Fires on the Plain | |
---|---|
Directed by | Shinya Tsukamoto |
Written by | Shinya Tsukamoto |
Produced by | Shinya Tsukamoto |
Starring | Shinya Tsukamoto Yusaku Mori Yuko Nakamura Tatsuya Nakamura Lily Franky |
Cinematography | Satoshi Hayashi Shinya Tsukamoto |
Edited by | Shinya Tsukamoto |
Music by | Chu Ishikawa |
Distributed by | Kaijyu Theatre |
Release dates |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Languages | Japanese Filipino |
Fires on the Plain (野火, Nobi) is a 2014 Japanese war film written, produced, directed, edited, co-photographed and starring Shinya Tsukamoto. The film is based on the 1951 anti-war novel Fires on the Plain, which was a semi-autobiographical work loosely based on author Shōhei Ōoka's experience in World War II. The novel was previously adapted in the 1959 film Fires on the Plain by Kon Ichikawa. The film premiered at the 71st Venice International Film Festival in 2014, and was released to the wider Japanese box office on 25 July 2015.
Fires on the Plain takes place during the final days of the Japanese occupation of the Philippines on the island of Leyte, after the American army had returned. The Japanese army remnants have taken to the jungle after being driven out of the main cities. The Filipinos, after suffering a brutal Japanese occupation, are in little mood to show mercy on their former tormentors, and light the titular bonfires for communication. Japanese soldiers are reduced to little more than bandits and murderers as their supplies dry up and they are encircled by the American-Filipino forces. A delirious and sick Private Tamura attempts to survive an aimless journey through the jungle as starvation drives the surviving soldiers to theft, madness, murder, suicide, and cannibalism.
Plot
Private Tamura, a writer, is ridden with tuberculosis (TB) and is sent away from his company to the military hospital; the makeshift hospital refuses to accept him, as they are already full. Tamura is discharged back and forth until essentially ordered not to return and continue consuming supplies - he is ordered to commit suicide instead rather than return yet again.
On his own, Tamura finds that military discipline has faltered as the Japanese army disintegrates into the jungle and subsists largely on yams. Tamura steals food from some local Filipinos while encountering disturbing evidence of the Japanese army's collapse. A despondent soldier blows himself up with a grenade, while others lie dying from malnutrition or injuries on the path. Tamura encounters two soldiers, Yasuda and Nagamatsu, who attempt to trade cigarettes for yams to soldiers who pass by; he declines the cigarette but gives Nagamatsu a yam regardless out of pity. Tamura desperately forages whatever food he can, while American aircraft occasionally strafe the Japanese army remnants with bullets. At a seemingly abandoned church, Tamura stabs a dog. He sees a pile of Japanese corpses nearby, but investigates regardless; he finds a cache of salt hidden beneath a floorboard, but is found out by two Filipino civilians. In a panicked haze, he shoots one; the other runs away, with Tamura's halfhearted shots missing. Tamura runs away with his stolen food before reinforcements come, abandoning his rifle in the process. Tamura joins up with some remaining soldiers from a different company, where he is told that the whole army has orders to attempt to retreat to Palompon. Tamura travels with them for a time, trading his salt for yams; the other soldiers morbidly joke that they practiced cannibalism in order to survive during the New Guinea campaign, although Tamura is unsure if it is actually a joke or not. The retreat to Palompon requires crossing an open road; as Japanese soldiers attempt to cross it at nightfall, they are easily detected and gunned down by the Americans and Filipinos.
A famished Tamura prepares a white flag to attempt to surrender to a passing American jeep. Just before he runs out to surrender, he sees another Japanese soldier attempt the same act. The other soldier is gunned down by a vengeful Filipino woman in the jeep despite the American soldier's attempt to accept the surrender; Tamura perceives the shooter as the same woman he shot in the chapel. It is clear to Tamura that crossing the road to get to Palompon is impossible, so he returns the way he came into the jungle. Now delirious and perceiving corpses as talking to him, Tamura is found and saved from starvation by Nagamatsu, the soldier he had given a yam to earlier. Tamura is given bark, water, and "monkey meat". Tamura is bullied into giving his grenade to Yasuda, the canny superior whose leg was wounded and rolled up cigarettes for trade. After hearing a shot, Tamura chases after Nagamatsu; he sees that he had fired at a fleeing Filipino civilian, and that the "monkeys" he had been hunting were other humans. The loose alliance between Nagamatsu and Yasuda breaks down now that Yasuda has a grenade, as the two each fear that the other will kill them for their meat. After guarding the only source of clean water in the area, Yasuda is smoked out; Yasuda attempts to negotiate, but Nagamatsu shoots him. As Nagamatsu attempts to devour Yasuda, Tamura grabs his rifle. In the resulting struggle, he shoots Nagamatsu, who assures him before he dies that he knows Tamura will eat him.
The scene shifts to post-war Japan, where Tamura writes a memoir. Tamura claims to awaken at an American field hospital in his notes and not have remembered what happened after shooting Nagamatsu, but dry heaves at the horrible memory regardless.
