Title: Sunset Sunrise / サンセット・サンライズ
Rating: 8 / 10
Recommended for:
For those who want to watch a feel-good story with serious topics embedded within amid some funny elements and/or are fans of Suda Masaki and Inoue Mao
* Potential spoilers ahead!
* I have not read the original novel.
Liked:
- While this movie was longer than 2 hours, it surprisingly didn't feel draggy nor rushed. Although I was a bit worried that this story might be big on senseless humour because it's a Kudo Kankuro script or go the other way to be a serious and dark story given the location in Tohoku (will inevitably talk about the aftermath of the 3.11 earthquake and tsunami crisis), I'm glad that there was a fine balance struck to make the movie quite palatable.
The story was pretty straightforward as it depicted how a company employee from Tokyo came to a fictitious town in the Tohoku region to rent a large house at an unbelievably low price after seeing the ad online. Since that was during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic and that the virus hadn't actually spread in the countryside yet, an outsider from a place which was already seeing shutdowns and people working from home full time to curb the spread of the infection would naturally be viewed with increased scrutiny and skepticism. Even if the locals realised that his choice was largely influenced by the fact that he was a fishing enthusiast, had no ulterior motives and could make use of the fact that he could work remotely outside of Tokyo to pursue his interest, it still took them some time to warm up to this stranger. The journey which the lead character went through was predictable and there wasn't a lot of "drama" in that sense. However, I thought that the story provided quite a lot of food for thought on various issues.
One line which I thought was quite memorable and impactful goes something like this - "We in the Tohoku region have always looked to Tokyo as the capital for things like the hottest TV shows to watch and the songs we listen to. However, how many people in Tokyo actually pay the same kind of attention to us? You people can't even name the 6 prefectures in the Tohoku region, for heaven's sake. And then after the tsunami crisis, you people just came to volunteer for a while, take off after that and conveniently forgot about us." Wow, very blunt but I think really impactful message which KudoKan was trying to convey here.
- Suda Masaki was definitely the star of the show as an endearing and funny stranger in this countryside as he learned how to live among the locals. I really liked his pairing with Inoue Mao and the ending was a tad unconventional i.e. that flying hug but very sweet. You would probably like this movie a lot if you are a fan of them.
Disliked:
- Although the movie as a whole had a nice vibe, I thought that there were some parts where the humour got a bit stale. Perhaps by making the pace a bit faster in the second half of the story and cutting out the fluff might make this even more enjoyable to watch.
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