Sunday, November 16, 2025
The Eurospy Genre Lives Again in Bruno Forzani and Hélène Cattet's Dazzling, Dizzying Pastiche Reflection in a Dead Diamond
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Hope You Like Me: Nobuhiko Ôbayashi’s Biker Musical Melodrama His Motorbike, Her Island
HIS MOTORBIKE, HER ISLAND / Kare no ōtobai, kanojo no shima
(Nobuhiko Ôbayashi, 1986, Japan, 90 minutes)
Welcome to my island
Hope you like me, you ain't leaving.
–Caroline Polachek (2023)
Nobuhiko Ôbayashi, who passed away in 2020 at 82, was one of Japan's foremost antiwar filmmakers, a master of the experimental short film (for both theatrical and advertising purposes), and the go-for-broke genius behind the most bonkers horror-comedy musical ever made–though Miike Takashi's multimedia zom-com Happiness of the Katakuris comes close.
That's only a sampling of Ôbayashi's many talents, but most people probably know him best for House, aka Hausu, one of the Criterion Collection's crown jewels, to the extent that they've even produced a perennially popular, bright orange, cat-face t-shirt. I doubt we'll see a t-shirt for, say, Au Hasard Balthazar any time soon, but I swear I would wear it if they produced one.
I'm unaware of any antiwar messaging embedded in His Motorbike, Her Island, his 17th motion picture, but Ôbayashi was an endlessly inventive filmmaker, and I wouldn't put it past him.
Nor is the film thoroughly experimental, though it incorporates avant-garde techniques–freeze frames, jump cuts, varied aspect ratios, and rhythmic shifts from black and white to color.
(In an archival interview included with the new release, Obayashi acknowledges that he added the cuts simply to get the run time under 90 minutes in order to screen as part of a bill with director/producer Haruki Kadokawa's crime thriller Cabaret.)
All told, it's one of his most accessible efforts, though still unconventional by most any standard, then and now. In Ôbayashi's nouvelle vague-inspired take on the Japanese biker movie, future v-cinema star and Miike favorite Riki Takeuchi (Dead or Alive), in his feature debut, plays Koh Hashimoto, a music student, part-time delivery driver, and motorbike obsessive in Obayashi's native Onomichi. There's a girl in Koh's life, his boss's younger sister, Fuyumi (Noriko Watanabe), but his bike always, always comes first.
Though screenwriter Ikuo Sekimoto drew from Yoshio Kataoka's 1977 novel, the way Koh consistently refers to his bike as a Kawasaki W3 plays like the handiwork of a man who made thousands of television commercials.
Koh, in other words, comes across like a pitchman. It's funny, but not in a way that makes him seem like the butt of a filmmaker's joke–though he's a fairly single-minded fellow–and I may be reading more into it than I should, but the fact that it's a Japanese make rather than an American one, like Harley Davidson, feels like home-country pride on Ôbayashi's part, though Japanese biker films do tend to favor Kawasaki, Honda, and Suzuki.
In his opening narration, Koh declares, "My day-to-day life at the time was a complete mess," indicating that the film will recreate past events. He goes on to describe his dreams as "monochrome," a partial explanation for the extensive use of B&W, but not a complete one since Ôbayashi often switches between the two within sequences in a way that seems more stylistic than thematic. He admits as much in the archival interview, explaining that an all-B&W film might have seemed pretentious or nostalgic, so he considered using B&W for past and color for present, but in the end he opted for a more random scheme, much like a B&W manga with the occasional color panel.
After Kho gets in a scuffle with his boss, Hidemasa (Tomokazu Miura), who insists that he formalize his makeout sessions with Fuyumi, Koh decides he would rather spend time alone with his motorbike, which excites him more, so he visits nearby Iwashi Island where he meets Miyoko (Kiwako Harada, older sister of Tomoyo Harada who appeared in several Ôbayashi films, including The Girl Who Leapt Through Time). She admires his bike and snaps a few pictures. It's a fleeting encounter, but she makes an impression.
