00:00
300
More
Tengu (J 2009, 63 Min, HD)

Written and directed by Roger Walch


SYNOPSIS:

David (Ted Taylor) comes to Japan for one week to study traditional legends. He is supposed to meet Professor Ozawa, a leading expert in the field. But when he arrives, he gets picked up by Ozawa's two female assistants, Sanae (Mimori Sento) and Manami (Sakiko Ikegami). They bring him to a traditional guest-house and accompany him during his stay.
A strange man in the bath house (Kan Mikami) tells David about the local Tengu legend. Tengu are a class of well known monster-spirits with a long nose and a red face who live in the Japanese forests and mountains. David is immediately fascinated. But the more he finds out about the Tengu, the more he is drawn into his own past-life.

As a matter of fact some Tengu legends can be connected to shipwrecked foreigners who were forced to live in hiding in the Japanese mountains during Japan's Sakoku (closed country) era (1637 - 1853). Ultimately, "Tengu" is the story of a Westerner who becomes the origin of a famous Japanese legend.

"Roger Walch is a Swiss filmmaker and a longtime resident of Kyoto who makes films that capture the beauty of Japan in out-of-the-way places that most guidebooks don't cover. His latest film is an erotic mystery and travelogue about a first-time visitor to Japan (played by Ted Taylor) who may have a connection to supernatural creatures called "Tengu" found in Japanese folklore."
(Matt Kaufman, Kansai Time Out Magazine)



REVIEW:

Red-faced and large-nosed, the Tengu is a Japanese nature spirit, dwelling in remote forests, eating raw meat, and teaching fighting skills to the famous warriors of history. Interestingly, there is speculation that the Tengu stories were derived from encounters with ship-wrecked European sailors, forced into hiding during Japan’s period of isolation.
It is this aspect of the myth that filmmaker Roger Walch seizes in a new hour-length feature film, and turns into an exploration of the modern ex-pat experience, as well as the power of dreams, mask and mystery in everyday life.
David (Ted Taylor), a student of Japanese legends, comes to Japan to meet the mysterious Professor Ozawa. But he never does – he is met by his assistant (Sakiko Ikegami), and taken to a quiet forest ryokan run by the alluring Sanae (Mimori Sento). At the station on the way there, the camera pans across three topless figures in fox-spirit masks, waiting alongside David, yet invisible to him. So begins a masterful creation of a dual reality – David’s mundane introduction to Japanese customs and life, and a larger world of spirits, demons and dreams in which he obliviously moves. The two worlds begin to intersect as it becomes increasingly clear that Professor Ozawa is not going to show, and David is fatefully enchanted by the presence of Sanae.
In Walch’s previous film, Yuwaku 3, he explored a similar theme of the innocent abroad, when a hapless English teacher is entrapped into involuntary donating his organs to an ailing Kyoto man. That movie effectively combined humour and malice, and Tengu shares its thickening atmosphere of ‘something’s happening here but you don’t know what it is’ – a familiar feeling to many a foreigner who has lingered on these shores. It is clearly an aspect of cross-cultural life that Walch, a Kyoto resident from Switzerland, wants to explore, but here he mixes it with a sophisticated extra dimension – the idea that dreams and collective myths have a greater truth than mundane experience. The use of traditional masks in the movie is quite brilliant – powerfully telling the story while effortlessly carrying its themes.
Tengu – shot on a low budget and using both professional and amateur actors and crew – could be better paced in its opening scenes, and the occasional dialogue is clunky, but the script, the art design, the use of settings and the cinematography all show that Walch is a writer / director with impressive skills, and original ideas.
A must-see for people interested in local art forged by the clash of East with West.

(Reviewed by Australian Film Critic Miles Hitchcock)
This conversation is missing your voice. Take five seconds to join Vimeo or log in.

Advertisement

About this video

FLV
00:05:00
  • 504x284, 20.94MB
  • Uploaded Fri February 13, 2009
  • Please join or log in to download
1 Related collection

Statistics

Date Plays Comments
Totals 1,805 2 0
Feb 14th 0 0 0
Feb 13th 1 0 0
Feb 12th 5 0 0
Feb 11th 2 0 0
Feb 10th 0 0 0
Feb 9th 1 0 0
Feb 8th 5 0 0