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The 2005 New York Film Festival’s
other tale of cinema hailing from the Far East,
Who’s Camus Anyway? riffs intertextual
where Hong Sang-soo’s film waxes meta. Mitsuo
Yanagimachi’s first film in 10 years, WCA?
has the cinephilic zeal of youth but the assured
touch of a mature pro. A week in the life of a
Japanese student-film production, the film kicks
off with a breezily orchestrated six-minute take
introducing us to the main players: the assistant
director in the midst of a casting crisis, the
motorcycle-riding director, his obsessed girlfriend,
assorted crew members, their outwardly grave professor
(secretly smitten with a student), and the student
film’s cinephile producers, who are discussing
movies with long opening takes.
With its formal games, amused sidelong
glances at campus life, and knowing allusions
to other movies, the film may first appear to
be a lightweight trifle, more funny ha-ha in the
depiction of its milieu than Funny Ha Ha.
But as the week wears on, the subject matter of
the student film, The Bored Murderer,
based on the true story of a Japanese schoolboy
who murdered an old woman, begins to weigh on
the cast and production team. In attempting to
determine the teen killer’s motivation (compared
by the professor to Meursault’s in Camus’s
The Stranger), they are confronted with
the absurdity of their own actions as eros runs
amok on set and off—the professor even makes
a move on his crush on the anniversary of his
wife’s death, in a riff on Vertigo.
As in ensemble Altman, the diversity
and folly of human behavior are laid bare, though
moments of happiness are allowed. The film builds
to a finale that is both disturbing and jubilant:
the students have begun their first day of shooting,
the filming of the murder scene, and spirits are
high. After a 10-year hiatus himself, Yanagimachi
would hardly begrudge them their pleasure. But
the audience is left to wonder what it is these
movies do for and to us: offer cheap vicarious
thrills, or insight into ourselves and fellow
neighbors—distance or empathy? Smuggling
all of this into an ostensible college comedy
should be work enough—let’s hope it
doesn’t have to be smuggled onto the Internet
for you to see it.
Sales Agent: Gold View Co. Ltd.,
kiyo@goldview.co.jp
© 2006 by Mark Cummins
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