Takashi Miike is a Japanese director who seems to make films based on
William Blake's precept "The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom".
His "Dead or Alive" concludes with a cop and a gangster blowing up the
world at the climax of a "High Noon" type duel.
(http://www.columbia.edu/~lnp3/mydocs/culture/dead_or_alive.htm).
"Audition" is a tale of a beautiful but needy young woman who tortures the
men who love her insufficiently. Audience members often not only stagger
out of theaters during the final grizzly scene, but vomit in the aisles.

His latest, now available in DVD, is titled "Happiness of the Katakuris".
It is the story of the Katakuri family who opens up a bed and breakfast in
a remote mountainous area only to discover that each new guest finds a way
to die in their rooms. The first is a depressed middle-aged man who stabs
himself in the neck with a room key. The next is a famous sumo wrestler who
dies of heart failure during a marathon lovemaking session with his petite
lover, who then dies of suffocation beneath his massive body. Since the
Katakuris are afraid of bad publicity, they decide to secretly bury the
unfortunate guests.

If this suggests a combination of "Fawlty Towers" and the Addams Family,
that's not the least of it. When things take a particularly discouraging
turn, the Katakuris break into a charming if somewhat inept song and dance
reminiscent of Bollywood movies. Since Miike is utterly lacking in
sentimentality,  the effect is more in line with Brechtian alienation or
the jarring performances in Dennis Potter's "The Singing Detective".

And even then, Miike is not satisfied. At key moments, he switches to
claymation which allows him to fully realize his surrealist vision. For
example, grandfather Katakuri discovers that a guest has not only falsely
represented himself as an American jet pilot and the nephew of Queen
Elizabeth, but has stolen an ashtray. After the two men begin to fight in
the nearby forest, they roll over the edge of a cliff and hang by vines. At
this point Miike switches to claymation and allows the thief to tumble down
into the ravine like Wile E. Coyote. Eventually the battered (but
non-claymation) figure shows up again in the hotel only to be dispatched
for good.

"The Happiness of the Katakuris" is based on the Korean comedy "The Quiet
Family," directed by Ji Woon Kim. The Katakuris keeps reminding the
audience and themselves that they are a typical Japanese family. There is
the respected grandfather (played by veteran actor Tetsuro Tanba), his
failed shoe-salesman son and his wife, and their two adult children, one an
ex-convict and the other an sex-starved single mother who falls in love
with the ashtray thief. Her young daughter provides voice over narration
for the film's unfolding action, such as it is.

If there is any consistent thread in this director's work, it appears to be
a determination to challenge the Japanese self-image. A profile in the June
2, 2003 Guardian sums this up nicely:

"Against traditional national values like honour, order and emotional
restraint, Miike sets excess and exuberance. Where Japan has maintained an
isolationist stance towards its Asian neighbours (much as Britain has
towards its European ones), Miike's Japan is a melting pot. His films
regularly include immigrants from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Korea; one
of them, City of Lost Souls, has a Brazilian-Japanese hero, as skilled with
a football as he is with a gun.

Even his most apparently banal films, like the aforementioned Visitor Q and
his recent horror/musical/ comedy The Happiness of the Katakuris, address
the breakdown of traditional family values. There are personal dimensions:
some of Miike's family emigrated to China, and his grandmother was a war
orphan who was abandoned in Korea during the second world war. 'Am I proud
of being Japanese? Yes and no,' he says. 'Many people advised me to go to
Hollywood after Audition was well-received in the States, but I am happy,
and feel fortunate to be making movies where I was born.'"


Louis Proyect, Marxism mailing list: http://www.marxmail.org

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