Foreign movies are better?

Right now I’m watching the amazing five part Yakuza Papers series by Fukasaku Kinji (1 2 3 4 5). I’ve been impressed with the way the actors inhabit their characters, so believable, every action adding to the overall realism of Fukasaku’s gritty gangster world. It seems most foreign movies have excellent performances, and I think this is mainly due to the worthwhile movies being separated from the chaff when studios decide what to export, but I wonder if it also has to do with a culture barrier. Can we, as Americans, not pick up on the little things that ring untrue in a French or Japanese actor’s performance? Can we not hear poorly delivered dialog because we don’t understand the natural rhythms of most foreign languages? I suppose it evens out with the enjoyable nuance we miss in poor subtitles and overdub, and the humor we don’t catch because it relies on cultural norms with which we’re not familiar.

Either way, I’m pretty sure Yakuza Papers is awesome.

New feature on DreamingAnt.com – Movie Reviews!

The web team have implemented a new “Movie Review” feature on DreamingAnt.com. Our website is already one of the best independent rental store sites I’ve seen, with a database searchable by title/director/actor/genre, movie descriptions, you can see which Dreaming Ant location has the movie you’re looking for, and you can see if the movie is in or out in real time. Now all members can review and rate all the movies in our database! Seriously! It’s like we’re a mini IMDB.com, but you can walk over to our brick-and-mortar and rent any movie you read amazing reviews on.

I think this new feature has the potential to make everyone’s dvd renting and viewing experience much more rewarding. The future may bring an in-store kiosk for easy reference, and maybe bonuses for customers who write the most, or most helpful, reviews, although these ideas aren’t finalized yet.

Rating and reviewing movies is pretty easy:

First, log in.  If you’ve never logged in to DreamingAnt.com before, follow the instructions under “Create new account”.  You’ll need the email address you gave us when you signed up for your membership..

Now that you’re signed in, you have two options. You can either click “Rate movies from your rental history” and bring up a page with multiple movies and a drop down box to rate each from 1 to 10, or you can click “View your rental history”. You can then click on any movie you’ve rented and click the button at the bottom that says “Review/Rate”. Type up your little Siskel/Ebert/Roeper, click submit, and congratulations: you’re a Dreaming Ant critic.

I hope everyone takes advantage of this amazing new feature. The feedback will help both you, the customers, get the most for your rental dollars, and us, the employees and owners, to better understand what our fellow Ant renters enjoy and supply you with more of that sweet, sweet celluloid honey.

-RW

Director Spotlight: Kitano “Beat” Takeshi

Better known as a comedian and game show host in his native Japan, actor and director Kitano Takeshi’s films have gained a substantial international art house and gangster aficionado following. He has cultivated a style unique among his contemporary directors, oscillating between playful, childlike innocence and explosive scenes of realistic violence. The result is an offbeat, life affirming atmosphere heavy with pathos, usually driven by the laconic performance of Kitano himself. The downbeat counterpart to the Miike Takashi’s gratuitous magical realist yakuza pictures, Kitano’s films offer a slower experience heavy with tension, and rich with emotions often lost in his contemporaries’ gunbattle epics. These are some of my favorites:

Violent Cop (1989): Kitano’s stripped to basics directorial debut. Stillness, misanthropy, and an odd naiveté explode periodically from Kitano’s detective Azuma. His personality bruises the people around him, police and criminal, like a blunt weapon. The world he occupies is a real-life Tokyo, complete with consequences and repercussions, far removed from the fantastic cinematic realms of Die Hard or John Woo’s Hard Boiled. Essential.

Sonatine (1993): Available as the second disk on Zatoichi (2006). A mid level yakuza boss travels to Okinawa to settle a dispute, but it soon becomes apparent that he has been sent there to die. The yakuza retreat to an abandoned beach house, passing the hours as pleasantly as they can under the unspoken knowledge of their inevitable deaths. The film is saturated with Kitano’s bittersweet atheistic nihilism, more powerful than in his other films as evidenced by his suicide attempt immediately after its release.

Brother (2000): His first release for American audiences. Kitano is an exiled yakuza who casually transforms his brother’s small time Los Angeles gang into an organized crime powerhouse. The translated-to-English dialog can seem stilted, its delivery cumbersome, but the oddness fades as the story gains momentum. Omar Epps’ friendship to Kitano’s “big brother” figure drives the second half of the film, lending a poignant weight to the unavoidable conclusion.

Also recommended: Fireworks, Kikujiro, Boiling Point, Zatoichi.

-RW