi-vegetative state, he takes her out of the hospital and they run away.
  • Another young man (Nukui, played by Tsutomu Takeshige) is obsessed with the pop-star Haruna (played by Kyoko Fukada); he blinds himself when she is involved in a disfiguring car accident.
  • An aged yakuza (Hiro, played by Tatsuya Mihashi), who tries to meet a girlfriend from his youth (played by Chieko Matsubara).

These stories do have some incidental visual cross-over with each other in the film, but are mostly separate. The first story is the one the film centers on. The film leads into it by opening with a performance of Bunraku theatre, and closes with a shot of dolls from the same. The performance is that of "The Courier for Hell" by Chikamatsu Monzaemon, and it alludes to themes that reappear later in the film. Because the rest of the film itself (as Kitano himself has said) can be treated as Bunraku in film form, the film is quite symbolic. In some cases, it is not clear whether a particular scene is meant to be taken literally. The film is also not in strict chronological order, but there is a strong visual emphasis on the changing of the seasons and the bonds of love over the progression of time (Matsumoto and Sawako spend most of the film physically connected by a red rope).

[edit] Themes

The film and each of its vignettes revolve closely around the theme of death. It was Kitano's intent to show death as neither good nor bad but a relative event. In an interview, Kitano stated, "The reason why modern Japanese and Westerners loathe the notion of death so much is beyond me. There really is no reason to loathe death," adding, "How you perceive this film can considerably differ depending on the position where you stand."[1]

[edit] Soundtrack

Dolls
Soundtrack album by Joe Hisaishi
Released 2 October, 2002 (UPCH-1191)
Label Universal Music Japan, Milan Records

All compositions by Joe Hisaishi.

  1. "Sakura" 4:40
  2. "Pure White" 2:48
  3. "Mad" 4:55
  4. "Feel" 4:58
  5. "Dolls" 4:09

[edit] Reception

The film has positive scores in review aggregator websites. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film 75%, with 36 reviews.[2] Metacritic gives it 71 out of 100, with 16 reviews.[3]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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