Title: Tsuki no michikake / 月の満ち欠け
Rating: 6 / 10
Recommended for:
For those who want to watch a love story but don't mind the illogical and harrowing reincarnation concepts in the movie and/or are fans of the cast
* Potential spoilers ahead!
* I have not read the original novel.
Liked:
- The love stories of the two couples i.e. the Osanais (Ooizumi Yo and Shibasaki Kou) and Ruri x Akira-kun (Arimura Kasumi and Meguro Ren) were depicted pretty well with the former being the heartwarming and brings-a-smile-to-your-face type of subtle love and the latter being more of passionate and somewhat intense kind of love. I actually prefer the Osanais' story especially the parts where they talked about how they fell in love with each other and eventually got married. Such a warm and fuzzy vibe and very blissful kind of love to watch.
- The acting of the four leads were definitely quite spot-on and very enjoyable to watch except for the scene when Ooizumi's character Tsuyoshi was crying at the sight of his loved ones' bodies after the accident where his cries sounded a bit odd. While Shibasaki may not have appeared a lot, I thought that the ending moments of her character Kozue telling her side of the love story were extremely well done. Fans of Meguro Ren would be quite happy to see him as a lovelorn chap but may not be so excited to see the bed scene with Arimura Kasumi (not explicit though since they were mainly long shots from a distance and there was a blanket covering the actors).
Much as I don't feel like praising Tanaka Kei, I have to give him credit when it's due - he's really suited to play this kind of obsessive/abusive husband and lover with a seemingly harmless and nice face.
Disliked:
- This is my personal preference though but I am really not a fan of 転生 / reincarnation stories to begin with. While I understood that this was necessary for the purpose of this story, the loopholes and illogical execution of this concept made it impossible for me to like the movie. To be able to choose at will how or who you will be reborn as - that's already quite unbelievable. Not to mention waiting for the reborn version to grow up (which will take at least more than a decade) before resuming your love story from the last life - that just comes across as a horror and rather repulsive thing to happen and I certainly don't find it, romantic at all. Especially the final scene showing who Kozue was reborn as - that really killed any remaining positive feelings I had for the movie. This was quite a pity though because I did like specific parts of the movie as outlined above but it ended on such a sour note that I am not even sure if I want to finish reading the original novel which has been lying around since I bought it a while ago.
- Given that the story spans quite a number of years, I was surprised to see that there wasn't any attempt to distinguish between the 80s and 90s more distinctively. As such, in terms of clothing, the sets, surroundings and character images, they didn't feel that different from each other in the two timelines. That could be a bit confusing for viewers though so that's probably why the years kept appearing on screen to indicate the time when the development happened.
- In relation to the above point, while Ooizumi and Shibasaki's characters did appear different in the two timelines, both in terms of mannerisms and appearance since the couple did evolve from newly-weds to parents of a 18-year-old senior high school kid, Meguro's character didn't really show the progression of time. He may have dressed more maturely as a guy in his 30s when he met Ooizumi's character for the first time but it felt like he was stretching it a bit too far and didn't come across as too convincing in this sense. On the other hand, his scenes as the university student-version of Akira-kun were definitely more natural since that's close to his actual age.
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