Scenes I Go Back To: Go

Go was the movie that first got me thinking about “scenes I go back to.” A few months ago, I found myself down in the basement with a sudden urge to just flip through the many solid scenes in this Japanese film (which is not to be confused with the 1999 American movie of the same name, which is enjoyable as well, but for completely different reasons).
Go boasts a solid performance from Yôsuke Kubozuka, one of Japan’s finest young actors, and deals with some heavy topics—racial identity, discrimination—in a manner that gets its point across without being preachy.
A lot of this is due to director Isao Yukisada, who infuses the film with enough offbeat style and verve to keep things hopping. But ultimately, it comes down to Kubozuka, who delivers a layered performance as a Japanese-born Korean who is as capable of enjoying Shakespeare as he is knocking the teeth out of the Japanese high schoolers who try to rough him up. He delves into some particularly gutwrenching territory, especially when he chooses to stand up to some Korean friends who want to avenge a fellow classmate’s murder.
There’s an inner torment that Kubozuka expresses so amazingly and touchingly, as he struggles to reconcile his Korean heritage and Japanese identity, his thirst for violence and his desire for a simple, private life. And when Kubozuka confronts his Korean friend, telling him he’d sell his own soul if it meant he could be at peace with such frightening intensity in his eyes—goosebumps, plain and simple.
This entry is part of my August blogging project, “Scenes I Go Back To”.
What Is This Place?
Opus is a website masquerading as a blog masquerading as a webzine. It’s where I (Jason Morehead) write about music, movies, art, web design, religion and whatever else interests me at the time (Read More).
Related: I can also be found on Twitter, Facebook, and Flickr.
Recent Music Reviews
Recent Movie Reviews
Recent Comments
- Joe Davenport on Slowdive's "Pygmalion" has been reissued
- Jason Morehead on New album from Sufjan Stevens: "The Age of Adz"
- James Wright on New album from Sufjan Stevens: "The Age of Adz"
- bekahcubed on Elsewhere, August 24, 2010
- Jason Morehead on Elsewhere, August 24, 2010
Friends, Allies & Inspiration
- The Grand
- View from the Prairie Box
- Red Bicycle, Inc.
- Looking Closer
- Arts & Faith
- Filmwell
- Twitch
- Elastic Heart
- Raymonn
- Skoolbus 39
- Something Excellent
- Bad Robot Brain
- Long Pauses
- Firespring
- Andy Whitman
- The Search
- The Hurst Review
- Christ and Pop Culture
- This Is Not Entertainment
- TheoFantastique
- Image Journal
- Flickerings
- Disquiet
- PopMatters
- The War Against Silence
- EE Insider
- Godbit Project
- Smashing Magazine









0 Comments
Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.