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Third Murder (The) AKA Sandome no satsujin (Blu-ray)
[Blu-ray]
Blu-ray B - United Kingdom - Arrow Films Review written by and copyright: Paul Lewis (9th August 2018). |
The Film
![]() ![]() By a river, factory owner Yamanaka Mitsuo is murdered, his corpse set alight; the murder is apparently committed by one of Mitsuo’s employees, Misumi (Yakusho Koji). Mitsuo had a reputation of hiring, and exploiting, ex-cons; Misumi is no exception, having previously served 30 years in prison for the murder of two loan sharks in Hokkaido. Then, Misumi narrowly missed the death sentence, thanks to the liberal ruling of the presiding judge, Shigemori Akihisa (Hashizume Isao). Now, the quiet and unassuming Misumi is to be defended by Judge Shigemori’s son (Fukuyama Masaharu). As the younger Shigemori takes the case, he is informed that Misumi has already confessed to the murder, and Misumi was found with the victim’s wallet in his possession. Misumi’s guilt doesn’t seem to be in question. Shigemori and his team’s job is simply to try to prevent Misumi from being executed for the crime. This hinges on Misumi’s motive, something which Shigemori struggles to understand owing to inconsistencies in Misumi’s story. At first, Shigemori tries to prove that Misumi didn’t commit the murder with the intention to steal the wallet but instead took it as an afterthought, which if true would mean Misumi might escape being executed for the crime. Misumi has an adult daughter, Megumi, who still lives in Hokkaido. However, Misumi is estranged from her, and Shigemori debates whether or not to travel to Hokkaido to interview her as a character witness. Misumi’s alienation from his daughter mirrors Shigemori’s own cold relationship with his 14 year old daughter Yuka (Makita Aju), a petty criminal who displays a chilling ability to distort the truth and cry on demand in order to get her own way. ![]() Japanese film director Kore-eda Hirokazu began his career in documentaries before moving on to the world of fictional narrative cinema. Kore-eda is primarily associated with naturalistic stories about families, such as I Wish, Like Father, Like Son and After the Storm. With The Third Murder, which is not his most recent film but the most recent of his films to be released in the UK, Kore-eda has delivered an incisive courtroom drama which focuses on Misumi, a convicted murderer, recently released from prison, who commits another killing. Misumi is caught and, if convicted, faces death by hanging. Misumi has confessed to the crime but a lawyer named Shigemori, who has been tasked with defending Misumi, believes that there must be a mitigating motive for the murder. Shigemori tries to tease from Misumi the ‘truth’ of the event but struggles to comprehend Misumi’s vague and non-committal responses to his questions. Visiting Hokkaido to speak with Watanabe, the detective who arrested Misumi for killing the two loan sharks, Shigemori is informed that during Misumi’s previous trial, he kept changing his story in a similar way, Watanabe asserting that ‘It was like he [Misumi] was an empty vessel’. ![]() The murder which Misumi is presumed to have committed (though later sequences in the film cast doubt upon this) seems, for much of the film, to be lacking in clear motive. This, and the film’s subtle examination of the dualism between determinism and the notion of free will, results in a narrative that has echoes of the murder that the narrator-protagonist Meursault commits in Albert Camus’ 1942 existential novel L’etranger (published in English as The Outsider or The Stranger). Misumi shares Meursault’s curious affectlessness. Kore-eda’s film also seems self-consciously indebted to Rashomon, with each version of the murder that Shigemori uncovers during his investigations serving only to further obscure the truth of the matter. Like Akira Kurosawa’s film adaptation of Rashomon before it, The Third Murder is ultimately about the impossibility of knowing the ‘truth’ of any event: people’s behaviour, and their actions, are a puzzle. Even our own actions often become a puzzle to us as time passes and our memories distort our understanding of them. After speaking to a lawyer friend, Kore-eda became fascinated with the idea of a courtroom as a place not in which the truth is uncovered but in which it is further concealed by the various conflicting narratives that are presented there. This became the basis for The Third Murder. ![]() Shigemori finds himself swamped by the case, almost obsessively attempting to identify Misumi’s motive for murdering his employer, despite initially telling a member of his team that ‘You don’t need to understand or empathy [sic] to defend a client [….] You’re not going to become friends’. Shigemori is initially cynical vis-à-vis the importance of the concept of ‘truth’: when a colleague asks him ‘Which is the truth, a grudge or