I must confess that Shinji Aoyama’s 2000 film “Eureka”, which happens to be released in South Korean theaters a few days ago, tested my patience more than once. This is one of those dry, slow, and distant movies demanding a lot of patience from you right from the beginning, and I actually checked the time more than once during my viewing. Nevertheless, I also admired its confident handling of mood, story, and character, and it is surely a rewarding cinematic experience you will not forget easily.
The movie begins with how the mundane daily life of its three main characters is suddenly shattered on one day. Makoto Sawai (Kōji Yakusho), a plain ordinary bus driver working in some rural town outside Fukuoka, and several passengers on his bus are suddenly attacked by some deranged dude, who eventually holds Makoto and two teenagers as hostages after killing everyone else in the bus. Although they are fortunately rescued as this crazy guy is subsequently killed by the police, Makoto finds himself quite traumatized by this incident, and so are Kozue (Aoi Miyazaki) and Naoki (Masaru Miyazaki), those two teenagers who are incidentally siblings.
After struggling to process his trauma from this shocking incident, Makoto eventually leaves his family as well as his wife, but then he returns to the town two years later. Although he is welcomed by his family and then gets employed in some local construction company, he remains distant and isolated from others around him including his family members, and then there eventually comes a point when he cannot live with his family any more for a rather petty reason.
After getting out of his family house, Makoto goes to the house belonging to Kozue and Naoki, who have lived alone for a while as their mother left and then their father died due to an unfortunate accident. After seeing that the kids really need someone to take care of them, Makoto volunteers to become their de facto adult guardian, and both Kozue and Naoki do not mind this at all, though there is still not much interaction between them and Makoto.
Some time later, Kozue and Naoki are visited by Akihito (Yoichiro Saito), an older cousin of theirs willing to spend some time with them. While being initially perplexed by his younger cousins living with Makoto, Akihito quickly accepts Makoto without much objecting, and the movie phlegmatically observes these four characters gradually forming a sort of alternative family day by day.
However, the story slowly takes a dark turn as the town is disturbed by a series of mysterious murders. Mainly because these killings were started not long after Makoto arrived in the town, a local detective naturally begins to suspect Makoto even though there is still not any direct evidence to incriminate him, and the situation becomes all the more troubling for Makoto when someone close to him becomes the next victim.
Nevertheless, the movie does not hurry itself at all as steadily and somberly focusing on the melancholic frustration surrounding Makoto and several other characters near him. At one point, he has a meeting with his wife before they become officially divorced, and we gradually sense a lot of regretful bitterness from both of them as they talk more with each other. It is evident that Makoto simply wanted to get away from everything and then have a new beginning for himself, but, as his wife correctly observes, he has never got away from anything at all while being merely stuck in his miserable state. In case of Kozue and Naoki, they also seem to be stuck in their own world as remaining distant to Makoto as before, and that is why it is surprising to see Kozue eventually interacting a bit with Makoto later in the story.
For accentuating their moody status of life, Aoyama and his cinematographer Masaki Tamura shot their movie in heavily desaturated color, and there are several delicate long-take scenes where Tamura’s camera subtly captures the emotional drama among Makoto and several other main characters around him. Although the camera mostly remains static, we come to pay more attention thanks to thoughtful camera movement and precise scene composition, and we accordingly get more immersed into its slow but engaging narrative flow.
I will not go into details on how the story takes an unexpected turn during its last act, but I can tell you instead that everything in the movie is held together well by the quietly strong presence of Kōji Yakusho, who has been one of the most dependable actors of Japanese Cinema during the last two decades. Even when his character does not seem to signify much on the surface, Yakusho deftly conveys to us his character’s dark inner conflict along the story, and he is also supported well by several other main cast members including Yoichiro Saito, Sayuri Kokushō, Ken Mitsuishi, and Aoi and Masaru Miyazaki, who are incidentally real-life siblings.
On the whole, “Eureka” is worthwhile to watch for its several excellent qualities including its lead actor’s memorable performance. Although I am not very enthusiastic about it compared to many other critics and reviewers out there, I am willing to revisit it someday for re-evaluation, and I may come to observe and feel more in the next time.













































