Kakera   2009   Japan Kakera: A Piece of Our Life
Kakera: A Piece of Our Life Image Cover
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Director:Momoko Andô
Studio:Pictures Dept.
Writer:Erika Sakurazawa, Momoko Andô
IMDb Rating:6.7 (90 votes)
Genre:Drama
Duration:107 min
Location:Tokyo
Languages:Japanese
IMDb:1512184
Search:NetflixYouTube
Momoko Andô  ...  (Director)
Erika Sakurazawa, Momoko Andô  ...  (Writer)
 
Hikari Mitsushima  ...  Haru
Eriko Nakamura  ...  Riko
Ken Mitsuishi  ...  Riko's father
Tasuku Nagaoka  ...  Ryota
Rino Katase  ...  Toko
Ryû Morioka  ...  Tetsu
Toshie Negishi  ...  Riko's mother
Megumi Ohori  ...  Kisaragi
Jyonmyon Pe  ...  
Kageki Shimoda  ...  
Masahiko Tsugawa  ...  Tadashi Tanaka
James Iha  ...  Composer
Kôichi Ishii  ...  Cinematographer
Comments: In the "Making of" documentary on the Love Exposure DVD director Sono Sion says to Hikari Mitsushima, "You're an actress. You're supposed to move us. Move us, you idiot!" She must have taken it to heart. She was great in Love Exposure and she's the main reason I like this film. She doesn't have a lot of dialog in A Piece of Our Life but she is constantly communicating, through body language and projecting her internals. That's something good actors do.

A Piece of Our Life is a story about two very different young women who end up spending time together. It's not a lesbian story, per se. There are no make-out scenes or naked bodies entwined in soft focus. No politics. The two protagonists just happen to be women. That's a healthy notion and could have made for a much better movie if one of the women didn't actually have to tell us that. "It's not about if you're a man or a woman. You should have someone who you think feels good" might sound like words of wisdom but to me they sound like words from a director who is afraid her audience won't get it unless she spells it out.

There are many subtle and wonderful details in A Piece of Our Life, such as when Riko (Eriko Nakamura), the aggressive and confident one, asks Haru (Hikari Mitsushima) if she liked their "kiss for friendship" and Haru says "No" and the scene cuts away. Haru's response isn't one of objection or disgust. It's just simple and honest, even if born a bit from surprise. But there are also a few details that are just plain wrong, such as why does the quiet woman, who's probably never imagined dating another woman before, have to start out being in a relationship with an jerkball, a guy with terrible table manners who uses her only for sex while he openly has another girlfriend on the side? That seems like a cheap and lazy juxtaposition against Riko's declaration that she likes women because "they're soft and cuddly, and they smell nice". It snuggles up to close to the tired idea that women only choose other women after they've become thoroughly disgusted by disgusting men.

I also think Riko's character was a lot smarter than the way she acts every time the couple interacts with a third party: when Haru's (ex)boyfriend comes over; when a man approaches Haru in the nightclub; when Riko shows up at Haru's university party. Riko acts childish and jealous. This seems at odds with the maturity Riko shows when dealing with her other girlfriend: "I can't fulfill the hollow you have in your heart".

There are a lot of things to like about this film. It's got a simple, honest, and wonderful vision which it explores with some effectiveness, and the two lead performances are outstanding. But it could have been a really, really great film instead of just a really good one if it would have practiced what it preaches and left out more of the stuff we've seen, heard, and grown tired of before.

Momoko Ando is a young director to keep an eye on. "A Piece of Our Life" is one of the best and brightest films I've seen recently. My criticisms are born of a frustration that the director came just short of making an other-worldly masterpiece by adding in elements she just wanted to make a point of rather than letting the world of the film dictate the boundaries.

Just shy of five:
★★★★

Summary: "Based on the best-selling manga ‘Love Vibes’ by Erika Sakurazawa and featuring a soundtrack by James Iha, former guitarist of Smashing Pumpkins, the debut feature of Momoko Andô, is a delicately-nuanced portrait of two very different women."


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