SFIFF: The Long Excuse (Misa Nishikawa, Japan, 2016)
Details
Note: Showtime is 7:30PM. Running time is 124 minutes. Tickets are $13 for SFFS members, $15 general, $14 for students/seniors/the disabled, and $8 for children, available at the festival website (http://www.sffilm.org/festival/lineup/the-long-excuse). As part of a CineVoucher 10-pack (http://www.sffilm.org/festival/attend/tickets), tickets are $12 each for members and $14 each for general public.
The San Francisco International Film Festival (http://www.sffilm.org/festival/), the longest-running film fest in the Americas, returns for its 60th Anniversary from April 5 to 19 screening over 120 films at various locations in San Francisco and Berkeley
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Some people handle fame with grace and gratitude. Then there are those like Sachio Kinugasa (Masahiro Motoki, the superstar from the 2008 Oscar-winning drama Departures), a celebrity author who experienced success early on, and remains a petulant brat even in middle-age. When his long-suffering wife Natsuko (Eri Fukatsu) dies in a tragic accident during a trip with an old school friend, Sachio goes through the motions of public grief while feeling nothing himself. Nevertheless, he lets himself get drawn into the hapless mourning of Yoichi (Pistol Takehara), whose spouse died alongside Sachio’s. He even consents to babysit the truck driver’s now-motherless children, Shinpei and Akari, while dad is on the road. At first, Sachio may have selfish motivations—his dried-up creative well needs fresh material—but it turns out he has a hitherto untapped ease with kids, perhaps because his own emotions are so frequently childish. Still, the redemption of this prickly man-boy won’t be easy. As he says early on, "I don’t want sympathy…I don’t really like myself anyway." A specialist in charting sea changes within "difficult" personalities, writer-director Nishikawa (adapting her own novel) has crafted a bemused, dry-eyed yet heartfelt spin on tearjerker-narrative territory. She finds an ideal muse in Motoki, who makes Sachio a tragicomedic figure worth savoring—and slapping.
Official Selection of 2016 Toronto International Film Festival
Trailer:
