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Confessions Blu Ray Review

THE FILM
[This part of the review is taken from my review of Confessions on its cinema release]
Acclaimed Japanese director Tetsuya Nakashima’s latest is the first of his films that I’ve seen. It will not be the last.

Confessions is, in generic terms, perhaps closest to being a revenge thriller, but putting it in a box like that is almost an insult. It begins with a teacher (Matsu) addressing her class of 12 and 13 year olds. She tells them this is her last day of teaching, and then drops a bombshell; her four year old daughter was murdered by two of these students, and she’s going to take revenge, because Japan’s juvenile responsibility laws will protect the killers otherwise. This is her confession. The film then unfolds with further confessions from various other characters, going back and forth in time as it views the events from several different perspectives.

The opening of Confessions is utterly extraordinary, it’s almost a self contained short film, a mini masterwork of its own, much like the Omaha beach sequence in Saving Private Ryan, as with that film the question then becomes; how can the film possibly live up to this? Where Ryan came up empty, Confessions has an answer: ‘Like THIS!’ Nakashima seems to say, juggling perspectives and timelines and throwing up ever more shocking moments up until the film’s shattering, jaw dropping, denouement.

As well as teacher Moriguchi the film focuses on three students. There are the two murderers; Shuya (Nishii) and Naoki (Fujiwara) and Shuya’s girlfriend Mizuki (Hashimoto), and there is also an important role for Naoki’s Mother (played by Yoshino Kimura, who Western audiences may remember from Fernando Mierelles’ Blindness). Each of these characters offers their own confession, their own spin on events both before and after the central murder. Happily the performances are exceptional all round, perhaps especially from the young leads (who, refreshingly, actually are the age they’re playing). These are complex roles for young actors, each has multiple layers; faces and motives they show to the world and those they keep hidden, it’s a testament to both the actors and director Nakashima that there’s never a false note struck.

The best work in the film probably comes from Yukito Nishii, who makes Shuya both utterly chilling and convincingly vulnerable, and it’s vital that you believe both for the ending to have any hope of working. Ai Hashimoto is also excellent; all sweetness and light just barely masking contempt for the world and its people.

Confessions is a 106 minute display of virtuosity by director Tetsuya Nakashima. It is an exceptionally beautiful film. Much of what Nakashima is filming is rather mundane, but his framing is always exceptional and the heavy use of slow motion, especially in sequences with rain, is stunning. The compositions in the film range from amusing (the students popping into frame to sing That’s the Way I Like It) to images that are much more difficult; some violent, some simply haunting, all rendered in Nakashima’s cold, steely, colour scheme. Startling as the visuals can be (and a slow motion shot towards the end of the film is, frankly, jaw dropping) Confessions is not some abstract artist’s film, it’s a constantly twisting thriller that just keeps on surprising and shocking us. Both times I’ve seen it the cinema has been deadly silent as the end credits rolled, the audience trying to collect their thoughts. That’s a testament to how strong the characterisations and plotting are in Nakashima and Kanae Minato’s screenplay.

It’s also well worth mentioning the soundtrack, as through a mix of bands like Radiohead and Japanese noise merchants Boris and original score that often sounds suspiciously like Sigur Ros, the film creates an almost omnipresent undertow of sound that pulls you into it’s world, without instructing you how you should feel at any given moment.

Confessions was a thrill for me, I never knew where it was going next, just that I could trust that it was going to do something pretty extraordinary. The ending certainly lives up to that promise, delivering an unexpected – but plausible – gut punch in the film’s final minutes. This is the first great film of 2011, and it’s going to take something pretty special to beat it this year.

THE DISC
As I said above, Confessions is a beautiful and intricately composed film, and Third Window’s Blu Ray release does a brilliant job of presenting it. The picture is stunning in terms of depth, clarity, detail, and the accuracy of the presentation on Nakashima’s cold colour scheme. It’s hard to imagine how the film could look better really. The only issue I have is with the subtitle placement, they are not at the bottom of the screen, and that means when there are two lines of subs they can be a little disruptive, but this is a smallish issue, and the transfer still deserves the highest praise.

THE EXTRAS
Third Widow tend to try to find a generous set of extras for their flagship releases, and so is the case with this release. Unfortunately the two main extras aren’t quite what I was expecting. ‘Real Confessions By Students’ is a series of very brief soundbites with the cast, the kids are charming enough, and some are very thoughtful, but there’s little meat here and the title of the feature is misleading regarding the subject matter.

The other main extra is ‘Final Confession by Tetsuya Nakashima’, which from that title and a 70 minute running time I expected to be some sort of companion feature, in fact it’s a making of documentary; a very good one, with some great behind the scenes glimpses (including sequences from Nakashima’s video storyboards) and a very good and extensive interview with Nakashima, but again, not what I was expecting. Third Window would do well to label extras a little more clearly in future, but you can’t really fault the content. Trailers for Confessions and other Third Window releases round out the package.

OVERALL
Buy this NOW. It’s the best film of the year so far and the Blu Ray presentation is exemplary.

Confessions is out now on Blu Ray and DVD.

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2 COMMENTS

  1. While his older films aimed for a kind of hip magical-realism never progressing beyond whimsy .Confessions attempts at gory grandeur and social commentary but fails by not making most of its undeniable strengths and losing itself in self-importance to a sadly laughable degree..The film is an overwrought experience. Any serious points the film may be trying to make on whether kids are victims now out of control or otherwise become lost in the process…Bombast is the right word for this is a film that overdoes it from the get go.

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