TOKYO (AP) — The highspeed bullet practice says Japan as a lot as Godzilla, sushi and Mount Fuji. And it takes heart stage in Shinji Higuchi’s new movie, “Bullet Train Explosion,” which premieres on Netflix Wednesday.
Higuchi, the director of the 2016 “Shin Godzilla” (or “New Godzilla,”) has reimagined the 1975 Japanese film “The Bullet Train,” which has the same premise: A bomb will go off if the train slows down below 100 kph (62 mph.) That original movie also inspired Hollywood’s “Speed,” starring Keanu Reeves, which takes place totally on a bus.
Higuchi remembers being fascinated by the aerodynamically formed bullet trains rising up as they roared by, virtually like a violent animal. To him, as with many Japanese, the Shinkansen — because the trains are known as in Japan — symbolize the nation’s efforts to develop into “top-rate,” superfast, exact, orderly and on time.
“It’s so characteristically Japanese,” Higuchi said in an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday. “To complete your work, even if it means sacrificing your personal life, is like a samurai spirit living within all Japanese.”
The movie’s realism was achieved by a clean mixture of laptop graphics and miniature practice fashions, constructed to one-sixth the scale of the true factor.
An enormous LED wall was used on the set to challenge visuals of passing landscapes as seen from the practice window, and people pictures had been juxtaposed seamlessly with footage shot on an actual practice.
The explosions are surprisingly exhilarating, and superbly depicted with scattering sparks and smoke.
Higuchi pressured that the filmmakers had been cautious to verify the legal act, as depicted, just isn’t bodily doable as we speak.
He mentioned “Bullet Train Explosion” marked a difficult departure from his previous films that had been about heroes and monsters.
“I examined the question of evil, and how we pass judgment on a person,” he mentioned.
“That’s what my predecessors did as directors before me: Try to show what happens if you commit evil,” he added. “And I tried to give my answer.”
One departure from the unique, which starred the late Ken Takakura because the bomber, is that Higuchi selected to give attention to the practice staff.
Tsuyoshi Kusanagi, previously a member of boys’ band Smap who portrayed a transgender girl in Eiji Uchida’s “Midnight Swan,” is convincing as a devoted Shinkansen employee.
“I always have fun working with the director,” Kusanagi mentioned of Higuchi at a Tokyo premiere earlier this week. “I’ve loved him for 20 years.”
Kusanagi starred in “Sinking of Japan,” Higuchi’s 2006 science-fiction thriller a few pure disaster that threatens Japan’s very existence.
East Japan Railway Co., fashioned after the nationwide railway was privatized, which operates the bullet practice featured in Higuchi’s reboot, gave full help to the movie. It allowed the usage of actual trains, railway services and uniforms, in addition to serving to practice the actors to simulate its staff and their mannerisms.
The bullet trains have lengthy been a logo of Japan’s blossoming as a contemporary economic system and peaceable tradition within the a long time following World Conflict II.
The primary leg, connecting Tokyo with Osaka, opened with a lot fanfare in 1964. The system now connects a lot of Japan, from the northernmost major island of Hokkaido by southwestern Kyushu. The practice featured in Higuchi’s work connects Tokyo with northern Aomori.
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Yuri Kageyama is on Threads: https://www.threads.web/@yurikageyama