Arab Times

Encouraged

-

“Seven years after the end of the war, the victors are celebrated, general amnesia is encouraged and silence is imposed,” he added.

“In a conflict that went on 30 years nobody is innocent.”

Because of the Tigers’ iron grip, “everybody got sucked into the ideology. The Tigers came to represent the Tamils, so if you are a Tamil you had to be a Tiger”.

Ratnam took a decade to complete the film. Given the new Sri Lankan government’s commitment to freedom of speech, he said he hoped “they will allow the film to be shown”.

Ratnam said he would be “much more comfortabl­e back home” in Sri Lanka where people lived with the war to the bitter end in 2009.

“Fear destroyed the lives of three generation­s” in Sri Lanka since British colonial rule, Ratnam said, when ethnic difference­s were used to “divide and rule”.

“My uncle had a gun. I have a camera... I want to avoid a fourth generation being trapped in the snare.”

Japanese director Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s “Before We Vanish” may be a sci-fi thriller about an alien attack and brain-drain a la “Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” but its ultimate message is the salvation of love. Playing frequently like an absurdist political satire with only flashes of violence, this low-tension, drawn-out work won’t gratify the chills or adrenaline rushes fanboys crave, but the ending strikes a romantic chord so pure that all but the most jaded cynics will be moved. Distribute­d in Europe through Wild Bunch,the film will rely heavily on Kurosawa’s reputation and longtime supporters even for moderate success.

The literal Japanese title, “Strolling Invaders,” suggests a threat so casual it’s not immediatel­y noticeable. In light of how press freedom and human rights are being whittled away in many parts of the world, a story about aliens robbing humans of their values (family, work, rules) and ability to think independen­tly can easily be read as an allegory of collective brainwashi­ng. But Kurosawa takes a more ambivalent stance by suggesting that sometimes being rid of socially conditione­d thoughts is not such a bad thing, as when the female protagonis­t’s boss regresses to prankish childishne­ss after losing the concept of work. Repeatedly, the aliens remind the protagonis­ts that humans are such scumbags they deserve eventual extinction anyway.

The emotional toll of marriage is at the heart of nearly all of the director’s film, from such horror movies as “Cure” and “Creepy” to his dramas, including “Tokyo Sonata” and “Journey to the Shore.” In this case, the movie starts with and revolves around illustrato­r Narumi (Masami Nagasawa) and her estranged husband Shinji (Ryuhei Matsuda). One day, Shinji returns home after a long walk a changed person, with little recollecti­on of the past and lacking basic social skills. To Narumi, this is a godsend, as it presents a chance for them to do over, so she even shrugs off a weird incident, when he gives her sister Asumi (Atsuko Maeda) a mini-breakdown just by poking her with his finger.

Meanwhile, a gruesome murder in their quiet Tokyo neighbourh­ood catches the eye of journalist Sakurai (Hiroki Hasegawa). When he arrives at the crime scene, he learns that Akira (Yuri Tsunematsu), the teenage daughter of the victims, has gone missing. A young man called Amano (Mahiro Takasugi) comes up to Sakurai asking him to be his “guide” so this visitor can acclimatiz­e himself to Earth.

The story, adapted from a play by Tomohiro Maekawa, does not try to wring any suspense from the odd behavior, disclosing early on that Shinji, Amano and Akira are aliens who have taken up residence inside their human hosts. As the first step to a full-scale invasion, they have to seize and absorb human “concepts and power of comprehens­ion.” For the most part, Amano and Sakurai engage in longwinded theoretic discussion­s that have little dramatic traction. Akira, who has a violent streak, pumps up the action with her vicious assault on humans who get in her way, but such scenes are few and far between.

All these plot strands pale in comparison to the engaging relationsh­ip between Shinji and Narumi, which has shades of “The Return of Martin Guerre.”Although the alien initially intended to use her as guide, the more he comes to understand human behavior, the more he grows attached to her.

LOS ANGELES:

The London premiere of the hotly-anticipate­d movie “Wonder Woman” has been canceled following the deadly terror attack in Manchester, Warner Bros. announced on Wednesday.

“Our thoughts are with those affected by the recent tragedy in the UK,” the studio said in a statement.

“In light of the current situation, we will not be proceeding with our

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait