Directed by Nobuhiro
Yamashita (2005), 114 minutes
Having just had a week
filled with watching two Shakespearean tragedies plus having to deal with
ongoing health challenges at home, I was ready to be uplifted and found
the perfect answer in Nobuhiro Yamashita’s Linda Linda Linda. It is not
only a feel-good movie, it is a feel-great movie that had the audience
dancing in the aisles (figuratively, if not literally). Yamashita has managed
to put together not only one of the best rock films but also one of the
most truly honest films I have seen about what life is like for teenagers.
It also has a very infectious song, Linda Linda Linda, arranged by former
Smashing Pumpkin James Iha that will roll around forever inside your brain.
The songs are not lip-synched but are actually performed by the talented
actress musicians.
The plot is simple and
can be summarized in a paragraph or two but the strength of the film is
not in its story but in its quirky humor, natural conversations, great
music, and the small moments that convey the roller coaster existence of
high school life. Four girls attending Shibazaki High School in Japan want
to compete at the annual Holly Rock Festival but things are not going their
way. With less than three days before the competition, Moe (Shione Yukawa),
the lead guitarist, has just broken two fingers in an accident and is unable
to play. Two members, Kei (Yu Kashii) and Rinko (Takaya Mimura) have had
a falling out and are not on speaking terms.
Kei (Yu Kashii) and Rinko
(Takaya Mimura) have had a falling out over Rinko’s attempt to recruit
a boy to play in the band and are not on speaking terms. A patchwork solution
is proposed where Kei decides to be the guitarist while Kyoko (Aki Maeda)
moves to drums and Nozomi (Shiori Sekine) plays the bass. All that is left
is to find a singer and a song, no small task. With days left to prepare,
the girls agree to choose the first person who walks in the corridor in
front of them. Since the first person was a boy, they decide to pass. They
also pass on Rinko, a vocalist they used in a former band.
Since Rinko doesn’t want
to sing the song they’ve chosen, they pick the next girl walking by, a
Korean exchange student named Son (Bae Du-na) who agrees to sing but without
much knowledge of Japanese, rehearsals are a struggle to communicate. Calling
themselves the Paran Maum, the girls have to sneak around the school and
rehearse at night, often falling asleep on the floor. The pace of the film
is slow and the girls face challenges but they are real life events, not
“movie” problems. Kyoko is attracted to Kazuya (Katsuya Kobayashi) but
needs to find the confidence to let him know. Kei must learn to work within
the confines of a group and give up some control and Son has to become
comfortable enough with the language to perform.
While the story may sound
like a teenage soap opera, Linda Linda Linda stays away from cliché
and the film is without contrived plot twists or dramatic confrontations
with parents (who are mostly non-existent in the film). Along the way,
however, there are some very endearing moments. One is Son’s attempt to
enter a karaoke club without buying a drink and her back and forth conversation
with the attendant borders on the painfully hilarious. Another great scene
is when a young boy tries to communicate in broken Korean to Son that he
loves her but there is more than a language barrier. The acting in Linda
Linda Linda is uniformly excellent, especially the performance of Bae Du-na
who moves from being shy and inarticulate to front and center stage and
sweeps you away with her great smile. The ending of the film is so perfect
that I dare not give it away except to say that the feeling the film leaves
you with is one of pure and simple joy.
GRADE: A
Howard
Schumann