Tag: Buddha: The Great Departure

  • JFF15 Review: Buddha – The Great Departure

    JFF15 Review: Buddha – The Great Departure

    [stextbox id=”grey” caption=”Buddha – The Great Departure (2011)” float=”true” align=”right” width=”200″]

    JFF Logo (Small)

    Buddha the Great Departure poster

    DirectorYasuomi Ishito

    Runtime: 119 minutes

    Starring: Sayuri YoshinagaMasato SakaiHidetaka Yoshioka

    CountryJapan

    Rating:  Wait for the DVD/Blu-ray (?)

    More info

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    The works of Osamu Tezuka have the distinguished honour of being considered masterpieces in both the East and West, with his manga works adapted into anime series that became popular all around the globe. If you don’t know the name instantly, you might recognise some of his more famous works: Astro Boy, Kimba the White Lion and Black Jack. “The Godfather of Manga” is also known as the “Walt Disney of the East”, which may reduce his works to a simple comparison, but also give an indication of just how significant his works are in their native Japan. Along with Phoenix, the 14 volume Buddha is one of his most significant and spiritual works, taking 10 years of Tezuka’s life. An adaptation to the big screen might be considered madness.

    Buddha – The Great Departure (手塚治虫のブッダ赤い砂漠よ!美しく) takes elements from the first three volumes of Tezuka’s work, and begins with the birth of Siddartha Gautama and the death of his mother shortly after. As the country is torn apart by famine, drought and bloody warfare, Siddartha tires of his life as a prince and seeks a higher calling. This is the start of his journey towards enlightenment, as he will eventually become the monk that is revered by millions across the globe today.

    Even with a planned three-film saga, the reduction of any literary work into the compressed format of cinema is always a tricky affair, especially when the source material is a whopping great set of shelf-fillers from a revered manga artist. Buddha proves to be something of a contradiction in this sense, rapidly squishing some of the significant elements of the source material into mere seconds of screen time. For example, a number of commentators have picked up on the abbreviated telling of the tale of the rabbit who sacrifices himself for a starving monk at the start of the film. Yet at the same time, director Yasuomi Ishito revels in extending battles out to epic proportions that seem to be contrary to the spirit of the Lord Buddha. As the film drags its bloodied feet into the prolonged second hour, one would be forgiven for crying out “Is he Buddha yet?”

    When Prince of Egypt was released by the fledgling DreamWorks back in 1998, it went out of its way to be careful to depict an Old Testament religious figure that was revered by half the world in such a honourable way as to suck all the life out of the story. Buddha suffers the opposite problem, in that it seems to spelling Buddha with a capital B for Blood. The chaotic editing muddies any semblance of a plot that viewers not intimately familiar with the legend of Siddartha, lurching from one moment to the next so as to give that B a tertiary meaning of boring.

    The animation, from the giants at Toei Animation (Digimon) has stripped all the Tezuka out of the piece, with a “barely there” animation style that is reminiscent of the “illusion of animation” style of the mid-1990s. This cheap-looking approach lessens the impact of the scattered story even more, and with the exception of a few pretty backgrounds, most of the action on screen is a disengaging mess. If the aim is to either pay respect to the creator of the anime or its subject, very little ground will be gained on either front by the end of this first film.

    [stextbox id=”custom”]We can only hope that the other planned parts of this trilogy will do more to engage audiences that this bloody snoozer of a journey through Siddartha’s formative years.[/stextbox]

    Buddha – The Great Departure played at the Japanese Film Festival on 26 November (Sydney) and 6 December (Melbourne) 2011 at the 15th Japanese Film Festival in Australia.

  • 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.