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Ghost in the Machine:
Kiyoshi Kurosawa and the
Heartbeat of J-Horror
by Matthew Plouffe
Pulse
Dir. Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Japan, Magnolia
After collecting dust for the
last three years in the infamous annals of unseen
work that has come to define for many the once-monolithic
Miramax, Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Pulse will
finally see its overdue stateside release at the
hands of smaller Magnolia Pictures this summer.
Were it not for the claque of American film lovers
touting Japanese Horror (or “J-Horror”) as the
go-to genre for anyone in search of real scares,
Pulse would most likely have moved straight
from the studio’s shelf to Blockbuster’s, but
since the relative success of both original foreign-language
and remake releases of films like Hideo Nakata’s
The Ring (Ringu) and Takashi Shimizu’s
The Grudge (Ju-On), distributors
and horror-lovers alike have been scouring Japan’s
output for whatever they can get their hands on.
It’s always difficult to predict the future of
a film like Pulse in a market like the
one we’ve got here; even if it did turn out to
be another Ringu or Ju-On, managing
to remain on screens for a few weeks, Kurosawa’s
unforgettable investigation of techno-isolationism
in contemporary Tokyo will likely not be recognized
by the general filmgoing public as anything more
than a little more J-Horror hoopla. Such is the
plight of Kiyoshi Kurosawa, whose name is often
found beneath headlines like “Lions Gate has acquired
worldwide distribution rights, excluding Japan,
to producer Taka Ichise’s six-pic horror package
‘J-Horror Theater.’” (Variety, May 14,
2004). In truth, a 2001 retrospective of his work,
which preceeded the first legit DVD release of
his supernatural crime thriller Cure (1997),
gave audiences the rare opportunity to see Kurosawa’s
oeuvre for what it really is: varied and unique—conceived
a world away from the J-Horror Jamboree marching
down Hollywood Blvd.
To the growing cadre who’ve immersed themselves
in the current landscape of lesser-known Japanese
cinema (in this case, mainly through bootlegged
copies of his undistributed work), Kurosawa’s
films remain as relevant and as highly anticipated
as those of his internationally-praised contemporaries
Takashi Miike and Takeshi Kitano. To fans, Pulse
is just one more remarkable film in a masterful
oeuvre too long overlooked, due in large part
to the fact that his often plodding, always enigmatic
films are an acquired taste. While much of the
filmmaker’s work is marked by an atmosphere that
waffles between eerie calm and thick anticipation,
films like 1999’s Charisma and 2003’s Bright
Future combat all clichés by settling themselves
into spaces that seem to exist between genres.
There is a sense that these works simultaneously
approach various styles but never commit to any
single one. Arguing that Charisma and Bright
Future (or 1998’s Serpent’s Path and
Eyes of the Spider) aren’t horror films
proper seems reasonable until one considers the
considerable number of terrifying moments dappling
each. Is it a horror picture? No. Is it horrifying?
Oftentimes, yes. Therein lies one of the innumerable
beauties of viewing the work of an artist less
interested in offering his grasp of genre through
imitation than through reconsideration and subtle
provocation. Therein also lies the irony that
Kurosawa is essentially another face in the crowd
of “Asia’s New Horror Auteurs,” that nameless
group of directors best known for how many films
they’ve had remade by American companies. If there
is anyone who could see the horror genre through
an evolution, Kurosawa could, and Pulse
might forever be known as the first of his work
to tackle a genre head-on.
From a boat far out to sea, a young woman recalls
the beginning of the end. After tracking down
a friend who has been missing for days, he unexpectedly
commits a bizarre suicide/disappearing act which
leaves a stain on the wall. His friends find a
disturbing image embedded in a computer data file
he leaves behind while at the same time, another
teenager—far less computer savvy—slowly figures
out something strange is going on when his computer
starts up by itself and asks if he wants to see
a ghost (remember, Teen Horror Flick). One by
one, the population of Pulse begins dwindling,
inexplicable deaths proliferate, puzzling images
plague computer screens, and phantom apparitions
wander the hallways of abandoned buildings marked
by doorways lined with red tape. As the teens
grasp for answers to all of this, Kurosawa’s techno-phobic
thematic strain threads their searches together
with particularly prescient power. There is here
an examination of human interaction in the age
of e-friends and hardwired communication. Indeed,
the ghosts inhabiting PCs start to outnumber the
citizens of Tokyo, and the two remaining protagonists
search to grasp at whatever reality they’ve got
left. One of the film’s most stirring moments
occurs when the girl rests her head on the other’s
shoulder in a tender, simple moment which suddenly
seems some kind of brute physicality.
