divemaster13
Member: Rank 4
I think it's a matter of trust. When I give over 2 hours of my time, there is a certain amount of trust I give over to the director. I trust that for a mystery, the "reveal" will be such that the clues are presented somehow leading up to the conclusion. Say you have a Victorian era drawing room murder whodunit. You watch the whole movie, picking at the clues and the red herrings and...and...and it was...aliens! WTF? Or say, there's a melodrama kid dying of cancer movie. You get to know the kid, his family--the director builds an emotional bond. Yes, you expect that he will either triumph or die at the end. Fair enough. What would not be fair is if the final scene the doctor comes in and bashes the kid's head in with a hammer and roll credits. Yes, that would be shocking for shock value and a huge WTF.
That's just the type of impression I got from Audition. In my opinion, Miike did not set up or justify the violence. I think that if the movie were told in a more straightforward way, without all the jumping around and circling back (was it a dream? was it a fantasy? was Shigeharu remembering? was he projecting? how did he see things that weren't there?); AND if I got a more solid sense of Asami's...psychological profile(?) then maybe I would cut it more slack. As it is, I'm not sure what to believe as far as her abuse goes. For example, in one scene the ballet teacher is coming after her as an 8-year-old, and another flashback he's coming after her as an adult.
My take on the film is here you have this lonely guy. Meets a seemingly sweet girl. Yes, she has some abuse issues, but he seems understanding and they hit it off. The next day she kills his dog, drugs him, slicey/dicey, and oh, I'll kill the son as well. WT everlasting F.
I expect the director to show me why Shigeharu deserves this fate. He wasn't one of her abusers. He was the only one nice to her! We see a scene that implied he had some sort of sexual encounter with the homely office worker, but did he? I think the scene could be interpreted either way. And wasn't there a scene that implied one of his previous sexual partners was a schoolgirl? I'm not sure. Maybe he's a sick bastard and deserves a terrible fate. If that were the case, and Miike built the support for that, I'd probably cheer along with kirikirikirikirikiri and hope she went for his balls when she got finished with his feet.
I guess there was just so much "I'm not sure" / "what did that mean?" / "was this part real and that part fantasy and this other part dream; or was THIS part real, and THAT part fantasy, and that OTHER part dream" to earn my trust. You build up my trust and I can take just about anything you throw at me. If it comes across as a self-indulgent exercise of "I'm gonna throw this at you and dare you to watch," and my primary reaction when the credits are rolling is WTF?...then count me out.
That's just the type of impression I got from Audition. In my opinion, Miike did not set up or justify the violence. I think that if the movie were told in a more straightforward way, without all the jumping around and circling back (was it a dream? was it a fantasy? was Shigeharu remembering? was he projecting? how did he see things that weren't there?); AND if I got a more solid sense of Asami's...psychological profile(?) then maybe I would cut it more slack. As it is, I'm not sure what to believe as far as her abuse goes. For example, in one scene the ballet teacher is coming after her as an 8-year-old, and another flashback he's coming after her as an adult.
My take on the film is here you have this lonely guy. Meets a seemingly sweet girl. Yes, she has some abuse issues, but he seems understanding and they hit it off. The next day she kills his dog, drugs him, slicey/dicey, and oh, I'll kill the son as well. WT everlasting F.
I expect the director to show me why Shigeharu deserves this fate. He wasn't one of her abusers. He was the only one nice to her! We see a scene that implied he had some sort of sexual encounter with the homely office worker, but did he? I think the scene could be interpreted either way. And wasn't there a scene that implied one of his previous sexual partners was a schoolgirl? I'm not sure. Maybe he's a sick bastard and deserves a terrible fate. If that were the case, and Miike built the support for that, I'd probably cheer along with kirikirikirikirikiri and hope she went for his balls when she got finished with his feet.
I guess there was just so much "I'm not sure" / "what did that mean?" / "was this part real and that part fantasy and this other part dream; or was THIS part real, and THAT part fantasy, and that OTHER part dream" to earn my trust. You build up my trust and I can take just about anything you throw at me. If it comes across as a self-indulgent exercise of "I'm gonna throw this at you and dare you to watch," and my primary reaction when the credits are rolling is WTF?...then count me out.