Tokyo Sonata

Tokyo Sonata

Film poster
Directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa
Written by Kiyoshi Kurosawa
Max Mannix
Sachiko Tanaka
Starring Teruyuki Kagawa
Kyōko Koizumi
Yū Koyanagi
Kai Inowaki
Kanji Tsuda
Kōji Yakusho
Music by Kazumasa Hashimoto
Cinematography Akiko Ashizawa
Edited by Koichi Takahashi
Release dates
  • September 27, 2008 (2008-09-27)
Running time
120 minutes
Country Japan
Language Japanese
Budget $2,500,000[1]
Box office $940,430[2]

Tokyo Sonata (トウキョウソナタ Tōkyō Sonata) is a 2008 film directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa. It won the award for Best Film at the 3rd Asian Film Awards and received 2008 Asia Pacific Screen Awards nominations for Achievement in Directing and Best Screenplay. At the 2008 Cannes Film Festival it won the Jury Prize of the Un Certain Regard section.

Plot

Tokyo Sonata is about a middle-class family in Tokyo, the Sasakis, which consists of Ryūhei Sasaki, his wife Megumi, and their two sons Takashi and Kenji.

Ryūhei has a good office job, but is suddenly fired because Chinese workers are cheaper. While attempting to find a new job, Ryūhei encounters an old classmate on the street, Kurosu, who has also recently been downsized. Kurosu uses a feature on his mobile phone that plays the ring tone periodically, so that it may fool others into believing he is still employed. This intrigues Ryūhei, who decides to hide the fact that he has been fired from his family. While the two men hopelessly try to find new work, Kurosu's wife slowly begins to suspect her husband's unemployment. Kurosu is later found dead together with his wife from gas poisoning in a double suicide, thought to be initiated by Kurosu.

Takashi, the oldest son, joins the US military and is deployed to war in the Middle East. Kenji, the younger son, wishes to learn to play the piano, even though his father refuses to allow him piano lessons. Kenji takes lessons secretly, and pays for them using his lunch money. Gradually, Kenji develops a strong relationship with his piano teacher, Miss Kaneko, who urges him to pursue his musical ambitions. When his parents find out about Kenji's secret piano lessons, Megumi, who is generally closer to the children, is supportive, but Ryūhei is so furious that he attacks his son, accidentally causing him a minor concussion.

One day, Megumi, while alone at home, is taken hostage by an unemployed man who broke in looking for money. The robber forces Megumi to drive a car he has stolen previously. After a long drive, he allows her leave the car to use the restroom where she has the opportunity to escape. However, she encounters her husband at the mall working in his secret job as a janitor and decides to return to her captor saying that she cannot return home.

That night, Megumi, Ryūhei, and Kenji all have experiences away from home in which they confront the full extent of their existential disquiet.

Kenji attempts to help a friend run away from home, but the latter is caught by his father. Kenji tries to leave town by sneaking onto a bus, but he is caught. Unwilling to answer the questions of the police, Kenji is charged as an adult and kept in a group cell overnight. He is released the following day when the charges are dismissed.

Megumi and the burglar drive to the beach together, where they spend the night in a wood shed. Megumi resigns to the robber's sexual advances, but he ultimately is unable to go through with the act itself. Megumi consoles the robber that he is not a failure, saying that he is the only person who can be himself. Later that night, as the robber sleeps, Megumi spots a strange light on the horizon over the sea. She goes out to look for the light and falls asleep on the beach. The next morning, the robber has driven the stolen car into the ocean, and Megumi returns home.

Meanwhile, as he cleans the bathrooms at the mall where he works, Ryūhei discovers an envelope stuffed with cash behind one of the toilets. He pockets it and encounters Megumi while fleeing the bathrooms, from whom he runs away. Ryūhei then despairingly wanders into the Tokyo night, is hit by a truck, and left for dead. He lies on the side of the street amid some leaves and sleeps there overnight, only to find himself waking up in the morning unharmed. He deposits the envelope of cash in a local lost-and-found bucket, and is the last to arrive back at the house, where the three family members share a meal together without mentioning the events of the previous night.

Four months later, Ryūhei appears to be engaged in his cleaning job. Takashi sends a letter home from the field, noting that he has realized that the U.S military is not the only right side and that he will stay in the America to search his happiness there. The final scene depicts Kenji performing "Clair de Lune" from the Suite bergamasque at his audition with Megumi, Ryūhei, and his piano teacher watching. His performance is flawless.

Cast

Record of awards and nominations

List of Accolades
Award / Film Festival Category Recipient(s) Result
61st Cannes Film Festival Un Certain Regard - Jury Prize Tokyo Sonata Won
44th Chicago International Film Festival Jury Prize Tokyo Sonata Won
3rd Asian Film Awards Best Film Tokyo Sonata Won
Best Screenwriter Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Max Mannix, Sachiko Tanaka Won
30th Yokohama Film Festival Best Cinematographer Akiko Ashizawa Won
23rd Mar del Plata Festival Best Director Kiyoshi Kurosawa Won
10th Arab Asian Film Festival Best Asian Film Tokyo Sonata Won
9th Utica Film Festival Best Asian Film Tokyo Sonata Won
4th Osaka Cinema Festival Best Film Tokyo Sonata Won
Best Director Kiyoshi Kurosawa Won
2nd Asia Pacific Screen Awards Achievement in Directing Kiyoshi Kurosawa Nominated
Best Screenplay Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Max Mannix, Sachiko Tanaka Nominated
33rd Hochi Film Awards Best Leading Actress Kyoko Koizumi Won
82nd Kinema Junpo Awards Best Leading Actress Kyoko Koizumi Won
Best New Actor Kai Inowaki Won
Cinema Award Best Film in 2008 Tokyo Sonata 5th place

Reception

Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian gave the film 4 out of 5 stars,[3] while Nick Schager of Slant Magazine gave it 3 out of 4 stars.[4]

Christopher Bourne of Meniscus Magazine said, "Kurosawa's latest film, Tokyo Sonata, is his best in quite a few years, a truly frightening work that achieves its effects without resorting to tired genre mechanics." He also wrote that "Debussy's 'Clair de Lune' may well have never been put to better use in a film."[5]

Meanwhile, Tom Mes of Midnight Eye said: "Tokyo Sonata is the ultimate expression of this quality of Kurosawa's cinema. As mentioned, it contains no supernatural elements, no ghosts, killers, or monstrous flora and fauna. Yet it is without doubt the most terrifying film Kiyoshi Kurosawa has ever made. It is terrifying because it is about us."[6]

References

  1. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0938341/business
  2. "Tokyo Sonata (2009)". Box Office Mojo.
  3. Bradshaw, Peter (January 30, 2009). "Film review: Tokyo Sonata". The Guardian.
  4. Schager, Nick (October 13, 2008). "Tokyo Sonata - Film Review". Slant Magazine.
  5. Bourne, Christopher (September 29, 2008). "Kiyoshi Kurosawa's "Tokyo Sonata" – 2008 New York Film Festival Review". Meniscus Magazine.
  6. Mes, Tom (May 17, 2008). "Tokyo Sonata". Midnight Eye.

External links

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