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Blue Spring
Director: Toshiaki Toyoda
Number of Items: 1
Format: Color, Widescreen
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Running Time: 83 minutes
Studio: Wea Corp
Product Group: DVD
Release Date: 2004-07-27

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From Description
In their graduation year, the disaffected students turn their concrete box of a school into a backdrop against which to create their own version of society. The newly elected boss Kujo (played with cool panache by rising star Ryuhei Matsuda) disdains all the rules, including those that have led to his election. Into this power vacuum, his scandalized friend and lieutenant Aoki (Hirofumi Arai) enters with vicious intent. As graduation looms, the pupils study violence and death.

EXTRAS:
Bio/Filmographies
Tom Mes Commentary
2 Interviews With Director Toshiaki Toyoda
Artwork
Scene Selection





"Black Hands"
(...)If one pays scant attention to the news in Japan, seen Iwai Shunji's _All About Lily Chou Chou_, or read short stories and novels by Murakami Ryu, one knows that Japan, like other countries, suffers from an escalation of violence in schools. This violence works in three ways: student vs. teacher, teacher vs. student, and, the most common, student vs. student. Although it is still rare, the newspapers and news programs are peppered with stories of bullies beating someone to death or the bullied killing his bulliers. Murakami Ryu and Yu Miri have both focused on these subjects in their literary works. Toyoda Toshiaki, through his film _Blue Spring_ also touches on this controversial subject.

The kids attending the all boys Asahi High School would basically be considered the dregs of Japanese society. The school is rundown and the teachers teach such a drypan, apathetic manner that it is not suprising that the kids could care less. The only teacher who seems to actually care about any of his students is a dwarf who waters the flowers on the school grounds all day.

However, although the teaching might be unstructured, there is a rigid code of hierarchy enforced by the tough kids. A leader is chosen by a suicidal ritual in which a student claps his hands as many times as possible while falling backwards. After he claps a certain amount of times, he grabs the guardrail. Miss the guardrail, instant pancake.

At the beginning of this film, after the "graduation" of the senior class, Kujo, played by the extraordinarily handsome Matsuda Ryuhei, wins the contest. Kujo is a bit indifferent to his new found power, but goes along with it because he has the support of his friends: Aoki, Yukio, Yoshimura, and Kimura.

Although many of the students are not satisfied with the way their lives are shaping, they seem to basically concede that good jobs and college are not in their future and that they are either on the track to become either a menial laborer or a member of the Yakuza.

_Blue Spring_ is an interesting film that depicts individuals who are not on the "normal road of becoming a good Japanese citizen": i.e. Graduation, wor, stable family. It shows the dregs, but the dregs also show that social heirarchy exists from the lowest to the highest.

I think that the film is quite well done. The filming is dark, but it fits the atmosphere of the film. The soundtrack is excellent.



"More Japanese films, please!"
This is a brilliant film. I saw it at he ICA a few years ago and have been waiting ever since to obtain a copy on DVD. I thought I was in luck when I saw it was soon to be released this year , only it is in the wrong format, I need it to play in the UK. PLEASE release for the UK SOON...I've been waiting long enough!



"Blue Spring: contemporary Japanese cinema at its best"
Blue Spring is a beautiful example of the power of contemporary Japanese cinema. It is quiet, yet breathtakingly atmospheric with an undertone of violence and savagery. In the rigid society of high school, beneath the surface is a violent feeling of chaos and conflict. Like the director's 9 Souls, this film is obviously a project which was very personal to him. This is not exactly a yakuza film, but some of the characters definitely seem to be headed toward that world, which is an interesting aspect and approach. It is an unconventional and bleak take on the theme of coming of age, yet it is compelling in that it is told honestly and in a deeply personal manner. As well, the quality of this DVD is very good, boasting a great transfer and great sound quality. In addition to sound, the music is also very suiting and powerful, strongly emphasizing and reinforcing the themes presented throughout. Overall, this film is highly recommended.



"Violent, melancholy, disturbing, contemplative, and cool."
If you're serious about films, you need to see this one. It's guaranteed to please almost anyone (you'll know why after you've seen it) but believe me when I say that this movie is much more than it seems.

It works on many levels, and has obvious as well as underlying themes. Perhaps the most obvious is youth and violence, but be wary, the violence here is powerful, unpredictable, and could inspire hopelessness -- especially if you're accustomed to movies that send a solid right-or-wrong-and-repent message along with their violence. Here, you might feel like you are taking part; living (and failing) life with these characters in their bleak fictional world, rather than watching a story and its 'moral' unfold.

This movie only gives you what you want to take from it. Certainly some viewers will be moved, while others might not feel much of anything. Bottom line is: This movie will entertain you. How it does so just depends upon your own personality. And in any case, you probably won't regret seeing it.







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