Document type
Review
Published
4 September 2003
Format viewed
Video
Label
n/a

9 Souls

picture: 9 Souls (2003)picture: 9 Souls (2003)

Original title
9 Souls
Director
Toshiaki TOYODA
Cast
  • Yoshio HARADA
  • Ryuhei MATSUDA
  • Koji CHIHARA
  • Takuji SUZUKI
  • ONIMARU
  • Mame YAMADA
  • KEE
  • Genta DAIRAKU
  • Itsuji ITAO
  • Kazuki KITAMURA
Running time
119 mins.

picture: 9 Souls (2003)

Year
2003
Author
Tom Mes

The past few years, one of the favoured subjects of Japanese filmmakers was that of disaffected youth. Young Toshiaki Toyoda added more than his own two cents with his debut films Pornostar (1998) and the magnificent but much overlooked Blue Spring (2002). The reason for the latter's lack of international exposure may well have been down to the fact that by the time it came out, the whole youth-gone-wild genre was already looking old hat. Whereto next then for a director who seemed to specialise in the matter? The simple answer is: forward. Toyoda's latest film witnesses the birth of an assured, mature director capable of handling multi-character storylines with confidence.

The nine souls of the title are nine escaped convicts. All male, they diverge in age, background and crime. There is Torakichi (Harada), the eldest and the group's natural leader, who killed his own son; Kazuma (Chihara), a former biker who stabbed four of his own gang; Inui (Suzuki), an epileptic mad bomber; the diminutive doctor Shiratori (Yamada), who was jailed for aiding suicide; the reclusive Michiru (Matsuda), a young man who murdered his own father; the temperamental Ushiyama (Dairaku); former chinpira Shishido (Onimaru); pimp Kiyoshi (Kee) and modest porn entrepreneur Fujio (Itao). One thing they share: they all have unfinished business to take care of and family members or a loved one to come clean to.

After hijacking a van, they set out in the direction of an elementary school at the foot of Mount Fuji, where their cellmate, soul number ten that was dragged off to solitary moments before the nine men found their escape route, is supposed to have hidden his stash of counterfeit yen. But they find the site vacant of any cash. Packing themselves back into the van, they head towards the suburbs and the city, with the men parting from the others' company one by one to attempt to pick up what is left of their lives.

Starting out as absurd comedy with surrealist touches, the tone of 9 Souls grows increasingly dramatic as the story progresses. The combination of outright comedy and poignant tragedy is a tricky one, and there are examples galore in world cinema that testify how easy it is to screw it up. The Brits manage to get it right from time to time, but for every Brassed Off there is a Peter's Friends whose up-down-up-down structure is too artificial and predictable to work. In 9 Souls, the change is gradual, with elements of tragedy always present within the comedy and vice versa. That the protagonists walk around in drag or wear false moustaches and glasses has no negative impact on their later much more serious encounters with the ghosts of their past. On the contrary, it makes the more serious parts of the film more impressive, since their earlier clowning made us care for them all the more.

Toyoda handles the inner dynamics of the group well. Never letting the atmosphere in the back of the cramped van escalate into predictable melodramatic tensions, he brings out the individuality of each member then creates links between them: the similarity in age of Michiru and Kazuma, the love for porn of Kiyoshi and Fujio, and the irony of the combination Torakichi - Michiru, the former having murdered his own son and the latter his own father. The director is aided in this by an excellent cast, headed by Yoshio Harada, who in the 80s had a patent on macho swagger but who since Rokuro Mochizuki's superb Onibi: The Fire Within (1995) has turned into one of the most impressive actors in Japan, combining a commanding screen presence with the kind of vulnerability and ability for self-effacement that comes with age and experience. Toyoda also brings back the two leads of his previous films Koji Chihara and Ryuhei Matsuda as Kazuma and Michiru, as well as supporting actors Onimaru, Kee and the wee Yamada.

Adding occasional touches of surrealism that work marvellously well (a red neon-fronted strip club appears in the middle of nowhere, clouds change shape on Michiru's command, Tokyo turns to ashes before our eyes), 9 Souls is already looking to be one this year's top films to come out of Japan. That other releases are carried by a lot more hype and anticipation is certainly unjust, but in the end matters little. They will leave their audiences disappointed in their wake. Something very unlikely to happen when the end credits of 9 Souls start to roll.

DVD

Artsmagic (USA)

picture: DVD cover of '9 Souls'

Region 1. English subtitles.

Artsmagic (USA)

picture: DVD cover of '9 Souls'

Toshiaki Toyoda boxed set (with Blue Spring). Region 1. English subtitles.

Pony Canyon (Japan)

picture: DVD cover of '9 Souls'

Region 2. No subtitles.