Blue Spring (2001)

Blue Spring (2001)
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Following up on his gritty boxing documentary Unchained, Toshiaki Toyoda returns to narrative film with this bleak portrait of life at perhaps the worst high school in Japan. The film opens with the quiet yet brutal Kujo (played by Gohatto's Ryuhei Matsuda) winning a particularly hair-raising version of chicken -- clapping as many times as you can while hanging on the outside of the school's rooftop railing. Kujo is immediately crowned the king of the school and his gang -- including his thuggish childhood pal Aoki -- rule the place with an iron fist. The student fear and worship Kujo while ignoring and ridiculing their tired and resentful teachers. As one member after another falls by the wayside -- one joins the yakuza while another stabs a third gang member to death -- Kujo grows disillusioned the life of a high school potentate and starts to ignore his chum Aoki. Confused and angry, Aoki disappears from school for a spell, only to return with a new road warrior haircut as a nightmarish vision of teenage alienation. With brutal efficiency, Aoki establishes himself as the school's top-dog and soon the two former friends face each other down in a final violent confrontation. This film was screened at the 2001 Toronto Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Ryuhei MatsudaHirofumi Arai, (more)
Director(s):
Toshiaki Toyoda
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Blue Spring

Following up on his gritty boxing documentary Unchained, Toshiaki Toyoda returns to narrative film with this bleak portrait of life at perhaps the worst high school in Japan. The film opens with the quiet yet brutal Kujo (played by Gohatto's Ryuhei Matsuda) winning a particularly hair-raising version of chicken -- clapping as many times as you can while hanging on the outside of the school's rooftop railing. Kujo is immediately crowned the king of the school and his gang -- including his thuggish childhood pal Aoki -- rule the place with an iron fist. The student fear and worship Kujo while ignoring and ridiculing their tired and resentful teachers. As one member after another falls by the wayside -- one joins the yakuza while another stabs a third gang member to death -- Kujo grows disillusioned the life of a high school potentate and starts to ignore his chum Aoki. Confused and angry, Aoki disappears from school for a spell, only to return with a new road warrior haircut as a nightmarish vision of teenage alienation. With brutal efficiency, Aoki establishes himself as the school's top-dog and soon the two former friends face each other down in a final violent confrontation. This film was screened at the 2001 Toronto Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
83 mins

Complete Cast of Blue Spring


Director(s):
Toshiaki Toyoda
Writer(s):
Toshiaki Toyoda
Categories:
Mystery & Suspense
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Member Reviews
 
Ed H.

A great movie with many diverse implications. Toyoda offers the suggestion of homo- coupled with a violent look at class gangs within a high school. There is much symbolism and some very subtle nuance in this movie. Also the sound track seems to set the tone for the movie. In a way that is completely Japanese, Blue Spring shows us that when it seems all is lost, sometimes it really can stay lost forever and all that remains will be the photographs and memories.

Yes   |   No

 
Michael S.

This film tries to add excitement to the world of Japanese adolescence by portrayng a Japanese high school as a gang-infested war zone. For anyone who has actually been in Japan, this is quite laughable,. Neatly dressed and coiffed teens smoke, curse, and chase each other around the halls, smashing and knifing each other at will, with almost no adults around at all, except for the occasional glimpse of droning, ineffectual teachers. It's like Lord of the Flies goes to Tokyo. Unrealistic, sensationalistic, unconvincing and unfortunate.

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