Audition

Indeed if anything, the first two acts of audition play like the social love stories that sprang out of Japan in the late 90s. Using frosty relationships as an allergy for an increasingly isolated and introverted society. However while the first and second act are wistful ruminations on life and romance the third act is a kick to the side of the head that few can be prepared for…

The audition attracts many applicants but Aoyama finds himself drawn to a young woman named Asami Yamazaki. Following a serendipitous coffee spillage Aoyama takes a closer look at Asami’s profile the night before the audition and finds himself rapt by her. This is largely due to several hardships she has suffered in her life, namely an accident that forced her to quit her dream of being a professional dancer.

Unlike other interviews where he was silent and unresponsive, he actively takes part in Asami’s interview. He asks her several questions and seems almost in awe of her, a point hammered home by his praise of her strength following her accident. After the interview, Aoyama receives a call from his friend saying that Asami’s reference does not check out completely. Her referee, a record executive, has been missing for months. Aoyama merely shrugs off the implications. However, this information does stop him from calling her for a while. When he finally does, give in Miike gives us the first and only clue to what is lying ahead. Asami back arched in an inhuman manner over her phone, smiles coldly and menacingly as Aoyama finally phones her. The sound of the phone prompts the contents of a mysterious burlap sack to move with the most disturbing sound affect imaginable.

What follows these initial scenes, which are tender and gentle and understated, is a descent into a hell of one man’s making. A glimpse into a mind where all the fears of getting to know a new person are played out in their most outlandish forms. Aoyama unable to find Asami when he awakes meets her stepfather who turns out to be a wheelchair bound pervert with a fondness for seared flesh, played with usual relish by regular Miike collaborator Renji Ishibashi. Having already displaced the serene narrative of the film with scenes of a young Asami having her thighs seared with hot sticks Miike slowly starts to ease on the tension with a visit to the bar where Asami works several days a week.

Completely paralysed but still able to feel sensation Aoyama is subject to horrific acts of torture. Needles are first drilled into his abdomen, Asami singing a sweetly psychotic ditty as she does so ‘kiri-kiri-kiri’, and then his face before sawing his foot off with wire. She is interrupted halfway through sawing his other foot by Aoyama’s son and just as Asami prepares to disable him we snap back to Aoyama waking up at the beachside resort Asami sleeping serenely beside him before we have a final flash back to the house where Asami fails to disable Aoyama’s son and finds herself plummeting down a stair way.

Audition is perhaps a perfect showcase for Miike’s talent as a filmmaker. The movie is shot in a wonderful style that apes the pseudo documentary style of contemporary Japanese social dramas and puts it together with his own eye for aesthetics. An example of this would be the clash between the desolate and sparse interview sections and the sumptuously coloured date scene shots. An interesting aspect of the movie is that during the torture scene the film snaps from a dreamy soft focus style of filming to an almost polarised and deep style to showcase Asami’s particularly grusome bloodletting.
And it is grusome indeed. While you may argue that this film is really, a statement about isolationism in Japanese society there is no escaping the fact that the last half of the film is a demonstration in pure voyeuristic delight. The scenes of torture are both uncompromisingly hideous, Aoyama desperately trying to move his prone hand is almost heartbreaking, and darkly hilarious, the cold mannered way that Asami dispenses of a severed foot and her chilling fun suggest an uncomfortable humour in these scenes.
10/10
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