life insurance?’, Shigemori answers, ‘Whichever is advantageous to the client [….] We’ll never know which is the truth. So we choose whatever benefits the case’. However, Shigemori soon comes to recognise the similarities between himself and Misumi, including their estrangement from their respective daughters. Shigemori also learns that the murdered Mitsuo wasn’t a particularly pleasant man: through speaking with Sakurah, one of Misumi’s colleagues, Shigemori discovers that Mitsuo hired men with criminal records ‘because we were cheap. You can’t fight back if you have a weakness’. Later in the story, Shigemori comes to the realisation that Mitsuo was sexually abusing his daughter, Sakie, and Misumi was apparently showing kindness towards Sakie – and may have killed Mitsuo to protect Sakie (or, alternately, Sakie killed her father and Misumi confessed to the crime to protect her from the legal system). For his attempts to engage with Misumi, however, Shigemori is chastised by the prosecution team, who accuse Shigemori of being ‘the kind of lawyer that gets in the way of criminals facing their guilt’. ![]()
Video
![]() The film is presented in its original aspect ratio of 2.35:1. The Third Murder is the first film Kore-eda has made in widescreen, which given the courtroom setting of most of the film might seem to be an odd choice. However, Kore-eda’s use of the widescreen framing is reminiscent of Richard Fleischer’s 1959 courtroom drama Compulsion and finds new ways of representing static compositions involving characters interviewing one another or statements being presented to the court. The compositions are stately and formal, the photography making much use of glass and reflection in order to delineate the relationships between the characters, especially between Misumi and Shigemori. The Third Murder was shot digitally, in colour. As a digitally-shot feature, the film has a very crisp and ‘clean’ aesthetic. Detail is superb throughout, the presentation communicating a sense of depth. Colours are balanced, consistent and naturalistic. Contrast levels are excellent, with low light scenes containing detail in the shadows and balanced highlights; midtones have a strong sense of definition throughout. The photography contains much use of chiaroscuro lighting, communicating a sense of depth, and this is captured excellently in this Blu-ray presentation of the film. Some full-sized screengrabs are presented at the bottom of this review. Please click to enlarge them. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Audio
There are two audio options: a DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track and a LPCM 2.0 track. Both tracks are clear with a good sense of depth and range. The film’s sound design isn’t ‘showy’, but the 5.1 track comes alive with ambient sound, offering a slightly richer soundscape than the LPCM track. Dialogue is in Japanese throughout, with optional English subtitles provided These are easy to read and mostly error free, though there are some very minor grammatical errors that appear here and there.
Extras
![]() - An interview with Tony Rayns (38:04). Rayns situates the film within the career of its director, Kore-eda Hirokazu, and explores the picture’s depiction of the Japanese legal system. He reflects on the fact that Japanese courtroom dramas are few and far between and discusses the film’s approach to capital punishment. Rayns demonstrates his usual affability and attention to detail. - ‘The Making of The Third Murder’ (30:04). This featurette looks at the making of the picture and features footage from the film intercut with interviews with Kore-eda and the cast. We see footage of preproduction meetings, allowing a glimpse into Kore-eda’s approach to planning the shoot. Behind-the-scenes footage of the production is included too. The featurette is guided by a female voiceover. Spoken language is Japanese, with optional English subtitles being provided. - Introduction by Cast Members (1:53). Fukuyama, Yakusho and Hirose provide brief spoken introductions to the film, in Japanese, with accompanying optional English subtitles. - Behind the Scenes Image Gallery (10:10). - Trailers and TV Spots: UK theatrical trailer (1:32); Japanese theatrical trailer (1:33); Japanese teaser (0:33); Japanese TV spot 1 (0:18); Japanese TV spot 2 (0:18).
Overall
![]() Arrow’s Blu-ray presentation of The Third Murder is tip-top and is accompanied by some very good contextual material. The interview with Tony Rayns is typically thorough, and the ‘making of’ featurette is an impressive one, giving some strong insight into Kore-eda’s approach to filmmaking. In all, it’s a very good release. References: Nippon Communications Foundation, 2018: ‘Capital Punishment in Japan’. [Online.] https://www.nippon.com/en/features/h00239/ Click to enlarge: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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