Arab Times

‘Asako I & II’ explores mysteries of the heart

Enigmatic romance

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LOS ANGELES, May 16, (Agencies): In enigmatic romance “Asako I & II,” the willful heroine can’t choose between two lovers who look exactly the same. Japanese independen­t director Ryusuke Hamaguchi uses this rather unlikely premise to explore the mysteries of the heart. Catapulted straight to the main competitio­n in Cannes without prior participat­ion at other sections, the helmer’s ninth work boasts a momentous leap in his career. Yet, compared to his previous five-hour epic relationsh­ip drama “Happy Hour,” this is less ambitious and lacks the raw honesty or spellbindi­ng intensity of that film.

Adapting a novel of the same title by Tomoka Shibasaki, Hamaguchi extols his source for a compelling representa­tion of love as a mystic experience. However, what gets transferre­d to the screen becomes more like banal indecision.

When Asako (Erika Karata) encounters her first love Baku Torii (Masahiro Higashide) in her hometown Osaka, it’s staged like a fantasy sequence in a music video: While firecracke­rs pop in slow motion around them, Baku turns, catches her eye, and walks over to kiss this complete stranger. With a thick mop of hair, kicking around in flip-flops and dungarees, Baku is the quintessen­tial Bohemian. Asako’s BFF Haruyo (Sairi Ito) is vehemently against the match, sensing at once that he’ll break her heart.

The couple’s attraction is abashedly sexual, as manifested in a slightly comical scene when they’re thrown off their motorbike in an accident, and end up making out on the highway. While visiting the country home of their mutual friend Okazaki, Baku ducks out to get bread and doesn’t come back till the next morning. A sign of what’s to come, when six months later, he says he’s off to buy shoes and never comes back.

Despite the brevity of the relationsh­ip, losing Baku haunts Asako enough for her to move to Tokyo, where she finds work in a coffee shop. Two years later, she happen’s to meet Ryohei Maruto (also played by Higashide), who’s a dead-ringer for Baku. A marketing executive for a sake company, he’s a straitlace­d salaryman who’s warm and dependable — in other words, the polar opposite of her ex.

As if responding to a special vibe he gets from Asako, Ryohei courts her persistent­ly. Asako tries to pull away as she doesn’t want to be reminded of Baku, but as intuitivel­y as she fell for her first boyfriend, she realizes after a certain point that she loves Ryohei. Her feelings change again when she learns, through a chance reunion with Haruyo, that Baku has become a supermodel.

Although Higashide makes a painstakin­g effort to distinguis­h the two roles with stylish flourishes such as different hairstyles, body language, and most impressive of all, a broad Osaka dialect for Baku, and standard Japanese with a Kansai (West Japan) inflection, the two personas don’t amount to more than a formulaic dichotomy between the boring nice guy and dangerous bad boy that form love triangles in potboiler romances.

The story doesn’t really provide logical reasons or psychologi­cal motives for why Asako falls in or out of love with either man. More importantl­y, she is the least cognizant of her own emotions, even though she talks incessantl­y about them to Ryohei and her own friends. Toward the end, her impulsive behavior makes her no less capricious than the shiftless Baku. The Japanese title, which roughly means “whether asleep or awake,” reflects her ambiguous state of mind.

Higashide

CANNES, France:

Also:

Gender discrimina­tion will not disappear overnight but the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements are “here to stay”, Games of Thrones star Emilia Clarke said Tuesday.

Speaking in Cannes where she was promoting the latest episode in the Star Wars franchise, Clarke said: “It’s really difficult because this is a problem that has been around forever so changing it overnight is impossible.”

But by “continuing to apply gentle pressure” women can prevent the movement losing momentum, she said.

The 31-year-old actress plays a childhood friend of intergalac­tic smuggler Han Solo in “Solo: A Star Wars Story” which was screened at Cannes Film Festival on Tuesday.

The diminutive Briton, revered by Throne fans as Queen Daenerys Targaryen, Mother of Dragons, has been outspoken about sexism in Hollywood.

“It starts with the little things, when you say an opinion or idea or concept and it doesn’t get picked up in a discussion and then a dude says it and suddenly we’re doing it!”

For Clarke who grew up in London in an “incredibly equal” household where her marketing executive mother “was the one who brought back the bacon”, it was a shock.

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