Protraph
Lack of good storyline.
Lucybespro
It is a performances centric movie
Bluebell Alcock
Ok... Let's be honest. It cannot be the best movie but is quite enjoyable. The movie has the potential to develop a great plot for future movies
Darin
One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.
WILLIAM FLANIGAN
Viewed on Streaming. Script = nine (9) stars; subtitles = eight (8) stars. Director Kenji Uchida (who also wrote the screenplay) serves up a hugely-inventive, hilarious story (actually multiple stories that converge into one) with stunning (and unexpected) plot twists about trading places by adults (not necessarily grown ups). Things usually turn out to be not as they initially seem. Principal characters include: an apparent contract killer (with an unique body disposal technique); a successful business woman (determined to apply a business model to the process of matrimony with formal vetting of candidate partners, milestones, progress reports, etc.); and a lay-about, good-for-nothing "actor" (sort of contemplating suicide as his final (and, to date, only) role). There is a feel-good, Hollywood-style happy ending for each (as well as for a cat with a walk-on cameo). One ending includes an unexplained car crash (an amusing context injudiciously edited out and/or not re-shot?). Uchida has set a hectic pace that makes the viewer wonder just where the two hours of movie time went! There are, however, a few hammy gimmicks (including an overly Japanese-cute one using the sound of a car alarm). The Director extracts Goldilocks (just-right) acting performances all round in part by keeping dialog realistic and to a minimum (screaming, sobbing, melodramatic scenery eating, and other typical (and tedious) forms of movie emoting have been banished). Cinematography (semi wide screen, color) is very good with consistent scene lighting and color that makes for near seamless editing. Subtitles are very well done (by a pro who really seems to understands Japanese and English grammar). A delightful gem! WILLIAM FLANIGAN, PhD.
TheFilmGuy1
This is a quite interesting, unique and weird film. I guess that's to be expected from a Japanese film. It's about a guy who's a depressed actor who ends up stealing the identity of an assassin who get's amnesia when he slips on a bar of soap and hits his head. Yeah, weird, I know. It's also a comedy/drama movie, and that's where my problems lie. I have no issue with comedy/drama films, but I tend to find that sometimes, comedy just doesn't translate well. Sometimes things that are funny in other countries just aren't funny in your own country. Also, sometimes things are funnier when you hear them said by the actor as opposed to reading the subtitles. This is kind of what happened to me with this. I found a lot of it to not be that funny. It had some really great moments of slapstick, but that's more towards the end of the film when the two protagonists come together. The comedy just didn't translate as well as I would have liked it to, and since comedy is a big part of the film, that's an issue. The drama does work when it needs to, which is a plus. Some people might be turned off by the general weirdness of the film. While it isn't as odd as a lot of Japanese films can be, it is different for sure, and won't be everyone's cup of tea. I was able to appreciate that creativeness and it helped me enjoy it. However, I wish the jokes had worked better for me. I think if they had, I would have loved this movie, but in the end I just kinda enjoyed it, and that's it.
gradyharp
Writer/director Kenji Uchida's newest film, KEY OF LIFE, is a crisply written, adroitly directed, beautifully acted little story that is a comedy on the surface, but does not fail to show the other side of the infamous masks of comedy/tragedy. Though it is long (in excess of two hours) the story is presented in such a fine overlapping episodic way that it seems to whiz by to the final moments. The film opens with a business meeting in which we meet Kanae (Ryôko Hirosue), a 34-year- old magazine editor who announces boldly that she is getting married in two months. Without a candidate for a husband she engages the help of her fellow workers to help her search for the right man during a rather narrow time frame. We next meet Sakuari (Masato Sakai), a 35- year-old aspiring actor who is jobless, living in squalor, and has just failed a suicide attempt. Then we meet Kondo (Teroyuki Kagawa), a wealthy successful hit man carrying out his latest hit. After their simultaneously acts Sakurai and Kondo end up going to the same public bathhouse: Kondo slips on a bar of soap, sustains a concussion, is taken to a hospital where he discovers he has complete amnesia. The somewhat desperate Sakuari switches locker keys, and in effect switches identities with Kondo, of course not realizing that he is stepping into the identity of a hit man. Kanae visits the hospital where her father (who expects his daughter to marry soon) is gravely ill - the same hospital where Kondo is recovering. Fate is such that the two meet. How a failed actor takes on the role of a hit man without much success, and a hit man gains employment as an actor who can convincingly play gangster parts, and how the lovesick Kanae connects with Kondo and helps him try to regain his memory forms the rush to the surprise ending of the story.There is enough social commentary on relationships and what is love, what is acting, and what is ethical that makes this little film gleam. It is an excellent film from Film Movement and should enjoy success in the art houses. It is a breath of fresh air from the current clutter of over the edge CGI 'dramas'! Grady Harp, December 13
Kicino
Ever since I saw Kenji Uchida's "A Stranger of Mine," I became a big fan of his. When I knew his work would be shown at the Summer Festival, I dashed to get a ticket and looked forward to watching it.It turned out to be better than I expected. When/if it is publicly released here, I will definitely watch it again. Behind the laughs and sadness, there is some sense of compassion for the modern men and women which made you want to munch on the plot and scenes days after the movie.A superb plot and great observer of daily life. In many ways, a killer's life is quite similar to an actor's when he had to pose as many different people. Except in our movie, the actor is a lousy one: Sakai Masato's plays Sakuari, an attempted and disorganized actor who fails to make ends meet, let alone realizing his dream in acting. Sakai seems such a different person from "My SO has got depression" although in both movies he plays a weak character who tends to have apologetic smiles. Sometimes I wonder if he is really a bad actor or he is playing the role of a bad actor because some scenes were bad when he held one facial expression for probably too long. Or was he just playing dumb?Opposite the spectrum is professional killer Kondo (Kagawa Teruyuki) who is organized, thoughtful and serious even when he has got amnesia. He tries very hard to regain his memory, only to find that he is twirled into a mishap involving the Yakuza gangsters. Kagawa is not very good looking but somehow the killer's personality makes him quite attractive with a little comical trace. The full comedy comes into place when their identities are switched, as in "The Prince and the Pauper," except here the swap is not voluntary. The laughers are guaranteed to intensify when kind and sensible Kanae (Hirosue Ryoko) steps in to help Kondo regain his memory while looking for her husband to appear in a pre-arranged wedding. The art direction is excellent: the numerous fake IDs, detailed hand- written notes, elaborated and well-stocked wardrobes all contribute rich accents to the story and is crucial to the final scene. An intriguing but very interesting plot. Very witty lines and superb performance by the cast. You can see human compassion here and there which makes the movie very enjoyable and makes you have more faith and confidence in life. Highly recommended.