When he returns, Kho takes up with Fuyumi again, but without much enthusiasm.On another break that establishes his loner tendencies as much as his unhappiness with Fuyumi, Koh visits a mountain spa, where a nudie cutie catches his eye. When she turns around, he realizes it's Miyoko, aka Miiyo.
She's everything Fuyumi isn't, and he's smitten. She's ebullient, uninhibited, and recalls Jennifer Connelly with her flowing black hair and thick brows. After the bath, he gives her a ride back to the inn where she's staying.
He's finally ready to break up with Fuyumi, which leads to a joust with Hidemasa, a fellow motorbike enthusiast. Kho wins the fight, which Ôbayashi depicts in quick, abstract cuts. Later, he drops by local speakeasy Michikusa to blow off some steam with Ogawa (Ryōichi Takayanagi), his best friend.
To his surprise, they run into Fuyumi, who sings a sad song from the stage. Ogawa doesn't understand why he would break up with such a sweet girl. "All she knew was crying and cooking," Koh sniffs, and indeed, she cries the entire time before running off the stage. Unlike Koh, the widower in Miike's Audition would have been thrilled to meet such a delicate flower.
Finally single, Koh is thrilled to receive a letter and photographs from Miiyo (they would probably be texting today). During their first phone conversation, he gets out his guitar and sings her a song, the first indication that he's also a songwriter, and the second that this film doubles as a musical. Miiyo invites him to visit her island. "I felt very close to this strange girl," he says in voiceover.That night, Koh dines with her and her grandfather (Takahiro Tamura), who admits that he spoiled her, before joining them for the Obon Festival where the islanders sing and dance in traditional garb to honor the dead.
Back in town with Miiyo, Kho visits Michikusa to find that things have changed. Fuyumi, of all people, is now the house vocalist. No longer dressed in loose, girlish clothing, she wears a fitted red dress and a more sophisticated hairstyle. Miiyo, who shares her interest in singing, goes on stage to perform Koh's song, "Sunshine Girl." (Harada also sings the film's theme song, "Living for Your Love.") Instead of getting jealous, Fuyumi marvels, "She's a great girl." Ôbayashi never explains this shift in confidence, but suggests that the breakup with Koh freed something in her.
Though he once told Miiyo, "Don't be jealous. You’re no match for S3 horsepower," she was, in fact, jealous, and so, unbeknownst to him, she reached out to Ogawa who helped her to secure a midsize license. Now she can go out riding with Koh, Hidemasa, and his other biker friends.
Koh doesn't know what to think about this development, and fears she'll get hurt, though she impresses his biker buddies--"She's one of those motorbike prodigies," Hidemasa enthuses, "people like you just don't have the gift"--as she takes one lap after another. She next sets her sights on a 750cc license.
Though Koh harbors chauvinist tendencies, Miiyo can be reckless. She always wears a helmet, but loves to race around in the rain. Then again, she and Koh live in a damp region. He gets so upset during one excursion, that he slaps her and calls her an idiot. She slaps him back and adds a few punches for good measure. (Fortunately, he only does that once.) "You're gonna die," he laments. Instead, she disappears–taking his bike with her.
Until that point, Ôbayashi has leaned as heavily on the film's action set pieces as its melodrama, but things don't converge the way that combination might suggest. The film isn't a narrative version, for instance, of Jan and Dean's classic 1963 teen-tragedy single "Dead Man's Curve."
In her very good commentary track, Samm Deighan explores the 22-year-old Miiyo's death drive, an understandable reaction, though I didn't see it that way. She's such a bright and lively presence that I didn't sense any desire to die, though the scenario isn't worlds away from David Cronenberg's Crash or Julia Ducournau's Titane. It's hardly that extreme, and there's no body horror, but both Koh and Miiyo relate to their bikes in a sexual way, even if Ôbayashi handles this with more PG-rated subtlety than not.
