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      2/Duo

      1997 1h 30m Drama List
      Reviews An out-of-work actor and a depressed boutique employee have a difficult time communicating with each other. Read More Read Less

      Critics Reviews

      View All (1) Critics Reviews
      Ben Kenigsberg New York Times Similar techniques yielded brilliance from John Cassavetes, Jacques Rivette and Mike Leigh. But here they mostly result in characters who don’t appear fully realized. Dec 8, 2022 Full Review Read all reviews

      Audience Reviews

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      Audience Member Las peliculas de Suwa apelan siempre a lo real, que no al realismo. No buscan la identificacion por parte del espectador con los personajes, sino transmitir la impresion de que aquello que cuenta podria suceder o puede haber sucedido. En este caso, una pareja en una situacion mas o menos estable emocionalmente, ve sacudida su cotidianidad tras la propuesta de matrimonio de el. Estallan en ese momento conflictos que exigen tomas de decisiones, lo cual trastoca la aparente buena salud emocional de la pareja. La intensidad dramatica y la busqueda de lo real, la lleva a cabo el director japones a partir de una puesta en escena deudora a partes iguales de Ozu y del cine europeo menos academico. Planos-secuencia con la camara muy quieta y unos fundidos en negro, marca de la casa, que subrayan unas elipsis personalisimas que logran acercar al espectador la, en ocasiones, inabarcable sensacion que deja el paso del tiempo. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/03/23 Full Review Audience Member This is a rare gem. The feature film debut of director Nobuhiro Suwa. It's a no-budget, mostly improvised slice of emotionally repressed life which observes a young couple for a short period of time as they struggle to communicate. I wouldn't say things are going badly for them at this particular point in their lives, they seem very much in love, but the relationship is uncomfortable. A small, quiet film with characters that seem overflowing with histories right when we meet them. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/10/23 Full Review Audience Member [img]http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_A0nlWTOsGTY/TSozSm3-rsI/AAAAAAAADEs/YK_EQ_H2g54/s1600/2Duo.jpg[/img] This is a rare gem. The feature film debut of director Nobuhiro Suwa. It's a no-budget, mostly improvised slice of emotionally repressed life which observes a young couple for a short period of time as they struggle to communicate. I wouldn't say things are going badly for them at this particular point in their lives, they seem very much in love, but the relationship is uncomfortable. Kei (Nishijima) is a struggling actor, freeloading off Yu (Eri Yu) which makes him impulsive and insecure resulting in unpredictable behavior, fits of anger, and a proposal of marriage. Yu works in a boutique as a shop assistant and seems to be playing the archetype of the abused and unappreciated Japanese woman who tackles her fate with a Zen determinism. Her habit of laughing during the most tense and awkward moments makes her appear a little unstable but also very real, almost surreal. Even without a handful of scenes where the characters (the actors?) are interviewed about their feelings by an off-screen voice, the film has a fly-on-the-wall documentary feel. 2 Duo is a quietly disturbing character study and the blurring of fiction with documentary might serve to enhance the impact but I'm not interested in critiquing the film from that angle. This is a film which lets us observe the surface interactions of a couple characters that clearly have immense depth. With its crisp vision, assured direction, and most of all its fine acting we really don't need any meta-narrative in order to be fully engaged. I'll leave it to film school students to comment on the ramifications of the documentary style interviews if such a critical look is needed. This is a small, quiet film with characters that seem overflowing with histories right when we meet them. It's a little sad and painful but it's executed so well there's an uplifting quality to it. This is mostly due to the performance of Eri Yu, who went on to make a few more films but then seems to have disappeared from the industry. Nishijima's performance isn't quite the caliber of Yu's, or perhaps his character isn't as interesting. Being a jerk isn't as complex as being someone who bes with that jerk with their head held high, slightly wobbling. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/19/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis An out-of-work actor and a depressed boutique employee have a difficult time communicating with each other.
      Director
      Nobuhiro Suwa
      Production Co
      Bitters End
      Genre
      Drama
      Original Language
      Japanese
      Runtime
      1h 30m