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Mata no Hi no Chika (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2

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Mata no Hi no Chika (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)

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YesAsia Editorial Description

Maverick director Hara Kazuo has long built a reputation as one of the world's foremost documentary filmmakers. From 1972's Goodbye CP to 1987's The Emperor's Naked Army Marches On (a.k.a. Yukiyukite, Shingun), his controversial no-holds-barred documentaries never fail to shock and provoke thought. In 1995, he directed his first fictional feature-length film, Many Faces of Chika (a.k.a. Mata no Hi no Chika), and it should come as no surprise that Hara breaks with convention in his storytelling. In an interesting casting decision, he uses four different actresses - Yoshimoto Takami (Tokyo Noir), Watanabe Makiko (The Mourning Forest), Kim Kumija, Kaori Mamoi (Memoirs of a Geisha) - to portray the protagonist, bringing new dimension to this uncommon character study.

Set in the chug and tug of 1970s Japan, the film follows a woman, Chika, through four different relationships in her life. Married and with a son, she originally has a happy, picture-perfect life but everything changes after her husband becomes hospitalized. Returning to the countryside, Chika falls into an affair with a new teacher at her school, and eventually leaves home for Tokyo on her own. Starting anew in the city, she encounters a student and later a gangster who bring her to new places on her continuing journey of hope and heartbreak. Hara chose to use a different actress to portray Chika in each episode of her life, because he wanted to show that though she is the same person, she becomes different because each man perceives her differently. The four men of Chika's life are played by Tanaka Minoru, Tanaba Seiichi (Thirty Lies or So), Kotani Yoshikazu (The Prince of Tennis), and Natsuyagi Isao (Samurai Wolf).

© 2007-2009 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

Technical Information

Product Title: Mata no Hi no Chika (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) Mata no Hi no Chika (DVD) (英文字幕) (日本版) Mata no Hi no Chika (DVD) (英文字幕) (日本版) またの日の知華 Mata no Hi no Chika (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)
Also known as: Many Faces of Chika Many Faces of Chika Many Faces of Chika Many Faces of Chika Many Faces of Chika
Artist Name(s): Kaori Momoi | Tanabe Seiichi | Yoshioka Hidetaka | Natsuyagi Isao | Kim Kumija | Watanabe Makiko | Tanaka Minoru | Kotani Yoshikazu | Yoshimoto Takami 桃井薰 | 田邊誠一 | 吉岡秀隆 | 夏八木勲 | 金久美子 | 渡邊真起子 | 田中實 | 小谷嘉一 | 吉本多香美 桃井薰 | 田边诚一 | 吉冈秀隆 | 夏八木勲 | 金久美子 | 渡边真起子 | 田中实 | 小谷嘉一 | 吉本多香美 桃井かおり | 田辺誠一 | 吉岡秀隆 | 夏八木勲 | 金久美子 | 渡辺真起子 | 田中実 | 小谷嘉一 | 吉本多香美 Kaori Momoi | Tanabe Seiichi | Yoshioka Hidetaka | Natsuyagi Isao | Kim Kumija | Watanabe Makiko | Tanaka Minoru | Kotani Yoshikazu | Yoshimoto Takami
Director: Hara Kazuo 原一男 原一男 原一男 Hara Kazuo
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Release Date: 2007-08-24
Publisher Product Code: GNBD-7428
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English
Country of Origin: Japan
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it?
Other Information: DVD
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004912397

Product Information

タイトル:またの日の知華
出演:吉本多香美/渡辺真起子/金久美子/桃井かおり/田中実/田辺誠一/小谷嘉一/夏八木勲/吉岡秀隆
監督:原一男

幸せな日々を送っていた体育教師の知華だったが、夫が肺結核で倒れて療養生活に入ってしまう。それを機に、様々な職業を転々とするようになった知華。そんな彼女は次々と4人の男に愛され、愛される男ごとに、別の表情を見せていくのだった…。
激動の1970年代を舞台に、懸命に生きる一人の女の半生を描く。監督は「ゆきゆきて神軍」の原一男。本作はドキュメンタリー作家として名高い原監督が、初めて劇映画のメガホンをとった作品である。主演は吉本多香美、渡辺真起子、金久美子、桃井かおり。一つの役を4人の女優が演じるという全く新しい手法を取り入れ、真実味溢れる女の生き様を描いた人間ドラマである。