Not long before Miiyo disappears, for instance, she embraces Koh's bike–in the rain, of course–as if it were a human being or an extension of his body, which isn't too far off the mark (she's also wearing a wet white t-shirt without a bra, bringing yet more sexuality to an-already charged scenario). And when she's racing around, she's in her element to the extent that it's quite possibly a turn-on. If she gets hurt, in other words, it was worth the risk, which isn't the same as wanting to die, though Sekimoto's screenplay suggests that she's going to and that it will have been worth it.Someone dies at the end of His Motorbike, Her Island, so it's a tragedy for them, but Koh and Miiyo remain intact, or at least that's how I read things. There's just enough ambiguity to suggest that the final sequence is a daydream or a fantasy, though the film lacks the supernatural phenomena, like possession and time travel, frequently associated with Ôbayashi's work.
Mostly, the film is a good time with fun characters--initial boorishness aside, Koh can be quite the charmer--and that includes Fuyumi and Ogawa, who also come into their own. Biker movies tend to exclude women, to make them bystanders, or to push them to the front as in 1970's Stray Cat Rock: Delinquent Girl Boss with the immortal Meiko Kaji, but Nobuhiko Ôbayashi's unique take splits the difference. It's only when Koh meets a woman who loves bikes as much as he does that he can truly love another human being.
It's fitting then that, once reunited with both Miiyo and his bike, a life dominated by monochrome dreams finally springs to full, vibrant color.
ICYMI, I wrote about another biker movie last year.
His Motorbike, Her Island is out now on a Cult Epics Blu-ray loaded with extras. Beyond the informative commentary track and illuminating interview, the release includes visual essays on the Japanese biker movie and Nobuhiko Ôbayashi's hometown. Images from Hollywood Theatre (Kiwako Harada), The Criterion Collection (House t-shirt), DVD Beaver (Riki Takeuchi), the IMDb (Takeuchi and Harada), The Cinematheque (Noriko Watanabe), an X/Twitter (Tomokazu Miura with Takeuchi and Harada).
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
Bruce Springsteen, Nebraska, Deliver Me from Nowhere, and the Familial Ties That Bind
Wednesday, October 15, 2025
Rose Byrne Unravels in Mary Bronstein’s If I Had Legs I’d Kick You, a Horror-Comedy with Motherhood as a Neverending Nightmare
Friday, October 10, 2025
63rd New York Film Festival Snapshot, Part 3: Kathryn Bigelow’s Thriller A House of Dynamite
(Kathryn Bigelow, 2025, USA, 112 minutes)
Like any major film festival these days, this year's NYFF included a few Netflix titles, including Richard Linklater's Nouvelle Vague and Noah Baumbach's Jay Kelly (Sony Pictures Classics is handling Blue Moon, Linklater's other NYFF selection).
It's always a mixed blessing. Subscribers, like me, can save money and wait until a film hits streaming unless they would prefer to see it before the official debut and/or with the director and other contributors in attendance.
Netflix also makes films available for critics, but the Seattle screening of A House of Dynamite was scheduled for the same day I was planning to see it in New York, so I bought a ticket, because I didn't want to wait for the October opening, and figured I might never get the chance to see the Oscar-winning director in person again. (Press screenings for NYFF took place primarily between Sept 17 and 25, so that wasn't going to work for me.)
Granted, I would've needed to attend the NYFF premiere to see Rebecca Ferguson, Idris Elba, and Anthony Ramos in person, but that was beyond my budget and schedule.
Instead I attended a screening that included Bigelow, writer Noah Oppenheim, actors Jared Harris and Tracy Letts (very funny), and sound designer Paul N. J. Ottosson, who worked on Bigelow's last three films.
The thriller revolves around a nuclear missile hurtling its way towards the Midwest, and the race against the clock by government and other officials, including the President, to minimize the damage. In some ways, it feels like a continuation of themes Bigelow explored in The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty, but Oppenheim's screenplay plays more like Steven Soderbergh's Contagion as Bigelow shifts from person to person and scenario to scenario.
