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Locarno 2004
Tony Takitani by Jun Ichikawa
The Loneliness of Tony Takitani
by Tereza Brdeckova
The
fate of Tony Takitani is being alone. During the Second World War, his
father was lying helplessly on the floor of a military prison listening
to the shots of executions coming from outside, whistling a silent jazz
chant to beat his fear. Many years later, the prison is symbolic for his
son: an empty white room without windows, a room which used to be a wardrobe
of Tony‘s dead wife. Tony lies there in the same position as his
father. Just silence around him.
Tony
has been alone since he was born. He studies fine arts, but his drawings
shows no sign of artistic talent. Tony falls in love with a young woman,
who has a strange passion for luxury clothes. They marry, they are happy,
their house is full of dresses. The wife‘s hunger for beautiful
dresses grows; she is no longer able to suppress her passion for shopping,
the dresses are there to fill her empty heart. Finally, her addiction
becomes the cause of her tragic death. Later, Tony sells her dresses,
and in the same way, after the death of his jazzman father, he sells all
his precious jazz records, thinking that getting rid of things means also
to forget and not to suffer anymore. Then he accepts the silent hell of
solitude, and in the end, he loses, by accident, the last chance to find
a new love.
The basis of the film is a short story by Haruki Murakami
and it is directed by the experienced Jun Ichikawa. It is a little masterpiece,
a beautiful and exact study of the roots and consequences of solitude,
the longing for love and a soul confused by the Consumer Society. Ichikawa
uses just three actors and a narration. His cold pictures are almost empty,
light and silent. He has a wonderful minimalistic style, transforming
every detail into poetry. In today‘s world, the value of good films
is often defined by their political engagement – which is necessary
and understandable, but at the same time, it puts in danger the real values
of cinematic language. Ichikawa goes back to the roots. All the elements
of our contemporary world are present in his film, not as a declaration,
but in order to serve his strong, simple and highly artistic idea of human
loneliness.
Tereza Brdeckova
© FIPRESCI 2004
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