Kurosawa lets his narrative twists take a backseat
to aesthetic and psychological endeavors; though
the plot lines become more fascinating to discuss
after each viewing, it is the filmmaker’s handle
on the intricacies of scaring audiences that makes
Pulse such a remarkable work, and like
all of his films, the complex narrative is anchored
by a highly controlled visual style that delicately
palpates the liminal space between corporeal and
supernatural. Though its greatest triumph may
be that it manages that simple Teen Horror Flick
ethos—the only thing easily grasped in one viewing
is the filmmaker’s inimitable vision of modern-day
Japan, as bleak as it is utterly horrifying. Pulse
is a film for those who never bought into The
Ring’s contrived formulas or The Grudge’s
smurf-tot antics, who believe American pop culture
has missed the boat altogether, extolling the
same old repackaged horror tropes again and again:
grating hyper-editing, silly shock scares, and
the kind of hollow high-concept that leads jaded
filmgoers to check out moviespoiler.com in lieu
of wasting 10 bucks. It’s a film for those who
believe that ideas are scarier than severed limbs,
that art and horror aren’t such strange bedfellows;
the first film worth all of the J-Horror hype,
trumping its peers in artistic value and scare-counts
while engaged in a radical rethinking of what
terror really is. That Kurosawa is also engaged
in an examination of contemporary (dis)connectivity
in today’s e-society is icing on the cake.
Nothing less than a master class in terror, the
film employs deceptively simple digital imagery
to compliment an unmatched attention to all-but-forgotten
techniques for frightening viewers. Foggy visuals
created with soft shards of light and hanging
transparencies are the foundation of Kurosawa’s
deceptive mise-en-scène, which often reveals itself
as labile, containing more than what one sees
at first glance. The film’s most memorable shocks
come not from sudden bloody close-ups but from
the revelation that what seemed a shadow has apparently
come to life. Long after you want to look away,
the unnatural movement and inscrutable physical
appearance of Kurosawa’s ghosts haunt audience
and characters alike; when it seems they’ve given
up, the eerie, pixilated apparitions press on
at a snail’s pace like some postmodern manifestation
of Romero’s living dead. Most remarkable in his
arsenal of terror tactics is the filmmaker’s ear
for aural effect, and Pulse utilizes the
art of sound design to its fullest capabilities.
What David Lynch has taken to new heights for
atmosphere in his scariest work Kurosawa here
scatters to fine and pointed effect. If it is
the master filmmaker who understands that sound
is the scariest element of all, Kiyoshi Kurosawa
is without question at the head of his famed J-Horror
class.
But as The Ring’s U. S. remake franchise
powers on, one wonders whether the J-Horror phenomenon
will amount to anything more than an unabashed
remake-fest with less and less regard for the
original works from which they are derived. The
catch-22 of the remake may best be exemplified
by the positive result—the source filmmaker’s
name and nationality being mentioned in refrence
to the remade work—and the contrasting fact that
most filmgoers are unlikely to see the original
film. (Though in the case of Ringu and
Ju-On, both films were released theatrically
in their original forms, the audiences paled in
comparison to those turning out for the blockbuster
remakes.) On the other hand, in the case of films
like Ringu or Ju-On, the losses
don’t seem as great; ultimately, the original
works didn’t offer much more artistry than their
American counterparts, and one could argue for
the concurrent PR campaign granted Japanese film
that it might never have had. In the case of Pulse,
however, it’s hard to feel the same, as there
seems a lot more at stake. Knowing that a Wes
Craven remake was one of the hot pre-sales at
Cannes this year is likely to make a few more
stomachs turn because Pulse is a work that
transcends not only the J-Horror phenomenon but
the horror genre as we know it today. There is
in this one work, enough artistic content and
progressive craftsmanship to open eyes across
the globe to what could be the future of horror
filmmaking. Thanks to the Brothers Weinstein,
it’s been sitting in storage for three years;
thanks to Magnolia Pictures, audiences will finally
get a chance to lay their eyes on an early masterwork
of the 21st century.
It may be a long while before general audiences
turn to searching out original foreign-language
versions of the remade films they love. It’s common
knowledge that the very term “foreign film” has
a lot working against it—a regular comment made
in reference to the subtitled category is “If
I wanted to read, I’d pick up a book.” In the
end, one of the most exciting things about a film
like Pulse is that Kurosawa’s scare tactics
ultilize the medium’s particular facilities—sound
and image rather than dialogue—to make a lasting
impression. One hopes that the universality of
fear and the desire to be scared will draw audiences,
and that the filmmaker’s ability to appease their
appetites without the use of words will keep them
in their seats, searching out his work and that
of his contemporaries, for a lifetime. In the
meantime, we can only hope that Kurosawa’s few
appearances on the festival circuit will open
distributors’ eyes to the appeal of some of his
earlier work as well, and that audiences in search
of real scares will make a plea for more for more
J-Horror in its original form. If Kiyoshi Kurosawa
is any intimation of what’s out there, we all
might run across a few great filmmakers along
the way. |