It gets off to a promising start by first introducing the threat, identified by Anthony Ramos's no-nonsense Army Major stationed in Alaska, followed by Rebecca Ferguson's senior intelligence officer in DC, who has a happy home life with husband and child. I figured Bigelow would return to Olivia Walker from time to time, and she does, but not nearly enough, since she's the most clearly-defined character, though not to the same extent as Jessica Chastain's CIA analyst in Zero Dark Thirty. Every other character has some interest or quirk–golf game, jump shot, model train, and the like–that sets them apart, but as the action ramped up, my investment started to wane.
I didn't want to see any of these competent, hard-working people die, let alone their friends and family members, and that isn't something Bigelow shows--though she does suggest it--but the lack of emotional stakes proves a liability.
The grim lesson with which I left is that it's better to avoid angering countries with nuclear capabilities, like Russia and North Korea, than trying to stop a nuclear war once it's begun. The functional, technically-adept White House she depicts also looks nothing like the car filled with clowns currently running the country, which isn't the film's point, but the studious avoidance of politics--the culprit remains a mystery--feels like a cop out.
That said, there's something about seeing a decent, kindly man as President that hurt my heart, because I'm not so sure we'll ever see that again.
James Earl Jones, Morgan Freeman, Dennis Haysbert, Jamie Foxx, and other Black actors have played the President, so Idris Elba–though UK-born–doesn't represent a first, but he does represent an ideal; a guy who treats teenage basketball players, his Special Agent in Charge (Reacher's Brian Tee making the most of a small part), and his staffers with equal respect.
Bigelow has filled out the cast with a wide-ranging group of talents, and they give it their all, but I miss the greater care she once took with character, even in stylized genre exercises like The Loveless, Near Dark, and Strange Days, which, sci-fi trappings aside, is nearly a two-hander with Ralph Fiennes and Angela Bassett.
I realize her interests and priorities have changed, but A House of Dynamite, though hardly a waste of time, has me hoping she can find her way back to the more affecting--yet still action-packed--films with which she began.
At the NYFF, I also caught Duse, Late Fame, Sentimental Value, a 4K restoration of Yasuzo Masumura's 1965 The Wife of Seisaku, and Bruce Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere, which I wrote about here.
House of Dynamite opens in Seattle at SIFF Uptown on Fri, Oct 10, and comes to Netflix on Fri, Oct 24. Images from the IMDb (Joe Klaunberg and Gabriel Basso and Anthony Ramos) and me (Jared Harris, Noah Oppenheim, Kathryn Bigelow, and NYFF programmer Rachel Rosen), and Cinephilia and Beyond (Ralph Fiennes and Angela Bassett in 1995's Strange Days).
Wednesday, October 8, 2025
63rd New York Film Festival Snapshot, Part 2: Ira Sachs' 1970s Reverie Peter Hujar's Day
PETER HUJAR'S DAY
(Ira Sachs, 2025, USA,
76 minutes)
I may have missed The Mastermind, but I had no problem getting to the Walter Reade Theatre in time for the 9:15pm screening of Ira Sachs' ninth feature, Peter Hujar's Day, about which I had heard good things since its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival.
First, I stopped by the concession stand to fuel up on caffeine lest I nod off after my two-hour sleep. I was wearing the super-soft One Battle After Another t-shirt I picked up at the preview screening the week before, and the charismatic cashier was so tickled that he waived the cost of my cold brew. I swear it almost made up for missing the Kelly Reichardt film.
Though the pan-European Passages was a breakthrough for Sachs, a longtime New Yorker, I wasn't especially charmed by the central trio–or even the premise–despite my affection for all three actors, including Ben Whishaw, who plays American portrait photographer Hujar in the new film.
If anything, Whishaw felt like a third wheel in Passages, which may have been intentional, but Martin wasn't given the chance to be much more than an appendage to Franz Rogowski's temperamental director, though Josée Deshaies' cinematography was lovely and the sweaters were fabulous.
