Japanese Story Movie Review
Japanese Story Review

"Japanese Story" Overview

Rating: NR
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Sue BrooksProducer : Sue Maslin,David Lightfoot
Screenwiter : Alison Tilson
Starring : Toni Collette,Gotaro Tsunashima,Matthew Dyktynski,Lynette Curran,Yumiko Tanaka
Here’s a textbook example of going into production without a finished script.
The superficial character development and structural defects in this Australian
romantic adventure suggest that it was made from a bare outline and smacks of
fund-raising compromises. That anything appealing survives such weak material
is a testament to the collaborative power of film.
Mostly, it's Toni Collette who pulls it off, much as she was depended on to do.
The drive to go into production seems largely based on her ability to take a
bare treatment and convey a dimensional character, a feat of creating on the
fly that demonstrates something about her acting instincts and earthy appeal.
As a geologist and partner in a small software company in Perth, Sandy Edwards
(Collette) is asked by partner Baird (Matthew Dyktynski) to accompany Tachibana
Hiromitsu (Gotaro Tsunashima), a Japanese business executive, on a visit to
inspect Australian mines. Baird's hope is that this accommodation will
influence Hiromitsu's company to buy their geology computer program and inject
some sorely needed capital into the firm's cash flow.
Immediately upon Hiromitsu's landing, the cultural and personal differences
between him and Sandy is obvious: she’s a rather direct and overly-capable
female with a stubborn personality; he’s a wimpy, taciturn, formal type who
sees her as nothing more than a driver provided for his convenience. His
attitude of superiority over his "glorified tour guide" grates on Sandy with
growing irritation as she dutifully responds to his demands to drive out to the
Jilbara, a desert more hostile than the atmosphere in the car.
Sandy's warnings about leaving the main road and driving on the barely defined
sandy one is rejected and results in their becoming stuck. After a contest of
wills and an unplanned sleepover, the pair cooperates and manages to get the
car going. As they continue the trip, we slowly become aware that these two
"geologists" couldn't tell shale from shinola. They wouldn't know an alluvial
deposit if they ran into one.
In a scene when Sandy and Hiromitsu pause to rest in a rocky enclave that might
be a geologist's wet dream, he picks up a rock with unique striations. A
perfect time for Sandy to wow us (and him!) with a little geologist tech talk.
She is still trying to get him to buy her software. But no technical
communication enters the dialogue. Not even when the pair is visiting the
working iron ore mine at Newman is there a single word to indicate that they
have any more knowledge of mining than a wide-eyed tourist. So why does he come
all the way from Japan to visit? Why, to set up romantic possibilities, of
course.
To get to that part, mutual understanding develops to make the travelers more
receptive to each other and to break down the initial frigidity. This leads to
sexual attraction, steamy gratification, and the disclosure that he has a wife
and children back home. Sandy accepts the reality but, just as they have to
confront the kind of relationship they have going, that thorny issue is avoided
with a tragic development that throws the last act into soap opera territory.
Grief, not ore, is mined for all it's worth to violin-heavy orchestral
accompaniment. Was this a story direction demanded by Japanese investors or an
accomodation to the Australian Film Commission, perhaps also suggesting why
Collette is paired with a physically slender leading man with little to no
charisma and the virility of an adolescent? Okay, so Gotaro Tsunashima's acted
before in Australia (the TV mini-series Changi), but where's Jet Li when he's
needed? Yumiko Tanaka as Hiromitsu's classically reserved wife is proper to the
requirements of the agonizing finale.
Collette is the key to what is engaging about the film. Her talent to project a
human, sexy vitality in a variety of contexts has been proven by her American
lawyer Michelle in Changing Lanes, her suicidal British hippy Fiona in About a
Boy, her intense mother Lynn Sear in The Sixth Sense, and her American
housewife Kitty in The Hours. Here, she's provocative enough to emerge with
impressive effect even after her character is rendered irrelevant by an inept
last act. The threadbare story is credited to writer Alison Tillson, who didn't
seem to bother researching her characters' unique specialty. Director Sue
Brooks ignored that and the other problems of story structure. But, besides the
fun of a seductive trip with Collette, there's travelogue value in the setting,
a rarely seen area controlled and cared for by indigenous peoples.
Tough road to hoe.
Reviewer: Jules Brenner



