"The Backwater" is not an easy film to watch, but it rewards patient viewers with its psychological depth and visual poetry. Aoyama's deft handling of the source material results in a film that is both a chilling family drama and a broader commentary on the darker aspects of human nature.
Aoyama's direction is quite restrained and controlled.
While it may not appeal to all audiences due to its deliberate pacing and disturbing subject matter, "The Backwater" stands as a powerful example of contemporary Japanese cinema, offering a unique and unforgettable viewing experience that lingers long after the credits roll.
Plot summary
Toma lives in a small riverside town with his brutish father and his father's girlfriend. Witnessing his father's predilections for abuse, Toma becomes anxious that he will have inherited those urges.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
July 31, 2020 at 01:30 AM
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLUMovie Reviews
quite well done.
Sticky, ghostly, dirty and deep
A social fable, about a man who oversteps the community's boundaries and must be removed. But also figuring a shift from a male dominated order to a female dominated one. There is also a complicated theme of inheritance running through it.
The titular backwater is like the subconscious of Japan, where life is dictated by natural forces and inherent urges. Much of the action occurs on the ground of a shrine, the ancient tradition representing at once the community's eternal values and it's constantly shifting roles. So when the emperor dies it may not change much overall but here it has great symbolic resonance or rather is a sign of the cultural shift.
The film was adapted from a novel and seems a little compressed. It is fairly didactic with the characters only just fleshed out. On the other hand, it has a literary complexity and a flowing narrative. The setting is very convincing. Even though it is winter, watching the film it felt like a cool summer night.