Eiga Sai 2019
The Red Carpet @ Shang
This complex crime thriller had numerous side plots which somehow connected to the main story line, that is if you really pay close attention. It starts in the 1960s where a young woman is looking for a job. We follow her story through a fast jump through the years until her death. In 2017, her estranged son, a well known detective is notified of her demise. He has been searching for her for 16 years. His only link to her past life is through a mysterious old man who was her partner for several years. A man who is elusive, and Detective Kaga has been trying to find him since his mother's death.
In a completely unrelated story, the body of a woman is found strangled in a small shack. Days later, the burnt body of a man is found. Could these two murders be related? What is their connection to the detective's late mother? Could the burnt man be the elusive partner of his late mother? Can the detective finally find the answers to his mother's past life? There are many questions which needed answers and some, if not all of these questions are slowly resolved by the conclusion of the film.
As I mentioned above, one needs to be alertly aware of each subplots so you can completely understand the main issues which the characters face in the various situations. Issues like parental neglect, not losing face, hiding secrets, as well as being true to oneself are coherently tackled. It helps that the pacing of the film is slow so the audience is given the chance to put two and two together to get to the bottom of this crime mystery.
The main characters are well developed and their storied pasts are sometimes shown through several flashback scenes or narrated in the dialogue. These flashbacks are well intertwined, quite flawlessly slip into the present day scenes. I also like how they were able to find closure in their quest for answers. The English subtitles flow by rapidly so you need to read fast. There is probably a lost in translation phase but overall, the plot is easy to understand as its pacing is well stretched out.
I like the fusion of numerous side plots in movies. It keeps me thinking throughout and it thrills me to no end. I'm usually fast in knowing the who, why, when and how, yet for some reason (perhaps reading subtitles) I was utterly lost in "The Crimes that Bind". Yet in this instance, it was a good kind of lost, so I'm good.
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