Saturday 11 May 2013

Re-Review (Just To Confuse People): Pistol Opera (2001)

From https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8iR3t0YRwXw7NvoIGkFOy594WRkkFl1GSmD0cLo3_CBs39hmN-kh4n5LXaak95RAJVxE0YY9d_hjwczVf5IrImdSvLj7KI7yDcuQGx2YhIC2Z-9tH4-BSCfBAc9Jyf4HDPsS5nqXywZc/s1600/pistolopera.jpg


Dir. Seijun Suzuki
Japan

From http://file.satyricon.ni-moe.com/Pistol-Opera1.jpg

This will not be a large review. A lot of what I said last time still connects to my thoughts on this film. It’s the context which has changed. I suspected that I would have a drastic change of mind on Pistol Opera when I got around to a second viewing, and that was thankfully the case. The narrative of Pistol Opera is a lot clearer on this viewing and one anyone can latch upon in its simplicity. Clearly set in the same world of Suzuki’s Branded To Kill (1967) and its Guild of assassins, ranked and able to be climbed into higher positions through killing off the people above you, it follows rank #3 Stray Cat, a woman whose fixation with guns goes into a sexual fetish, getting back into the work. She is assigned to eliminate rank #1 Hundred Eyes, a mysterious assassin who is completely unknown and has intentions to eliminate every assassin below them and the entire Guild itself. With only a young girl Sayoko, enamoured with her, who is really trustable, Stray Cat has to protect herself from Hundred Eyes, other assassins and the comical figure of Rank #0 The Champ, the protagonist of Branded To Kill, who is just as obsessed with his glorious (but exceptionally brief) moment at rank #1 as much as giving Stray Cat advice. It’s a clear narrative, but as mentioned in the first review, it’s the presentation that has to be adjusted to.

From http://dark-victory.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/pistolopera34a.jpg

From the director who became so bored making b-movie crime films for Nikkatsu Company that he pushed his luck making films like Branded To Kill, the tone of Pistol Opera was what I had to readjust myself to. It is very slow paced, methodical and contemplative in tone, the stereotype of a film of a much older director later in their career, but its subject matter goes against this and is furthered by Suzuki’s clear disregard for narrative. The narrative is actually very clear, but the presentation of dialogue, plot points and sequences is purposely abstracted. The few battles between assassins become performance art and the reality is continually pierced by non-diagetic tangents in the film’s world, even with a moment characters barrage each other with countless insults presented by close ups of their heads, against purple, and the mixing of Japanese and English. Its absurdist and very theatrical, his concentration on look, colour and presentation as important, if more so, than the plot point at that point he started with. The result is imaginative, a veteran with the dexterity of a young man in showing what is onscreen.

From http://www.jonathanrosenbaum.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/po-dangling-body.png

The film becomes much more abstract in its final act, Suzuki adding unexpected philosophical and political monologues and metaphors which may seem incongruous. I’ve not quite understood them all, but I’ve really became enamoured by them as this unexpected seriousness is one of the many swerves that Suzuki has been doing throughout the first three-quarters. It also leads to a final gun battle that I’ve described before as the hell sequence of Jigoku (1960) recreated through theatre, fun fair iconography and a playground. Also add to this illustration, pop art iconography, Peter Greenaway films and a set designed by manga artists, a kabuki theatre and Derek Jarman. The result are tremendous and is the centre piece that made me unable to completely dismiss Pistol Opera on the first viewing, and proves how good the whole film is. It was good that I did this review so I did not leave Pistol Opera with a divisive review only, but it also was good because the two reviews together also proves that a second viewing can have such a drastic effect on one’s thought on such a film. And what an appropriate film like Pistol Opera, about breaking expectations, to have this doubling effect of opinion that shifts?

From http://www.artofeurope.com/suzuki/pistol.jpg

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