Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Quick Review #77: Missing (movie)


Title: Missing / ミッシング

Rating: 7 / 10

Recommended for
Those who want to watch a documentary-style story with realistic and raw emotions and/or are fans of Ishihara Satomi

* Currently showing on Netflix (subject to geographical restrictions)

Liked:
- Stories about parents grappling with the aftermath of their children being the victims of crime aren't new so what made this quite different was its singular focus on displaying the raw emotions felt by the parents and those around them as time went by rather than finding out what happened or what was the outcome. From the initial shock and panic to that of denial, anger, despair before trying to cope with the situation while getting on with life, this movie was certainly not meant to entertain but a realistic depiction of the emotions felt by the characters who were related and unrelated to the child. This somehow helped the movie become easier to relate to even if you aren't a parent or haven't gone through a similar experience of loss.

- Ishihara Satomi was definitely the highlight of the movie as the story focused a lot on her emotions. Perhaps in the traditional sense, a mother should be entirely devoted to her child and make sure that the child's well-being is her utmost priority. That being said, a mother is still a human being who deserves to take a break from time to time because if she's not well in any way, it will affect her ability to take care of her child. The issue in this movie was that, just because she went for her idol's concert for a couple of hours and asked her younger brother to take care of her daughter briefly, this decision indirectly led to the disappearance of her child. Stuck in an endless spiral of self-blame, self-doubt, the what-ifs and consumed by the anger she unleashed on the people around her, Ishihara's acting managed to show the spectrum of emotions felt by the mother although it may seem a bit hysterical at times and certainly not too pleasant to watch.

Disliked: 
- The lack of a cause and resolution in the story may not go down well with some viewers who want answers so this no doubt makes this story feel incomplete. In reality, a lot of child disappearance cases actually have no outcome and parents are stuck in a forever abyss of not knowing what happened to their children. And since the movie's focus was on the things that happened after the child went missing, it was understandable although I would have preferred a more complete story.

- Due to the overly heavy focus on the mother in the story, the other characters in the story did not get enough attention. I thought that the scenes showing the father's (Aoki Munetaka) emotions under his calm facade were very good but they were too little. As for the reporter played by Nakamura Tomoya, it wasn't very clear why he was so focused on helping the family or the reason why he was troubled over the gap between what he was supposed to do and what he wanted to do. There could be more exploration of these "side characters" to give a bit more insight on the whys about their actions and thoughts.

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