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One
Tree Kill
James Crawford on Charisma
Charisma is a profoundly
weird film, especially for critics (like me) who
have been introduced to Kiyoshi Kurosawa as a
compelling practitioner of muted, creepy horror
movies through Cure, Séance, and
Pulseor socially conscious Yakuza dramas
Eyes of the Spider and Serpent’s Path.
Working in either mode, Kurosawa’s films are laced
with nuanced and thoughtful meditations on metropolitan
isolation and social miasma and push the extreme
limits of generic convention—insofar as they blend
so many different story tropes that are traditionally
mutually exclusive. As far as generic hybrids
go, Charisma goes pretty far off the reservation.
It welds a relationship farce onto an allegory
about the environment—awkwardly, by the director’s
own ambition. But I’m fond of Kurosawa, so I give
him the benefit of the doubt
With the notable exception of Bright Future,
Kurosawa’s cities are so desolate and bleak that
you wonder why his characters don’t just get up
and leave; in Charisma, someone finally
does. Yabuike (the ever excellent Koji Yakusho)
is a bleary, weary policeman who botches a hostage
situation, leaving a member of parliament dead
by the kidnapper’s hand. Yabuike’s response is
renunciatory: he leaves a message with his wife
saying that he “won’t be home for a while,” and
ventures out into one of the woods skirting Tokyo.
If the captor proves lunatic, in asking that society
“restore the rules of the world” as his sole ransom
condition, the spectacle Yabuike experiences in
the wild is far more bizarre: three different
factions, all fighting over a tree called “Charisma.”
A proto-militant group tries to uproot for market
sale; a botanist and her hot-for-Yabuike sister
assiduously try to kill it; and a loner defends
Charisma from both with vicious zeal. Almost somnambulant,
Yabuike wanders through the forest, munching on
hallucinogenic mushrooms, a mute and bewildered
witness to it all.
One suspects that part of Yabuike’s bewilderment
comes from the overwhelming parallels between
the forest and the city that he left behind. The
same polar opposites of good and evil are at work
(if slightly less well defined), as is the same
essential conundrum that precipitated his departure—a
standard utilitarian argument pitting the needs
of the many against the rights of the few. Saving
the tree, which is poisonous to the surrounding
environment, threatens to kill off all other flora
in the forest. As Yabuike becomes the tree’s steward
and wonders why he can’t preserve both Charisma
and the forest, he threatens to revisit the same
sins that forced his initial exodus. The bare
bones of the plot are thus fairly schematic, but
there’s enough accompanying atmospheric bizarreness
to keep things interesting. The botanist’s sister
has a zealous, irrational, and unrequited attachment
to Yabuike—the aforementioned relationship farce—and
the perpetual tripartite war over the tree is
waged as if by the Keystone Cops. Yet if all this
behavior seems natural, such is Kurosawa’s naturalist
aesthetic and Yakusho’s even temper.
Truth be told, Charismais probably one
of Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s weakest films because, beyond
a few obvious allegories, it borders on incomprehensibility,
skirting that precarious boundary between barely
decipherable and just plain cryptic. Yet Kurosawa
films his tale with an ingenuousness and commitment
to its own supremely strange universe that also
makes it strangely compelling.
Yabuike gives himself over to the forest’s green
world logic and structure, not unfamiliar to those
who have studied Elizabethan plays like A Midsummer
Night’s Dream and Twelfth Night.In
those comedies, the real world is fraught with
problems that can only be resolved by temporary
flight to the green world (usually a forest) with
its own (usually mystical) rules. Once the problems
are satisfactorily amended, the plot allows a
return back to reality. However, Kurosawa obliterates
easy dichotomies (city/country, naturalist/rationalist,
etc.) because the forest is less virgin wilderness
than the municipal world gone to seed. Piles of
earthy decaying refuse are piled up inside the
militant compound, while the loner’s dwelling
(which looks like a child’s indoor playground)
is in decay, with muddy floors and wind whipping
through its myriad broken windows. Small wonder
that Yabuike doesn’t find the peace he sought
in the wilderness. But when Yabuike makes his
return to Tokyo, there is no return to the real
world, for the rules of the forest have taken
hold everywhere. |