The Guardian (USA)

Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman review – Murakami’s surreal tales around a Tokyo earthquake

- Peter Bradshaw

Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami has inspired some prestigiou­s movies, most recently Ryûsuke Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car. Regardless of whether this new Murakami adaptation (based on his short story collection of the same name) comes to be considered the best, I think it might actually capture the elusive essence of Murakami more than any other – something in it being a Rotoscope animation of elegant simplicity. It has the ruminative lightness, almost weightless­ness, the watercolou­r delicacy and reticence of the emotions, the sense of the uncanny, the insistent play of erotic possibilit­y and that Murakami keynote: a cat.

Pierre Földes makes his feature directing debut here, having been long been a composer; his musical credits include Michael Cuesta’s L.I.E. from 2001, and he has written the score for this movie too, which brings together a constellat­ion of characters and storylines around the recent Tokyo earthquake – to which it attributes a tonal sense of disorienta­tion rather than tragedy and sadness. Komura (voiced in the English-language dub by Ryan Bommarito) is a quiet young man working joylessly in a bank; his wife, Kyoko, (Shoshana Wilder) suffers from insomnia and depression, ceaselessl­y watching TV news reports about the earthquake. She walks out on Komura, plagued by a guilty memory of having made a bizarre Faustian bargain to get together with him in the first place.

Meanwhile, Komura’s older colleague Katagiri (Marcelo Arroyo) is in trouble with his mean boss for failing to recover a huge outstandin­g debt and Katagiri is surreally visited in his apartment by a giant frog (voiced by Földes himself) who offers to take care of his banking problem in return for helping him do secret battle with a giant undergroun­d worm who is going to cause a second earthquake. The seductivel­y quirky sad-serious tone of Murakami is cleverly brought out.

• Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman is released on 31 March in UK and Irish cinemas, with an Australian release date to be advised.

 ?? ?? The elusive essence of Murakami … Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman Film
The elusive essence of Murakami … Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman Film

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States