■映像特典:劇場予告編

テクニカル・インフォメーション
:カラー
画面:16:9/4:3(LB)
言語/音声:日本語:DD(ステレオ)

その他の情報
製作年:2004
日本小売価格:¥4700

Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Mata no Hi no Chika (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)"

October 3, 2007

It's typical for biopics to use several actors to portray different stages in the life of a character, such as childhood or old age. Documentary filmmaker Kazuo Hara's directorial debut The Many Faces of Chika takes the idea to the extreme by using four actresses to portray one woman's life within only a short decade. The structure of the film is inherently episodic, showing protagonist Chika's encounters with four different men and how they affect each other's lives. While these men do cross over from episode to episode, The Many Faces of Chika feels more like four short films rather than a coherent whole. Perhaps it should have remained that way.

To make each section stand on its own, The Many Faces of Chika doesn't have much exposition. The film opens in 1969 amidst the student riots of Tokyo. Chika (played by Takami Yoshimoto in the first segment) is a talented gymnast who makes a mistake during her performance at the Tokyo Olympics, which causes her to end her own career. Defeated, she returns to her hometown and marries childhood sweetheart Yoshio (Minoru Tanaka). After several random occurrences, including one with an antisocial student student named Koji, and some devastating news from Yoshio, the film jumps to its second segment three years later. Makiko Watanabe now plays Chika, the gymnastics teacher at a new school, where she is seduced by a fellow teacher. The affair results in Chika's life going into a free fall - a fall not unlike the one she took at the Olympics.

In line with the infamous theory of "the male gaze", which argues that all films are supposedly made in the perspective of a male, Hara says the use of the four actresses at different ages is to represent how each man in the respective periods sees Chika. That would explain why Kumija Kim as Chika in the third segment appears much older to the young Koji than Kaori Momoi in the fourth segment, whereas Chika appears younger to an older man (despite Mamoi being older). While this "quick aging" of Haru's heroine is an effective way to show the slow self-destruction of Chika, the constant change of faces can also lead to a general detachment of Chika as a character. Without a clear background for Chika, trying to generate any liking for her is a bit of a task, and her later actions certainly don't help in getting us on her side. What's left is a matter of sympathy; we feel sorry for her because of her bad choices, not because she's a character worth liking. In fact, some can mistake Hara as misogynistic by making a film in which a woman's life is simply dependent on the men around her, as even the film's chapters are named after these men. Of course, that theory would only hold up if the screenwriter and producer wasn't Hara's wife Sachiko Kobayashi.

Possible misogyny aside, Chika doesn't seem to be an identifiable character anyway because Hara relies fully on the actresses to bring their own interpretations to the table. However, only Makiko Watanabe delivers a real standout performance as Chika in segment two, showing considerable restraint as a woman in a dilemma. Of course, it might also have something to do with the fact that Watanabe's segment is where Chika's character is the most compelling, as she tries to balance her roles as wife, mother, and lover before plunging to rock bottom. Having only seen Watanabe on Japanese variety shows, I found her short performance here to be nothing short of impressive. However, just when the actress begins to display a broader range in her performance, the film changes its main actor yet again.

Nevertheless, the structure of the film means that it moves along at a brisk pace. The episodes work because we want the gaps filled in (How many years did the film jump? What happened to whom? Why did Chika age so much?), not because Chika's story is particularly interesting. On the other hand, the film does take place in the 70s, so some might suspect that historical context has something to do with appreciating the film. Chika does encounter characters involved with events such as the animal liberation organization, but their additions merely help set the mood of the times rather than having any direct effect on the story. In the end, The Many Faces of Chika is an interesting experiment in perception, but the gimmick of using different actors for one character creates too much alienation for one film, leaving audiences with no one to root for. This idea would work better for a multiple-episode miniseries than a 114-minute film. Knowing how Japanese television works, don't be surprised if it's already in the making.

By Kevin Ma

This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

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