Ok, I watched it again this week. I don't know that the below will make any sense to anyone besides me, but I'll give it a shot.
After watching the film (now, for the third time), I have to conclude that Miike has contempt for his audience.
Regardless of the explanations of dream v. reality, or whether Shigeharu was a manipulative bastard or just a lonely man trying to get a date, or somewhere in between, or whether Asami was inherently evil or a product of endless abuse, I don't think Miike cares.
I'm sticking to my story that the film isn't a character study, nor is it commenting on either one of them. They are puppets in a more general story about how things can go terribly wrong ... in your dreams, in your expectations, in real life--for both of them. It's all just an excuse to set up the scene of a demure young woman amputating a guy's foot.
And I don't.
I've seen and enjoyed movies where people's legs get amputated and eaten (by the amputeur and by wolves/dogs:
Sin City). and movies with other on-screen gooshiness: (
Saw 1); so it's not a squeamishness factor. It's that , TO ME, the other qualities that make a good film are missing, and Miike does not seem to care.
It is a horror movie? It's not the least bit scary. Gooshy and disturbing, yes, but not, you know...
scary. (Although it does have just about the best "jump scene" I've ever seen, so kudos for
that at least).
Is it a social statement (misogyny or "me too" or whatever)? I don't think so.
It is a mystery a la
Jacob's Ladder or
Spider Forest? There's no puzzle that can be figured out, although Clayton-12 gives it a very good go (and I really enjoyed reading that interpretation).
Is it a revenge fantasy, a la
Last House on the Left? If it is, Asami gets revenge on the one fellow who was committing himself to her and the relationship, best I could tell. And tries to get the boy killed as well.
Do we have an unreliable narrator? Certainly. Shigeharu of course, but even Asami. There are scenes that call into question whether her backstory is reliable/accurate. But here's the thing. If the characters are unreliable, the
author or director better damn well be reliable at some point.
I'd say that if Miike were trying for any of the above, he failed. But I don't give him credit for even trying. Look at so many of the posts in this thread. "Toying with us." "An excuse to set up a [disturbing amputation scene]."
You don't get to toy with me or assault me without setting it up so that I believe the director is acting in good faith. I do not see Miike acting in good faith.
I think I mentioned this before, but the second time I watched the film was immediately after the first. Probably 15 years ago. I turned on the commentary, which, if I recall does not even start until the scene where Shigeharu falls backward in his house. At one point (I can't recall if it was during the "is it a dream or not" sequence, or the actual piano wire sequence), I figured, ok here I'll get an answer. Or at least, some insight into what the director was attempting. Miike's commentary? "Man, I don't know what's going on here. I think the screenwriter was on drugs." If that's not a verbatim quote, it's pretty damn close.
Miike doesn't know and he doesn't care. All he wants to do is provoke a reaction.
There are plenty of movies where the entire purpose is to assault the viewer. Chop up people in kewl ways with barely a plot.
I don't like those movies either. There has to be more.
I honestly think if Miike read Clayton-12's thoughts, he would laugh at him. Not because they are not good and interesting thoughts (they are 100X more interesting than anything I saw on the screen), but because Miike sees us as fools who will bite at anything as long as it is "cool." Like the author who writes a sex scene, and some lit class presents a deconstructed thesis on how this act symbolizes this and the woman's reaction says something about society, blah blah blah, and the author says "you guys are whack--this one guy is fucking that girl; there's nothing more to it."
This one girl (Asami) turns a few guys into gorks. And there's nothing more to it. That sums it up for me. Well done, Miike! Well done! (How the fuck do you make a rolleyes smilie?)