Kaneko Iwasaki - Toshie
Hosei Komatsu - Jimma
Mieko Harada - Mizue Tashima
Yoichi Higashi directs this blissful look
at the magic and terror of childhood. Based on the autobiography
of Seizo Tashima -- who along with his identical twin brother Yukihiko
became beloved illustrators for children's books -- the film centers
on his experiences as a young boy growing up in a rural backwater
just after World War II. The two (played by Keigo Matsuyama and
Shogo Matsuyama) spend much of their time doing what boys living
in a pastoral idyll might: swim, fish, and make mischief. Their
mother (Mieko Harada), who recently moved along with her sons and
elder daughter to the countryside, teaches at a local grade school
while her husband (Kyozo Nagatsuka) works for a government ministry
and is perpetually away on business. The locals regard her with
suspicion and view the twins as either curiosities or freaks. Their
reaction to this dubious social environment is a barrage of Tom-and-Huck-style
pranks. They impulsively cut down a neighbor's taro plant, break
light bulbs and chuck a classmate's sandals into a nearby rice paddy.
Along the way, they befriend a lad who is shunned at school for
his poverty and for his birth. Though it is never explicitly stated,
the film insinuates that the child is a member of Japan's untouchable
class. He shows them how to snatch an eel from a fisherman's trap,
the best places to fish and other secrets of the wild. Other encounters
prove to be much more mystical: water sprites call to them as they
struggle through a raging stream; a forest imp winks at them; and
a trio of witches watch over the twins throughout the duration of
the movie. E no Naka no Boku no Mura received the prestigious Silver
Lion prize at the 1996 Berlin Film Festival. |