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Departures Film Review
Departures Film Review
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Film Review
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Okuribito
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10/26/2009
Benjamin Ciccarone
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The evanescent title of Departures, in a word, regroups all elements within, catapulting
the viewer towards the climax of various themes and variations of epic proportion. The word
“departures” is used by the director as a blanket, as a wide and sweeping brush stroke, as a
morbid thread weaving in and out of the protagonist’s journey through a world he earnestly seeks
to understand. Moreover, Daigo searches for the truth, and as the film progresses he begins to
quest habitually thereafter – and all the while, he begins to discover that forgiveness is
inseparable from happiness.
As previously noted, this film is an epic. It is first an epic in terms of the multitudes of
genres therein: It can be simultaneously a comedy, a romance, a satire, an adventure, a drama,
and cannot be singularly exclusive to any one particular genre. This film surpasses the term
genre, and is therefore an epic of epic proportions indeed, especially where father and son
relationships are concerned. We also see the importance of rocks used to symbolize emotions.
However vital dialogue can be with regard to popular movies, it is music that creates
unity in this film. The dialogue and the scenery function as contrasting elements which push the
plot forward chronologically. The irony in this film is strikingly evident: the protagonist finds
pleasure by carrying out duties reserved for the lowest class in Japanese society – further, his job
(Encoffineer) is looked upon by his contemporaries as intrinsically unclean, filthy, and highly
undesirable. “Encoffineering” or Nokanshi involves the presentation and preparation of the
deceased prior to being placed in a coffin to await either cremation or internment.
About a third into this film Daigo has a conversation with an old man while he leans
against a bridge overlooking a rather wide stream teeming with salmon fighting to swim
upstream. The salmon that do not finish the journey float atop the surface, drifting aimlessly,
being casually carried by a perhaps indifferent current. At first, he ponders to himself, then an
older man approaches him saying:
Daigo Kobayashi: Sad, isn’t it. Coming all this way just to
die. It doesn’t seem worth it.
This film will take the viewer on a journey, and further, an adventure through which the
world remains unchanged – while its people have been indeed.