Cast
- Shinya Tsukamoto as Tamura
- Yūko Nakamura as Tamura's Wife
- Lily Franky as Yasuda
- Yusaku Mori as Nagamatsu
- Tatsuya Nakamura as Corporal
Production and themes
Shinya Tsukamoto read the novel as a child and was taken with its power; he stated in an interview that he always wanted to make a movie version.[1] He said that even his first movie, the 1989 cyberpunk film Tetsuo: The Iron Man, was influenced by Fires on the Plain; they both feature "normal" people who are drastically shaped by their environment.
Tsukamoto originally wanted to make "an epic movie, with a big budget" but was turned down by the companies he approached. He made the project completely self-funded as an independent film instead.[1] Tsukamoto also made the film due to the renewed interest in revising Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution and potential military involvement: "I wanted to remind younger audiences, for whom the horrors of WWII are a distant memory and may feel war is OK, the consequences of going to war."[1] The movie was released a few weeks before the 70th anniversary of Japan's surrender, commemorated on August 15 in Japan; Tsukamoto arranged for encore screenings to happen the next year for the 71st anniversary of the war's end as well.[2]
Release
Fires on the Plain was selected to compete for the Golden Lion at the 71st Venice International Film Festival in 2014.[3][4] The film saw a wider release in the Japanese market in July 2015.[5]
Reception
Mark Schilling of The Japan Times gave the film a positive review. He noted that many Japanese war films indulged in a certain amount of soft nationalism, praising the sacrifice and intent of dying Japanese soldiers even if their cause was bad; Fires on the Plain does no such thing, showing undignified and starving soldiers trapped in a "hellish antechamber to death" lashing out at both innocents and each other. He praised Tsukamoto's work and noted he seemed to be inspired by Terrence Malick's style of portraying death and terror on-screen in a hallucinatory, terrifying fashion.[5] Anthony Gates of Easternkicks.com also admired the film, comparing it to a more historical version of Mad Max. He also praised the vibrant color palette and Chu Ishikawa's musical score.[6] Xan Brooks of The Guardian wrote that the movie successfully makes its point that "war is hell, particularly if you are fighting on the losing side" and called the film "brilliantly bonkers".[7] Deborah Young of The Hollywood Reporter opined that Fires on the Plain felt like a "relentlessly cruel and gory horror film" and further stated, "it's not an easy watch but a highly rewarding one that most festival audiences will be anxious to sit through, thanks to Tsukamoto's reputation."[8] While Pierce Conran of Screen Anarchy felt that the film could in no way match the previous 1959 adaptation of the novel, he still praised its "frenetic and almost crude aesthetic" and effective mix of "shaky, high-contrast photography, boundless psychological despair and liberal doses of cheap but stomach churning gore."[9]
In a middling review written for Asian Movie Pulse, Panos Kotzathanasis commented that the focus on grotesque spectacle and splatter at times felt excessive, and concluded, "Fires on the Plain is not a masterpiece, but the extremity in the presentation of the anti-war message definitely sets it apart as a cult spectacle that fans of the genre will definitely appreciate."[10] In less positive reviews, Peter Debruge of Variety felt that the movie was more of a horror film to a degree that compromised its anti-war message and its realism, comparing the cinematography's lingering on horrible deaths to an "amateur zombie movie". Debruge also felt that Tsukamoto's acting performance was weak and one-note.[11]
In the Japanese film press, Fires on the Plain won the second prize at the 25th Japanese Professional Movie Awards for movies released in 2015 in Japan.[12] It also won 5th place at the 37th Yokohama Film Festival.[13]
References
- 1 2 3 Gates, Anthony (30 September 2015). "Shinya Tsukamoto interview". easternkicks.com. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
- ↑ "『野火』が再びスクリーンに帰ってくる‼︎". 24 July 2016. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
- ↑ "International competition of feature films". Venice. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
- ↑ "Venice Film Festival Lineup Announced". Deadline. 24 July 2014. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
- 1 2 Schilling, Mark (22 July 2015). "A second look at bloody WWII novel 'Fires on the Plain'". The Japan Times. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
- ↑ Gates, Anthony (2 October 2015). "Fires on the Plain". easternkicks.com. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
- ↑ Brooks, Xan. "Fires on the Plain: Venice film festival review – brilliantly bonkers Japanese film reminds us war is hell". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
- ↑ Young, Deborah (2 September 2014). "Fires on the Plain: Venice Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
- ↑ Conran, Pierce (12 October 2014). "Busan 2014 Review: Fires on the Plain Drags Us Into The Abyss". Screen Anarchy. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
- ↑ Kotzathanasis, Panos (2 January 2019). "Film Review: Fires on the Plain (2014) by Shinya Tsukamoto". Asian Movie Pulse. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
- ↑ Debruge, Peter (2 September 2014). "Venice Film Review: 'Fires on the Plain'". Variety. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
- ↑ "「バクマン。」が日本映画プロフェッショナル大賞でベストワン&作品賞". 映画ナタリー. 25 March 2016. Retrieved 25 March 2016.
- ↑ "綾瀬はるかや広瀬すずも爆笑!樹木希林の爆笑スピーチ". Movie Walker. 7 February 2016. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
External links
- Fires on the Plain at IMDb
- Official website (in Japanese)