Probable not the most politically correct movie, but then when
was Takashi Miike a politically correct director? The films I have seen by this
enfant terrible of Japanese film could never really be classed as making films ‘in
the best possible taste’, including two films that are absolutely unmissable, Audition (1999), which established
Miike’s reputation as a director who was more than willing to cross excepted
boundaries, and the outrageously violent gangster movie Ichi the Killer (2001).
In 2012 he made Lesson of Evil or as it was known in
its country of origin Aku no kyoten
which was described by Mark Player in his Midnight Eye end of year report as
perhaps the directors ‘most gleefully sadistic outing since Ichi’ and compared
it to other films in the great mans body of work including Visitor Q (2001), Dead or
Alive (1999) and Gozu (2003). And
politically correct it isn’t, being about a killing spree of pupils in a High
School, something that has happened in the USA and the UK and not forgetting
the mass killing of 69 participants of the Workers Youth League summer camp by
the far right terrorists Anders Behring Breivik on the Norwegian island of
Utoya in July 2011.
The films narrative possess the question ‘do you know the
difference between right and wrong’ and involves a charismatic English teacher
Seiji Hasumi who charms his way into the hearts, minds and in some cases the
body’s of his young charges. But unbeknown to both pupils and the school
authorities Hasumi, played brilliantly by Hideaki Ito who had worked with the
director previously in Sukiyaki Western
Django in 2007, is a seasoned psychopath who is prepared to go to great
lengths to solve what he perceives to be wrong with the school.
Based on the novel Aku
no Kyoten by Yusuke Kishi (first published serially
from July, 2008 to July, 2010 in monthly magazine "Betsatsu
Bungeishunju" and then published in novel form on July 30, 2010 by
Bungeishunju). This is the first time that Miike has been totally responsible
for a script; previously he has been in partnership with other writers.
This is a profoundly violent movie but one from which you
can never divert your attention even with the prior knowledge that what your
watching has been panned by the critics, not because it’s a badly made or acted
film, which it certainly isn’t, but because it has been deemed as unacceptable
subject matter. One thing you can be sure of is that it will not be the last
time Miike produces something that upsets staid cinemagoers!
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