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THE MAGIC HOUR DVD Review

Posted by James Hadfield at 1:21am.

Posted in Film & DVD Reviews .

When you’re up to your knees in a bucket of concrete and about to be dumped in the sea, you’ll say pretty much anything. For small-time hustler Bingo (Satoshi Tsumabuki), it’s a seemingly innocuous fib: after being caught sleeping with his boss’s moll, Mari (Eri Fukatsu), he rescues them both from a watery grave by claiming acquaintance with the renowned hitman Della Togashi. The only problem is that he now has five days to bring Togashi to his boss - and, of course, he hasn’t got a clue who he is.

Neither does anyone else, for that matter - well, what he looks like, at least - leading Bingo to concoct an unlikely scheme. He decides to hire an actor to impersonate the famed assassin, plumping for one Taiki Murata (Koichi Sato), a second-rate hack who scrapes by on a gruel-like diet of bit parts and body double work. Posing as a movie director, he propositions Murata to star as a hitman in his debut feature, shot guerrilla-style with minimal preparation and no real script. Amazingly, everyone buys it - and that’s when the problems start.

There’s nothing remotely plausible about the premise of Koki Mitani’s The Magic Hour, but then that’s the point. This a film with a deliberately haphazard grasp on reality, taking place in a town that looks like nothing so much as a 1940s movie set and culminating in a showdown that the characters literally stage themselves - lights, explosions and all.

“I feel like I’m in a movie,” Bingo’s colleague Natsuko (Haruka Ayase) observes early on. “Gangs, a hitman, cement shoes. It hardly seems real.” She isn’t the only one. In his free time, Murata obsessively re-watches an old film noir that his father took him to see as a child, imagining himself in the role of the doomed antihero. Given the chance to act out these fantasies, he immerses himself in the experience, pulling his best Riki Takeuchi impersonation and barely thinking to stop and ask for directorial guidance. At one point, he even pretends to peel his own face off, Mission Impossible style, in order to convince a rival gang boss of his true identity - a scene of quite sublime weirdness that lingers long after the credits have rolled.

Mitani doesn’t pursue this meta angle as far as he perhaps could: at heart, he’s still a crowd-pleaser, and he fulfills this role as effortlessly as ever. I can’t think of any other Japanese director producing as consistently entertaining comedies at the moment, films in which everyone involved seems to be having a blast. Sato, in particular, is on top form, but I also enjoyed Fukatsu’s coquettish femme fatale and Toshiyuki Nishida’s gang boss - a comparatively restrained performance, by his standards. Keep an eye out, too, for cameos by SMAP’s Shingo Katori and director Kon Ichikawa, in his last screen role.

The Magic Hour isn’t Mitani’s best film - if only because it’s a bit too long and lacks the ambition of some of his larger ensemble comedies - but it’s a more than worthwhile addition to his canon: a paean to cinema and the joys of getting lost in your own fantasies from time to time.

DVD Details

The Japanese edition of The Magic Hour, with English subtitles, is available from YesAsia.

 

Reader Comments

  1. Brad 01/14/2009 @ 4:41pm

    Fantastic review dude.

    I agree with you, it’s fun but nowhere near as good as Mitani’s previous flick.

  2. James Marsh 01/14/2009 @ 6:59pm

    Very keen to check out Suite Dreams - coz I saw this couple of months ago and thought it was genius! One of my favourite films of 2008.

  3. The Visitor 01/14/2009 @ 7:08pm

    nice review.

    but i don’t understand why everyone feels this movie is a bit too long. i sat through it thinking i would be bored by the 90th minute, but Mitani keeps the gags coming so well that i didn’t feel the more-than-two-hours running time.

    i’m a great big fan of Rajio no Jikan (saw it eight times in the cinema!), and i feel The Magic Hour is up there with Mitani’s other films. a crowd-pleaser through and through. i haven’t enjoyed a comedy this much in a long time.

  4. The Visitor 01/14/2009 @ 7:10pm

    just to add: i think the movie also says quite a bit about the fine line between delusion and ambition.

  5. James Hadfield 01/15/2009 @ 5:04am

    Yeah, good point.

    As for the running time - well, each to their own. The Magic Hour is a good half-hour longer than Rajio no Jikan was, and I just didn’t really feel that it needed to be (especially given the speed with which Mitani manages to sketch out the initial premise). It was a mighty fine film, either way.

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