:. Home
Reviews
Forum
Reports
Articles
Links
Contact :.
 
 

Search Reviews


Cinemas

Chinatown (VIC)
Market City (NSW)

Television
SBS
World Movies

DVD Releases
New Releases
Distributors

 
Pulse

DVD Info
Year: 2001
Country: Japan
Director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa
Cast: Haruhiko Kato, Kumiko Aso, Koyuki
The original Japanese title for this film is Kairo
Running time: 119 min
Language: Japanese with English subtitles

Distributed in Australia by: Eastern Eye

Synopsis:

In modern Tokyo the boundaries between life and death, nature and technology are slipping. When Michi discovers her co-worker’s suicide she is unnerved by the black stain where his body should have been. Meanwhile Kawashima, a young student, makes a discovery of his own: the Internet has started to act as a gateway between this world an overcrowded afterlife...

Review:

I'm gonna start this review with a little literary diversion. Sometime fantasist John Crowley wrote a book a few years back entitled Aegypt. The title was a deliberate displacement, taking an archaic spelling of Egypt and infusing that name with a mythic, alternate reality. By the same token the film Pulse is also known as Kairo.

Now this is not a deliberate thing, of course, Kairo being Japanese for 'circuit' — bear with me here — but it works on a similar level. Kairo is a film that deals in displaced realities, an alternate and vaguely exotic world where the gaps between the spiritual and technical are dissolving. And so I like to think that maybe, just maybe, the title might deliberately be invoking Cairo, a city steeped in its own mythic history where the boundaries between the living and the dead are, in the popular imagination, blurred.

Whether this is the case or not Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s movie plays on visual puns. The first characters of the film are workers in a rooftop nursery — an isolated, lush environment far removed from the technological landscape that litters the streets below. It is a nice ploy that the initial run of cyber-ghosts into the real world starts here. In a matter of moments we are taken from the nurturing if artificial natural world of the nursery into a place where the artificial is techno bound and omni present — all insidious and malevolent.

One of the nursery co-workers, Taguchi, has not arrived for work with an all important floppy disk. Michi (Kumiko Aso) goes to his apartment — dimly lit and claustrophobic after the airy rooftop greenery — only to find him non-communicative. Tagachi disappears for a moment and silently hangs himself. To top things off, and to really take this film out of any kind of normality, his body later appears to blur into the wall, leaving a dark burnt stain.

Elsewhere, college student, luddite and our eventual hero Ryosuke Kawashima (Haruhiko Kato) is discovering the joys on the Internet for the first time. Kurosawa’s concern with the Net as a controlled and limited gateway to the world are here first expressed as Kawashima’s computer acts with a mind of it’s own, taking him to a site that asks "Would you like to meet ghosts?" The computer eventually starts turning on by itself and Kawashima, baffled and more than a little concerned, visits computer lecturer Harue (Koyuki) for help.

It soon becomes apparent that people all over Tokyo are experiencing the same thing on their computers. The Net appears to have become a means for the Restless Dead to cross over and infect the living who, in turn, suicide and cross over themselves, thus creating a 'circuit' between life and death.

It is not a stretch to suggest that Kurosawa’s film owes much to the Ring cycle with its concerns of a technological society becoming dehumanised and isolated. So, yeah, sure it sits as part of a slew of films that deal with the same things — if it’s not the Net, it’s a video, a phone, a lift — but Kairo/Pulse has a strong and unique visual presence. I was reminded of William Gibson's Neuromancer, where the skies are the "colour of television, tuned to a dead channel".

It’s an apt quote, in many ways, for this film in which the circuit remains unbroken and the world spirals to an apocalypse as inevitable and unstoppable as that in the conclusion of The Return of the Living Dead. But Kurosawa’s film turns that American notion of zombies hungry for the brains of the living on its head: here the ghosts are the living and the dead long for life.

It’s a strange, simple conceit but Kairo/Pulse remains a fine, unsettling film.

8 who-the-hell-butted-out-their-ciggie-on-my-wall?s out of 10

by Alan Gelder

back to the top

DVD Releases

Distributed by Eastern Eye:
Pulseavailable now
Features include:
  • 'Making of' featurette
  • Stills Gallery
  • Original Trailers for both Japanese and American release

The 'Making of' featurette is the only extra of note but is not particularly exciting or well made. It essentially has a handful of shots of the actual filming with rare interviews with the Director himself. Watching the director work is interesting in seeing how well his instructions carried over to the film but nothing out of the ordinary really though it is refreshing to see how detail conscious he was. The interviews themselves show a little insight into what he was trying to achieve but they are too far and few between to make the entire featurette worth watching more than once.

review archive



Heroic Buddies
In Associate with YesAsia.com