New Int'l. Release
Death Note; Death Note: The Last Name
Desu Notu; Desu Notu: The Last Name (Japan)
Death Note: A Warner Bros. Japan release of a "Death Note" Film
Partners (Nippon Television Network, Shueisha, Horipro, Yomiuri
Telecasting, VAP, Konami De, Shochiku, Nikkatsu) presentation of a
Nikkatsu Studio production. (International sales: Nippon TV, Tokyo.)
Produced by Toyoharu Fukuda, Takahiro Kobashi, Takahiro Sato. Executive
producer, Seiji Okuda. Directed by Shusuke Kaneko. Screenplay, Tetsuya
Oishi, based on the manga by Tsugumi Oba (story), Takeshi Obata (art).
Death Note: The Last Name:
A Warner Bros. Japan release of a "Death Note: The Last Name" Film
Partners (Nippon Television Network, Shueisha, Horipro, Yomiuri
Telecasting, VAP, Konami, Shochiku, Nikkatsu, STV, MMT, CTV, HTV, FBS)
presentation of a Nikkatsu Studio production. (International sales:
Nippon TV, Tokyo.) Produced by Takahiro Sato. Executive producers,
Toyoharu Fukuda, Seiji Okuda. Directed by Shusuke Kaneko. Screenplay,
Tetsuya Oishi, based on the manga by Tsugumi Oba (story), Takeshi Obata
(art).
With:
Death Note: Tatsuya Fujiwara,
Kenichi Matsuyama, Asaka Seto, Shigeki Hosokawa, Erika Toda, Shunji
Fujimura, Takeshi Kaga, Yu Kashii, Hikari Mitsushima, Michiko Godai,
Shido Nakamura (voice).
Death Note: The Last Name: Tatsuya
Fujiwara, Kenichi Matsuyama, Erika Toda, Shunji Fujimura, Takeshi Kaga,
Hikari Mitushima, Nana Katase, Sakura Uehara, Magy, Miyuki Komatsu,
Michiko Godai, Peter (voice), Shido Nakamura (voice).
The Japanese psychothriller gets a fresh spin with double-header
"Death Note" and "Death Note: The Last Name," in which the central idea
and the games the two principals play -- rather than gore or clammy
atmospherics -- provide the thrills. Spun off from a highly popular
12-volume manga, and a B.O. slam dunk throughout East and Southeast
Asia last year, the two pics about a college kid who kills people by
writing their names in a magical book look to have strong fest and
ancillary legs in Western markets, where they've been slow to surface.
Both movies scream remake potential.
Original film took a bonny
$25 million in Japan in June, and the sequel took almost twice that
($43 million) in November. Based on the manga's popularity and the
boyish-looking leads' femme appeal, biz has been buoyant throughout
Asia. In Hong Kong, first pic drew the highest first-day gross for a
Japanese film in 10 years.
Films share almost identical tech
crews and cast, and were clearly written as a pair, with the second
already shooting when the first was in release last summer. Though the
plots do diverge considerably from the manga, with extra characters and
more backgrounding of the main one, casting leaps right off the page,
with Tatsuya Fujiwara and Kenichi Matsuyama exact replicas of artist
Takeshi Obata's protags -- the androgynous-looking student killer and
the kohl-eyed, weirdo teen detective, respectively.
Most of the
budget for the HD-shot pics seems to have gone to the effects --
notably the two Angels of Death, Ryuk and Rem, who are also dead
ringers for their counterparts in the manga. Incorporation of these
gangling loonies with live-action thesps is technically seamless --
luckily, as that interaction plays a vital role.
"Death Note"
starts with various baddies dropping dead as a hand writes their names
in a plain exercise book, and panic spreads that some kind of serial
killer is at work. Turns out, it's law student Light Yagami (Fujiwara),
who has already become disenchanted with Japan's justice system.
It's
revealed in flashback that Light hacked into the police database and
found criminals were being blatantly let off the hook. One rainy night,
he found an empty notebook in the street, with instructions in English:
"The human whose name is written in this note [sic] shall die." In a
flash, Light morphs from cocky, middle-class star student into cocky,
power-mad vigilante killer, with a mission to eradicate worldwide crime
by, uh, eradicating all criminals worldwide.
That's just the
movie's high concept. At the 20-minute mark, story pulls the first of
several twists that keep the idea fresh, initially by introducing Ryuk,
a kind of punk-rock Angel of Death with the same tailor as Tim
Burton.Second twist is the other main character, known simply as "L," a
super-detective the hapless police force calls on to solve the
killings. Initially a talking laptop, and subsequently revealed as a
spaced-out teen (Matsuyama, making superb use of lanky body language),
L engages in a battle of wits with Light, who's given himself the web
avatar "Kira" ("killer" in Nipponese pronunciation).
These games,
played in a blackly humorous way, are fascinating enough to sustain the
two-hour running time despite the film's lack of physical action and
visual oomph. Underlying tension comes from Light manipulating his
pursuers while finally "proving" his innocence to an increasingly
suspicious L.
"Death Note: The Last Name" -- which, at almost 2½ hours, would
benefit from some trimming -- continues the story of L gradually
zeroing in on Light. Latter has now officially joined L's investigating
team in its high-tech bunker and is still plotting to discover what L's
real name is so he can write him a death note.
Convoluted plot
intros a second Angel of Death, Rem, plus a second notebook, and ups a
minor character from the first pic, ditzy TV cook Misa (newcomer Erika
Toda), into a parallel Kira. The moral twist here is that, because of
plunging crime rates, a majority of the Japanese public now supports
the killings -- though neither film, wisely, ever gets into the ethics
of vigilantism.
Though it recovers in a clever finale, the sequel
does wander during its middle going, without the strong sense of
purpose that drove the original movie. Exchanges between Light and L
also lose their edge from over-familiarity.
Shusuke Kaneko (a vet
of "Gamera" and other monster movies, as well as femme swordplayer
"Azumi 2") directs with cool deliberation and little visual panache,
focusing, in TV-drama style, on the perfs. Latter are fine down the
line, with vet Takeshi Kaga notable as Light's iron-jawed cop father
and Nana Katase ditto as an ambitious TV researcher in the sequel.
Death Note: Camera (color, HD-to-35mm), Hiroshi Takase;
editor, Yousuke Yafune; music, Kenji Kawai; art director, Hajime
Oikawa; sound (Dolby Digital), Masayuki Iwakura; special visual
effects, Digital Frontier. Reviewed on DVD, London, March 31, 2007.
Running time: 125 MIN.
Death Note: The Last Name: Camera
(color, HD-to-35mm), Kenji Takama; editor, Yousuke Yafune; music, Kenji
Kawai; art director, Hajime Oikawa; sound (Dolby Digital), Masayuki
Iwakura; special visual effects, Digital Frontier. Reviewed on DVD,
London, March 31, 2007. Running time: 139 MIN.
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