Tag: A Ghost of a Chance

  • JFF15 Review: A Ghost of a Chance

    JFF15 Review: A Ghost of a Chance

    [stextbox id=”grey” caption=”A Ghost of a Chance (2011)” float=”true” align=”right” width=”200″]

    JFF Logo (Small)

    A Ghost of a Chance poster

    DirectorKoki Mitani

    Runtime: 142 minutes

    StarringEri FukatsuToshiyuki Nishida, Kiichi Nakai, Hiroshi Abe

    CountryJapan

    Rating: Worth A Look (?)

    More info

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    It really came as no surprise when Koki Mitani’s A Ghost of a Chance (ステキな金縛り aka Once in a Blue Moon ) opened to a  ¥533,4 million ($7 million US) weekend at the box office just a few weeks ago. The King of Comedy had previously seen massive successes with audiences on Suite Dreams and The Magic Hour, and his unique brand of comedy has a strong appeal with the Japanese market. However, his lack of success abroad has baffled many commentators, perhaps because he falls between the cracks of the arthouse crowd and the more extreme cult genres that Japanese cinema has been known for in the last few years. The 15th Japanese Film Festival in Australia aims to remedy that somewhat with a mini-retrospective of Mitani’s films. With the opening ceremony held in Sydney last night, it was the perfect way to commence a festival that is filled with more comedy than ever before.

    Emi Hosho (Eri Fukatsu, Villain) is a failing lawyer, trying to live up to the legacy of her dad’s career. When she is assigned an unusual case of a client accused of murdering his wife, things take a turn for the strange. The defendant (played by musician KAN, LoveDeath) claims that he was staying at an inn at the time, and was trapped by a kanashibar, or supernaturally induced sleep paralysis. Determined not to lose another case, Emi travels to the inn where she encounters Rokubei Sarashina (Toshiyuki Nishida, Star Watching Dog),a 421 year-old samurai who also happens to be a ghost. As the only witness to her client’s innocence, Emi convinces him to testify in court. The only problem is getting the rest of the world to see what she sees.

    Mitani’s high-concepts are always bordering on the ridiculous, and are at their best when they cross right over into insane territory. A Ghost of a Chance really shouldn’t work as a concept, and the fact that it mostly pulls off the task of drawing in a mass crowd is something to be applauded. Holding this film together is a leading performance from Toshiyuki Nishida, who is used to stealing every scene he is in. Best known to the Western world as Pigsy from the TV series of Monkey, he is every bit the 400 year old samurai. Playing it completely over the top, his character dominates the film to such an extent that the defendant must humbly ask “Isn’t this trial about me?”. When Nishida does leave the screen, his presence is palpably absent, although the other characters each have their quirks worth exploring.

    Like many of Mitani’s recent works, A Ghost of a Chance suffers from its unwieldy length, and this is perhaps a hangover from his extensive theatre background. What has traditionally tempered this is a cracking pace that wouldn’t seem out of place in a Howard Hawks film, but here the film certainly takes its time to get moving. The extended exposition is not as overtly madcap as his last feature, The Magic Hour, and it is not until the introduction of the legendary Toshiyuki Nishida that the film begins to pick up pace. However, many of Mitani’s familiar elements are all in place in the opening sequence, including Koji Yamamoto (Ninja Kids!!!) in a delightful caricature of a moustache-twirling villain from the silent era. Part of the success of Mitani’s previous efforts have been the anachronistic bubble in which Mitani’s films exist, and A Ghost of a Chance has a thoroughly modern setting, albeit a very warped take on it.

    If you accept Mitani’s central conceit, and you kind of have to, there is much to love about A Ghost of a Chance. There are several deus ex machinas that seem to drop in when it is most convenient to the plot, including the death of one character, but this is all in the (pardon the pun) spirit of the thing. Fumiyo Kohinata’s feather-suit wearing and Frank Capra loving being from another world adds his own flair to proceedings, and Eri Fukatsu’s breaks free of her Bayside Shakedown TV origins and delivers a wide-eye enthusiasm that is needed as a counterpoint to Kiichi Nakai’s (Princess Toyotomi) anti-villain.

    [stextbox id=”custom”]A Ghost of a Chance is typically long Mitani, but filled with well-crafted levels of silliness. The perfect opener for this year’s Japanese Film Festival and hopefully one that will see Mitani finally find some success in the West.[/stextbox]

    A Ghost of a Chance opened the Japanese Film Festival in Sydney on 17 November 2011. It will also open the Melbourne leg of the festival on 29 November 2011 at the 15th Japanese Film Festival in Australia.

  • Trailer for Koki Mitani’s A Ghost of a Chance

    Trailer for Koki Mitani’s A Ghost of a Chance

    A Ghost of a Chance (Once in a Blue Moon) posterAsianMediaWiki has revealed the English subtitled trailer for A Ghost of a Chance (ステキな金縛り), the lastest film from the Japanese King of Comedy Koki Mitani. Mitani is known for University of Laughs, Suite Dreams and The Magic Hour, and his film A Ghost of a Chance just hit the Number 1 spot at the Japanese box office last week.

    Synopsis: Defence lawyer Emi is assigned to a particularly unusual case: a man is suspected of murdering his wealthy wife, and his only alibi is a 421-year old ghost, Rokubei. At first Emi is hesitant, but when she pursues her lead she is visited by the ghost herself. And so the fun begins in the courtroom when Prosecutor Osano starts to cross examine…

    Once again starring the incomparable Toshiyuki Nishida, and a cast of Mitani regulars, this looks to be the Japanese comedy smash of the year.

