
a review by ElliotInfinity

a review by ElliotInfinity
I have a LOT to say about this movie. This had been on my watchlist for months now, and when watching a movie, my expectation is usually that I would find it to be just good, maybe even great. But this movie blew those expectations RIGHT out of the water (pun intended).
The music in the opening is beautiful, sad, bittersweet, and feels like a callback to one’s childhood. The opening itself is also somewhat of a contrast to the rest of the film. Two kids, Kosuke and Natsume, running and playing like young kids do. The world is a playground built for them. Two kids who would come to drift apart, drift away, and become distant childish memories.
When they return to the place that was once filled with joy, there’s hesitance. Resentment. The argument between Kosuke and Natsume escalated quicker and higher than I had expected. Going from Natsume talking about a friend the other kids question the existence of, to Kosuke furiously chasing Natsume for his dead grandpa’s camera, leading to Natsume slipping and falling from the roof. And suddenly…..the world was flooded. All that remained was a vast ocean, the clouds in the sky, and the old apartment building. Being stuck in the building didn’t erase the resentment either. Even when trying to obtain food for survival, the two bicker and fight with pure rage. Only through peaks into their pasts could they finally reconcile.
This is a movie about drifting. Friendships drifting apart, then back home. Buildings drifting away, then back home. Drifting away from things that are painful, yet necessary, to drift away from.
But it’s also filled to the brim with specific concepts that intrigue my braincells: the world is an ocean. Abandoned buildings. Plants growing on people. Those blue glowy lights……a movie full of INSPIRATION for my CREATIVE ENDEAVORS…….by the way: the ending song SLAPS it’s Blush by Zutomayo. In case you were curious.
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