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  • Dernière connexion: Il y a 16 jours
  • Lieu: so-called Australia
  • Contribution Points: 11 LV1
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  • Date d'inscription: mai 19, 2023

TheUnhinged

so-called Australia

TheUnhinged

so-called Australia
Ainu Mosir japanese drama review
Complété
Ainu Mosir
1 personnes ont trouvé cette critique utile
by TheUnhinged
nov. 2, 2023
Complété
Globalement 8.5
Histoire 8.5
Jeu d'acteur/Casting 10.0
Musique 10.0
Degrés de Re-visionnage 7.0

A perpetual coming of age

Honestly, I'm still not 100% sold on whether one can really call Ainu Mosir a coming-of-age film. It follows teen Kanto as they try to figure out their Ainu identity. Yet, I would argue, this has very little to do with the childhood-to-adult convention of usual coming-of-age stories. Or, perhaps, that the age distinction is simply irrelevant.

Kanto is far from the only one in the Ainu village community who is struggling with their identity. Debo, for an adult example, struggles in his own way with his Ainu identity, He expresses his uncertainty even as he tries to impress on Kanto the importance of being Ainu. Arguably, Debo too is undergoing a coming-of-age process.

What this film does well is sit in discomfort. I agree with JennyStuckOnThatRooftop's review in that I believe this film refrains from "judging". However, I don't think it's offering social commentary per se. It's more observational in its style and while there is certainly deliberate framing at play, I wouldn't go as far to say that's it editorialising. Instead, it allows for messy nuances and seeming contradictions to unravel on screen.

Sure, it's a quiet film as far as dialogue is concerned. But I found it noisy viewing: you can clearly hear the characters' thoughts among the rainfall or the crunch of snow. No one seems to really know their place in the world but they exist regardless.
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