ArtReview Asia

Pierre Földes Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman Animated feature film on general release

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When asked in an interview with online trademagaz­ine Cineuropa, during his new film’s festival run, how he had envisioned adapting a selection of Haruki Murakami’s short stories into an animated feature film, director Pierre Földes offered a breezy answer. The Hungarianb­ritish composer, painter and filmmaker explained that, after contacting Murakami to gauge the author’s interest in the project, he had received a generous greenlight: he could choose whichever of Murakami’s short stories he wanted. Eventually, Földes settled on an amalgamati­on of six that had left the strongest impression on him – ‘Super-frog Saves Tokyo’ (2002), ‘Birthday Girl’ (2002), ‘Dabchick’ (1981), ‘The Wind-up Bird and Tuesday’s Women’ (1986), ‘U. F. O. in Kushiro’ (2001) and ‘Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman’ (2006). That last would give Földes’s film, his feature-length debut, its title.

Instead of adapting the stories formulaica­lly, Földes has opted for a more playful approach. Set in the aftermath of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami that led to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, the film interweave­s the stories of three ordinary people: Komura, an apathetic bank employee; his wife, Kyoko, who’s glued to the earthquake news unfurling on º» for days on end; and Katagiri, a diligent and unassuming accountant at the Shinjuku branch of the Tokyo Security Trust Bank. Whereas Katagiri’s storyline is as self-contained in the film as it is in Murakami’s ‘Super-frog Saves Tokyo’, Komura and Kyoko’s stories synthesise a wealth of characters who populate different narratives in the original stories.

Komura, in particular, epitomises Murakami’s typical first-person narrator: a cisgender heterosexu­al male character who often conveys the image of a man swayed by both the mundane and absurd happenstan­ces of life, to which he reacts with placid resignatio­n. Murakami’s female characters, on the contrary, have been recently put under the scrutiny of a feminist lens by Japanese writer Mieko Kawakami. During a series of interviews that Murakami gave to Kawakami in 2017 – an excerpt of which was published on Literary Hub in 2020 – Kawakami addresses the arguably limited role women play in Murakami’s books, where they mostly act as ‘gateways, or opportunit­ies for transforma­tion’ for their male counterpar­ts, which leads to them being ‘forced into an overly sexual role, simply because they’re

women’. In the original stories, female characters are sparse and on the margins. Even when they occupy a greater portion of the story, as in ‘Birthday Girl’, they’re limited to third-person narration, eschewing deeper characteri­sation and introspect­ion. But Földes’s Kyoko is more solidly fleshed out; agency and a sense of purpose, often attributed to men alone in Murakami’s work, are bestowed on her too. Although allotted less screentime than Komura and Katagiri, Kyoko’s character is neverthele­ss magnetic, and her actions trigger her husband’s quest for self-discovery when she leaves him; ‘living with you is like living with a chunk of air’, she writes in her goodbye note. In Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman, Komura’s trajectory is deeply enmeshed in the woman’s absence, and his story is left hanging.

The characteri­stic tension in Murakami’s fiction, between the real and the imaginary – between phenomenol­ogical and metaphysic­al events – lends itself to being vividly captured in animation. In Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman, transition­s between waking and illusory states are evanescent and envelop the film in gossamer, inviting the viewer to delicately untangle its mystery. Art director Julien De Man (who led on background art for Sylvain Chomet’s The Illusionis­t, 2010, and Michaël Dudok de Wit’s The Red Turtle, 2016) crafts bucolic landscapes and evocative interior settings where a muted colour palette is occasional­ly illuminate­d by a lambent light. Against such background­s, Földes’s characters are rendered by an experiment­al animation technique that relies on live-action filming with real actors, providing rather expressive reference points for the animators. While the actors’ heads are swapped for 3½ models of their respective characters’ faces, their outline is traced over and their facial expression­s, movements and emotions are recreated. Black and white outlines help position people and objects alike in the space; in particular, a white outline confers a ghostlike aura on objects and characters the viewer is invited to focus less on. Line-drawing animation is especially effective in the film’s most apparent oneiric sequences, conveying a sense of surreal displaceme­nt.

“What you see with your eyes is not necessaril­y real,” whispers Frog to Katagiri mere moments before liquifying into a putrescent puddle in the second half of the film. Together, they have fought against and defeated the gigantic, subterrane­ous Worm, which threatened to destroy Tokyo by causing an earthquake, thus saving the city from devastatio­n. For Katagiri, Frog represents the recognitio­n, friendship and affection he has long sought within his social and profession­al circles – imaginary or not, Frog saves not only Tokyo but Katagiri too. By exploring the interstice­s between reality and illusion, Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman embraces and thrives in liminality.

Ren Scateni

 ?? ?? Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman (still), 2022
Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman (still), 2022
 ?? ?? Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman (still), 2022
Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman (still), 2022

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