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It’s Only Talk | Review

Learning to Live Again

Film looks at depression through a different lens.

Aimless, extremely slow-paced and stationary are just some of the adjectives and characteristics one could use to describe this newest offering in Japanese cinema. Based on a novel by Akiko Itoyama, Ryuichi Hiroki’s It’s Only Talk actually keeps the emotional reactions to a minimum – the focal point here being that strained souls are to be explored in smaller doses and more nuanced tribulations.

Encircling the private and sometimes public world of a female protagonist named Honma solidly played by Shunsuke Matsuoka, Hiroki has no rush in unraveling all the layers of this wanderer. Unemployment and depression means that she lives life a little differently from the average set. Her kinkiness, and her frequentations with a handful of gentlemen is a survival tactic – but what keeps her grounded are these moments where basic living, walking, talking pictures and simply existing helps combat against the coma-inducing medication for her depression. It’s when she meets her match in another drifter in her cousin that her world experiences a drastic shift.

Most notable is the film’s deliberate pacing matched with a moving camera that knows when to stop and place itself for a moment of reflection. In a country which packs millions of people it’s easy to get lost among the shuffle – but here the protagonist is isolated from such a pressure and when she lives out the burden viewers will experience that same moment with a profound lock on the look of the scene. While it may be difficult to be totally engrossed by the film, somewhere in its simplified quietude viewers will gain a full sense of what it is to live life during its simpler moments.

Sundance 2006.

Rating 3 stars

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Eric Lavallée is the founder, CEO, editor-in-chief, film journalist and critic at IONCINEMA.com (founded in 2000). Eric is a regular at Sundance, Cannes and TIFF. He has a BFA in Film Studies at the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema. In 2013 he served as a Narrative Competition Jury Member at the SXSW Film Festival. He was an associate producer on Mark Jackson's This Teacher (2018 LA Film Festival, 2018 BFI London). In 2022 he served as a New Flesh Comp for Best First Feature at the 2022 Fantasia Intl. Film Festival. Current top films for 2022 include Tár (Todd Field), All That Breathes (Shaunak Sen), Aftersun (Charlotte Wells).

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