Los Angeles Times

‘A Bride for Rip Van Winkle’ and other films.

- — Robert Abele

A soft-spoken teacher with a social media dependence endures a twisty emotional road in Japanese filmmaker Iwai Shunji’s overlong yet alluring “A Bride for Rip Van Winkle,” a movie that could be described as contempora­ry cyber-gothic. We meet recessive, unguarded Nanami (Haru Kuroki) when she meets her future husband, Tetsuya (Gô Jibiki), through her favorite app.

It also introduces her to a mysterious hipster businessma­n named Amaro (Gô Ayano) who promises to help Nanami pad her wedding with fake relatives. That’s just the first of three hours in an odyssey of misfortune and deception for Nanami that, after her marriage’s collapse, sees her take a job as a maid in a disused mansion alongside a friendly, force-of-nature actress named Mashiro (a magnetic Cocco).

By the time the two develop a swooning attachment to each other that involves intimate karaoke and a romp in rented wedding gowns, we’ve grown accustomed to the abiding strangenes­s of Iwai’s vision of our tenuously connected modern world.

Long a sensitive if coolly precious arbiter of haunted loneliness (“All About Lily Chou-Chou,” “Vampire”), Iwai, with his woozy, hovering camera, could be accused of emotional cruelty for what he puts Nanami through on her path to selfawaren­ess about others’ machinatio­ns and her own fragility. But the path beckons, as in a fractured fairy tale — or any peril-laden quest for love — in which the air of something vaguely threatenin­g is never far behind the pockets of comfort. “A Bride for Rip Van Winkle.” In Japanese with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 2 hours, 58 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Royal, West L.A.

 ?? Chigi Kanbe Eleven Arts ?? MASHIRO (COCCO), left, and Nanami (Haru Kuroki) develop an attachment to each other that involves renting wedding gowns at one point in Japanese filmmaker Iwai Shunji’s “A Bride for Rip Van Winkle.”
Chigi Kanbe Eleven Arts MASHIRO (COCCO), left, and Nanami (Haru Kuroki) develop an attachment to each other that involves renting wedding gowns at one point in Japanese filmmaker Iwai Shunji’s “A Bride for Rip Van Winkle.”

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