Review of Air Doll

Air Doll (2009)
4/10
the best and worst of Koreeda. Again
11 September 2013
An inflatable sex doll acquires a soul and wanders off to explore what people are really like. At first she feels different because she is empty, but she comes to discover that human beings, too, are empty.

That's pretty much all this film has to say, but it takes a very long time to say it. Some may say the lyricism, visual poetry, episodic delight and elegiac moments are reward enough. Personally, I found the lack of narrative coherence and complexity crushing. There is no philosophical exploration here, unless you consider on-the-nose dialogue about the fleeting nature of existence and our Godless mortality philosophy. The lack of character differentiation - everyone is lonely, maudlin, mildly misanthropic - makes the narrative progression flat and laboured.

The film most closely resembles Koreeda's Maboroshi. Both films feature outstanding performances from female leads (Bae Doo-na being more expressive than Esumi) displaced from their usual realm and facing existential crisis. Both films have gorgeous imagery. Both films take too long to convey very little. Still Walking is Koreeda at his finest. The cruelty, humanity, wicked humour and scalpel-like dissection of human interaction portrayed in that film are all absent here.

Far too self-aware as art house and lacking any motivation for the characters, the film itself ends up being the very theme that it intends to explore - soulless.
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