What makes it different from others?
Good , But It Is Overrated By Some
I really wanted to like this movie. I feel terribly cynical trashing it, and that's why I'm giving it a middling 5. Actually, I'm giving it a 5 because there were some superb performances.
View MoreOne of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
View More...precise story about Cancer; a illness that is beyond us and always win; sadly. The director takes this arduous subject in a very simple not oppressive way; painting us the picture with nice camera moves and colors. There is no any low blow or cliché to affect or effect what is going on in these 2 hours long. I think that this is very difficult to achieve in cases like this one that can turn a movie in a melodrama instantly. Life(and death)is simple and direct so this movie. Every one of the characters take the situations as they appear without too much analysis; only letting go and trying to flow with what roll you have in this world.Plenty of good and well known(in Japan)actors. Lily Franky always good and with a longer acting here; providing with a quote of humor for a sadly (included his)tale. Texture(is digital but top quality)colors palette; sound and of course photography are excellent for a "normal" budget movie. -In my opinion, the main character is not well done casting; I mean, he looks more for a character of a rock band (I think that he actually belongs to one)or a junkie than for this roll.
View MoreWhichever way you look at it, 'Pieta in the Toilet' is not an easy film to watch: A film about a failed artist-cum-window cleaner diagnosed with cancer is never going to be a laugh riot, and so the life and times of a 28 year old destined to die young has its ups and downs. Sonoda's reaction is one of apathy to his news. He tries to keep on working as if nothing has happened, initially rejecting his parents' concerns and treatment in hospital. A failed artist, he chooses to sulk himself to an early grave. But it is in two chance encounters at the hospital that he is brought back to life a little. He intervenes to help young Mai, a schoolgirl he befriends after a you-scratch-my-back exchange. Their relationship is an awkward one: He a young man about to die; she an underage school girl, unloved at home with a chip on her shoulder. Her push-pull attitude towards him becomes annoying, with Sonoda struggling to understand what she wants from him, but this perhaps suggests a well-developed character, perhaps from a male perspective anyway, of a difficult to read teenager. While someone he would rather escape, his ward-mate, the perverted Yokota, played by the increasingly popular Lily Franky, provides some humour in the bleakness, and someone that Sonoda eventually comes to empathise with and seek support. The meeting with Yokota leads him to the children's cancer ward, where he humours the young children , particularly Takuto for whom he draws his favourite comic books heroes. The story is inspired by the diaries of Osamu Tezuka towards the end of his life and sees Sonoda want to leave something behind after he dies, as well as pay tribute to the mother of Takuto and Mai simultaneously, recreating the image of Pieta, naturally in the toilet. Little about this film is easy, director Daishi Matsunaga drawing on various sources of inspiration and references. The switching of emotions and somewhat blandly unnatural scripting to facilitate the story can make the viewer feel a little unsure as to how to respond, though this is perhaps by design, as Matsunaga gets you inside the shoes and minds of the characters, unsure what to make of their lot.politic1983.blogspot.co.uk
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