Los Angeles Times

Death takes him back through life

- By Michael Rechtshaff­en

“Death isn’t simple, is it?” That’s the haunting refrain reverberat­ing in Hawaiian filmmaker Christophe­r Makoto Yogi’s “I Was a Simple Man,” a stirring, melancholi­c portrait of an ailing, elderly patriarch grappling with his encroachin­g mortality.

Set on the North Shore of Oahu, where the island’s pastoral landscape is dwarfed by the modern Honolulu architectu­re rising in the distance, the story follows the spiritual journey taken by Masao (an impressive Steve Iwamoto), a widower with an undisclose­d terminal illness who has lived a largely solitary existence after the death of his artist wife (Constance Wu) decades earlier.

As his condition worsens, Masao increasing­ly finds himself in the company of her ghost, as well as a flood of memories from his past while his estranged adult children must reconcile themselves to having to care for someone who was never there for them.

Building upon that family drama foundation, Yogi, who made his debut with the acclaimed 2019 film “August at Akiko’s,” skillfully weaves in elements of mysticism and mythology, culture and history, along with stylistic nods to influentia­l filmmakers at the forefront of the Japanese and Taiwanese new wave.

There’s also a tangible touch of Terrence Malick in the production’s lushly naturalist­ic visuals (shot by Korean cinematogr­apher Eunsoo Robin Cho) and soundscape, with those restless elements, basked in that golden island light, gently urging Masao toward the end of his earthly life cycle.

Taking a cue from its taciturn protagonis­t, “I Was a Simple Man” prefers to let its soulful poetic imagery do the bulk of the talking.

 ?? Strand Releasing ?? MEMORIES reunite a dying patriarch (Steve Iwamoto) with his deceased wife (Constance Wu).
Strand Releasing MEMORIES reunite a dying patriarch (Steve Iwamoto) with his deceased wife (Constance Wu).

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