A Scene at the Sea
Dir: Takeshi Kitano
1991
*****
I’ve been a follower of Takeshi Kitano’s films from the very beginning and
each film reflects where he was at that point in time, where his direction was
and how he felt about the world around him. In 1991, he took a swing away from
violence and adopted a much softer approach. He has said that in retrospect
that he intentionally shot violence to make the audience feel real pain and
although he admits that as much as he hates violence, its nature fascinates him,
like most things people fear can. In A Scene at the Sea Kitano makes a far more
personal film that might simply look like a tale of strength in the face of
adversity, but there is a little more to it than that. Kitano has long said in
his films that life begins and ends at the sea, here we see a boy at a coastal crossroads.
Our protagonist Shigeru is a deaf garbage collector, who comes across as rather distant and
emotionless. One day he finds an old discarded surfboard in the rubbish and
becomes determined to learn how to surf. His simple static shots and the
somewhat deadpan approach are still present from his previous films but there
is a newfound delicacy and romanticism here that came as something of a
surprise. It bleeds into many of his later films but never seems as pure as it
does in A Scene by the Sea. Most of Kitano’s film use extremities to dealer the
message but here he is as subtle as he has ever been but the film is more ambiguous
than it first appears. Shigeru’s girlfriend is also deaf in the film, the two
are silent companions and it is clear that his girlfriend Takako is left to one
side during his newfound passion. She continues to accompany him but it is
clear that the pair are drifting apart. I don’t believe their deafness has
anything to do with the story, as the adversity soon becomes meaningless and to
me it feels that Kitano is suggesting we all find a way of holding ourselves
back in some way or another and come up with excuses that have no relevance to
what we want to achieve or venture towards. All of Kitano’s films are ambiguous
to some level, A Scene at the Sea more than most as absolutely everything
within the film can represent something else, all depending on who is watching.
This is why it is so effective and seems to resonate more so with fans over
Kitano’s other films. We know now that Kitano was going through many emotional
changes around this time and his history of identity issues continues. He would
experience a ‘subconscious suicide attempt’ soon after and his films would go
on to form a different chapter in his career but A Scene at the Sea is
certainly in the DNA of everything he’s made since. Except maybe Getting Any?,
that is clearly him having a breakdown. Another thing that A Scene at the Sea
represents is the first in a succession of collaborations with composer Joe
Hisaishi. Hisaishi’s composition for A Scene at the Sea is sublime and
accompanies the film perfectly. The world of cinema has, in my opinion, had few
greater collaborations than Takeshi and Hisaishi, they are the eyes and ears of
the same genius. I adore all of Kitano’s films, Sonatine and Hana-Bi are
probably my favourites but A Scene at the Sea is his forgotten masterpiece.
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