April Story (1998)
10/10
A Subtle and Sweet Little Gem
23 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
On first viewing I was reminded how Japanese people often use language not to communicate in words but to hint at deeper ulterior meanings. For example, when Uzuki asks how late the bookstore is open, what she is really asking is, "What are the chances I'll be able to see today the man I am in love with?" I felt that this movie was a lot like literature in that we had the opportunity to fill in a lot of details with our imaginations. With this in mind, the second viewing was a remarkable experience. Check out the group of people for whom the moving van has to reverse for. Here we have what will ultimately be (off screen and after the credits) the happy ending, but we see it implied at the beginning of the movie.

The name Mushashino itself (as in both the university and bookstore): It refers to the wide plains upon which Tokyo has been built. Even more than a thousand years ago, in what some say is the world's first novel, "The Tale of Genji," Mushashino was considered a poetic place of exile and romantic yearning.

That jarring samurai movie may have been well-chosen as well for its symbolic ramifications. It was about Oda Nobunaga, who was the first person to come close to achieving a unification of Japan until he was assassinated by Mitsuhide Akechi: A story of ambush and treachery, just as what was going on with the creep making moves on Uzuki in the movie theater. But in the samurai movie Oda Nobunaga, through trickery of his own, survived that ambush, as did Uzuki. Her fleeing brings to mind Ieyasu who, in the historical time depicted, rapidly fled that dangerous situation with the assistance of the ninja Hattori Hanzo. So we can even make this part of "April Story" into a kind of ninja movie if we wish, with the protagonist successfully fleeing danger and later establishing a grand unification (with her soon to be lover) of her own. Like the one passing in front of the moving van.

Not only the movie theater creep was a threat to her fulfilling her chosen destiny but also the leader of the fly-fishing club who wanted to "catch" her. He even got the hook of a lure into her sweater. But what did he want with her after all? He wanted to use her: "If you get one other person to join our club this reel is yours for free."

Here in the U.S. young lovers have been known to write or carve their initials within the outline of a heart. In Japan they write their names vertically under an umbrella, on either side of the "handle." And the color of the umbrella she chose: the Japanese character for crimson can be synonymous for passion.

I found that the movie resonates deeply if we apply some attention and imagination.

What a pleasure it is to watch it, and the amazing performance of Takako Matsu who expressed so much and so deeply with so few external manifestations.

By the way, if anyone wondered about the location, she rides her bicycle over a blue pedestrian bridge that had written on it that it was in Kunitachi in the western part of Tokyo next to Tachikawa.
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