Left: a set photo by Ira Sachs that suggests a David Hockney painting
Peter Hujar's Day is a smaller, more experimental film--DP Alex Ashe shot it with 16mm Kodak stock, which seems appropriate for both era and subject--and it may not appeal to as many tastes, but it was more to my liking.
The film is the closest Sachs has come to docudrama, since most every word comes from the transcript of an interview arts writer Linda Rosencranz conducted with Hujar on Dec 18, 1974. During the Q&A, I don't recall Sachs mentioning that she published it as a book, but he did say that she had planned to interview several other artists about their day, but ended the project after speaking with Hujar and painter Chuck Close. I'm not sure why, but a recent Guardian profile makes it sound as if she simply lost interest. (Sachs did mention the book at the first NYFF screening on Sept 27.)
The versatile Rebecca Hall (Resurrection) plays Rosencranz, and she doesn't have a lot to do, but she does it well. That may sound like faint praise, but it isn't. She has to be present while Hujar is talking. Sometimes, she speaks, sometimes not, but she's always listening and reacting. Sachs could have cast a lesser actor, but I'm glad he didn't, since Hall, a fellow director, doesn't shrink in the sensual, unfiltered presence of her scene partner.
In the process of making the film, Sachs became friends with the now-91-year-old Rosencranz. Hujar, on the other hand, died from AIDS in 1987, which would also claim photographer friends David Wojnarowicz, with whom he had a close relationship, and Robert Mapplethorpe, who shared his interest in homoerotic portraiture. (At the Q&A, there were questions about Hujar's smoking in the film; he's never without a lit cigarette in his hand, which was probably true to life, but plays more alarmingly in 2025.)
Right: 1966 Peter Hujar portrait of Linda Rosencranz who he met in 1956The 76-minute film is as much a profile of the photographer, at a particular moment in his life, as a showcase for the actor, who first won my heart in Todd Haynes' multi-persona Dylan depiction I'm Not There, in which he played French symbolist poet Arthur Rimbaud, which struck me then--and now--as perfect casting. He would go on to play another brilliant, doomed poet, John Keats, in Jane Campion's Bright Star, a highlight of her fine career.
During the Q&A, I looked around at the audience, and noted a significant LGBTQ presence, which makes sense in terms of Hujar's overtly-queer work, in addition to the the fact that Sachs and Whishaw have often made or appeared in queer films, more so after Whishaw came out in 2013. (Near as I can tell, Sachs has been out since at least since 1996 when he debuted with The Delta.) The Whishaw contingent, in other words, was out in force.
Granted, Peter Hujar's Day isn't necessarily about being gay in the pre-AIDS 1970s; it's about one day in the life of a man who lived and thought like an artist, who knew every artistic New Yorker worth knowing, and who didn't make the money or find the fame he deserved during his abbreviated life.
Though Sachs opted not to include any of Hujar's photographs in the film, they're easy to find online, and they're quite extraordinary, especially his Old Hollywood-style portrait of Warhol Superstar Candy Darling, which Anohni would use for her 2005 Mercury Prize-winning album I Am a Bird Now.
I found the film touching, and I hope it spurs more interest in his work.
Next up: Part 3: Kathryn Bigelow’s Thriller A House of Dynamite
There are no further NYFF screenings, but Peter Hujar's Day opens in Seattle at SIFF Film Center on Fri, Nov 14. Images from Amazon (Peter Hujar's Day, 2022, Magic Hour Press), Films Boutique (Ben Whishaw and Rebecca Hall), and © Peter Hujar Archive / Cirko-Gejzír Mozi (Linda Rosencranz portrait).
A Snapshot of the 63rd New York Film Festival Plus a Detour to Take in a Broadway Show
More information about the 63rd NYFF at this link. Images from me (House of Dynamite screening and the line for Bruce Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere at Alice Tully Hall), Film Society at Lincoln Center (Distant and 21 Grams photocall), and Posterati (NYFF 41 poster signed by Junichi Taki).
















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