    A Ghost of a Chance (aka Once in a Blue Moon) opened in Japan on 29 October 2011 in Japan from Toho, and will be the Opening Night film on 17 November (Sydney) and 29 November (Melbourne) 2011 at the 15th Japanese Film Festival in Australia.

    [flowplayer src=’https://www.thereelbits.com/wp-content/uploads/video/Ghostofachance-engsubtrailer.m4v’ width=460 splash=https://www.thereelbits.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/ghostofachance001.jpg]

    Download the trailer

  • 15th Japanese Film Festival Reveals Full Program and guests

    15th Japanese Film Festival Reveals Full Program and guests

    15th Japanese Film Festival (2011)The 15th Japanese Film Festival in Australia unveiled their full anniversary program today, including their opening and closing night films, special guests and a whopping 15 additional titles to the 15 already announced. That’s a whopping 30 brand new Japanese films to enjoy for lovers of cinemas everywhere, and they all look like they are winners.

    Not only that, director Hideyuki Hirayama (JFF14‘s Sword of Desperation) is here with his film Oba, The Last Samurai and its incredibly popular star Yutaka Takenouchi will also come to Sydney. Takenouchi also stars in the previously announced A Honeymoon in HellMr. & Mrs. Oki’s Fabulous Tripand Hirayama’s 2010 Shinsan: A Serenade in a Coalmine Town will also play.

    Opening Night kicks off with Koki Mitani’s Ghost of a Chance, about man is suspected of murdering his wealthy wife, and his only alibi is a 421-year old ghost, Rokubei.It’s playing as part of a Mitani “King of Comedy” retrospective that also includes special event screenings of The Magic Hour (2008) and Suite Dreams (2006, pictured below).

    It’s not all comedy, of course, with the dramatic films weighing in heavily this year. Okinawa International Movie Festival winning Hankyu Railways: A 15-Minute Miracle (2011, Dir: Yoshishige Miyake) is about those chance encounters that can happen on a railway, while the similarly titled Railways (2010, Dir: Nishikori Yoshinari) is a more leisurely paced film about a Japanese salaryman who decides to go for his lifelong dream of becoming a railway driver. Given the reputation for punctuality in Japanese trains, this doesn’t sound like an easy job.  Cue the words “heart-warming”.

    Then there’s “food drama” Patisserie: Coin de Rue (2011, Dir: Yoshihiro Fukagawa), which takes a leaf out of JFF14‘s Flavour of Happiness, and mountain-climbing drama Peak (2011, Dir: Osamu Katayama), which screams Cliffhanger. Not that there’s anything wrong with that. Over in Rebirth (2011, Dir: Izuru Narushima), Mao Inoue (JFF15’s Oba, The Last Samurai) plays a woman who was abducted for four years as a child, and is unable to find peace.

    Suite Dreams

    Fantasia Film Festival favourite Milocrorze: A Love Story (2011, Dir: Yoshimasa Ishibashi) has been getting some interesting reviews around the world. We don’t think we could find one better than Twitch Film telling us that it is “like a My Little Pony shitting Gummi Bears into a river of Coca-Cola under a bright pink sky full of rainbows. It’s super sweet, kind of gross, plenty weird, and damn awesome”. Meanwhile, Japan’s comedic answer to The Da Vinci Code is Princess Toyotomi, about a 400-year-old secret that could turn Osaka into an independent country within Japan! Last but not least is The Lady Shogun and Her Men (2010, Dir: Fuminori Kaneko), an alternative history in which a woman took over the country after a mysterious illness takes out the men.

    In addition to the previously announced Arrietty, the other big anime title screening is Buddha: The Great Departure (2011, Dir: Yasuomi Ishito), based on the monumental Osamu Tezuka (Astro Boy) three-time Eisner Award winning manga of the same name. With over 20 million copies of the manga sold worldwide, this one is sure to attract lots of attention.

    The festival will close with the Montreal World Film Festival award-winning Life Back Then (2011, Dir: Takahisa Zeze), recalling the Oscar-contender Departures in its exploration of a young man who takes a job as a  “cleaner”, disposing of the belongings left behind by people who have died alone.

    Other films we have already unveiled include the highly anticipated Studio Ghibli Arrietty (aka The Borrower Arriety, 2010, Dir: Hiromasa Yonebayashi), Oba, The Last Samurai (2011, Dir: Hideyuki Hirayama), A Boy and His Samurai (2010, Dir: Yoshihiro Nakamura ), The Fallen Angel (2010, Dir: Genjiro Arato), A Honeymoon in HellMr. & Mrs. Oki’s Fabulous Trip (2010, Dir: Ryuichi Honda), Ninja Kids!!! (2011, Dir: Takashi Miike), In His Chart (2011, Dir: Yoshihiro Fukagawa), Star Watching Dog (2011, Dir: Tomoyuki Takimoto), The Last Ronin (2010, Dir: Shigemichi Sugita), GANTZ and GANTZ: Perfect Answer (2011, Dir: Shinsuke Sato), Villain (2010, Sang-il Lee), Abacus and Sword (2010, Yoshimitsu Morita) and the special event film, Yamakoshi: The Recovery of a Village.

    Buddha: the Great Departure

    The 15th Japanese Film Festival begins in Adelaide as of this year’s OzAsia Festival today. JFF15 will travel to Perth from 29 September to 7 October, then Brisbane on 1 to 4 November and Canberra from 9 to 20 November. It then moves to Sydney from 17 to 27 November 2011, before taking on Melbourne from 29 November to 6 December 2011.