Audition (film)

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Audition

Uncut Special Edition DVD
Directed by Takashi Miike
Produced by Satoshi Fukushima
Written by Novel:
Ryu Murakami
Screenplay:
Daisuke Tengan
Starring Ryo Ishibashi
Eihi Shiina
Distributed by United States Vitagraph Films
Release date(s) Flag of Japan Japan March 3, 2000

Flag of Hong Kong Hong Kong September 21, 2001
Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom October 17, 2001
Flag of France France March 6, 2002

Running time 115 min.
Language Japanese
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Audition (Japanese: Õdishon) is a 1999 film directed by Takashi Miike based on a Ryu Murakami novel of the same title, starring Ryo Ishibashi and Eihi Shiina.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Shigeharu Aoyama (Ryo Ishibashi), a middle-aged widower who lost his wife to an illness many years ago, is urged by his 17-year-old son, Shigehiko (Tetsu Sawaki), to begin dating again. Shigehiko is somewhat doubtful of his father's chances of success, but plans to move out when he finishes school and doesn't want his father to be alone. Aoyama's friend and colleague, Yoshikawa (Jun Kunimura), a film producer, devises a plan to hold a mock-audition, in which young, beautiful women would audition for the "part" of Aoyama's new wife, under the impression of auditioning for a new film.

Aoyama is immediately enchanted by Asami Yamazaki (Eihi Shiina), a 24-year-old woman with a soft voice and reserved, yet confident, mannerisms. In her audition, Asami says that she was once a ballerina headed for greatness but due to a hip injury she had to give up dancing permanently. Her biggest hope turned out to be her biggest disappointment and accepting a life without ballet was like accepting death. Aoyama, still reeling from the death of his wife, is attracted to her apparent emotional depth.

Yoshikawa warns him about Asami, saying that he has a bad feeling about her. None of the references on her resumé were able to be reached and her job history is shaky. Unfortunately, Aoyama is so enthralled by her inner and outer beauty that he is blinded by his feelings for her.

The audience also begins to suspect she's trouble. She lives in an empty apartment, furnished only with an ominous-looking burlap sack and a telephone. For days following the audition, she sits perfectly still in the middle of the floor next to the telephone, waiting for it to ring. When it finally does, the burlap sack lurches across the room and makes gurgling sounds. She ignores it as she waits a few moments before answering.

When Asami answers the phone, she confesses to Aoyama that she never expected him to call. She agrees to accompany him to a seaside hotel. Once at the hotel, Asami tells Aoyama about the abuse she suffered as a child and shows him the burn scars on her body. The two make love and Asami asks Aoyama to love only her. Aoyama promises to do so.

The next morning, Aoyama is awakened by a telephone call; it's the front desk wondering if, since his companion left, he too would be checking out. He realizes she is nowhere to be found. Using her resumé, Aoyama searches in vain for Asami.

Aoyama visits the old ballet studio where Asami claimed to have trained for twelve years. He finds that the studio is now inhabited only by a disabled pervert in a wheelchair with artificial feet who reveals that he caused the burn scars on Asami's legs while sexually assaulting her as a child.

Then he goes to the bar where Asami used to work and someone tells him that it's been closed for a year because the woman who was in charge, the wife of a record producer, was found dismembered with wire. It had something to do with a love triangle. When the police put her body back together, they found thirteen fingers, three ears, and two tongues.

The movie cuts to an informative yet confusing sequence about Asami's past and present. In one scene, Asami is seen finishing her dinner. She then vomits into a dog dish. The contents of the burlap sack are revealed: it's a man missing both feet, his tongue, one ear and has only three fingers on one hand. He crawls naked out of the bag, sticks his face in the bowl of vomit, and drinks the vomit.

Asami goes to Aoyama's house during his search. Once there, she finds a photo of his dead wife. Enraged, she slips a sedative in his drink and hides. A while later, Asami returns to the drugged and parylized Aoyama. She proceeds to inject him with an agent that paralyzes his body, but keeps his nerves alert. Then she tortures him in a gruesome manner typical of Takashi Miike — sticking needles into his chest and moving them, sticking needles into the area under his eyelids and flicking them, and finally cutting off his left foot with a sharp wire.

While Asami is about to begin cutting off his other foot, she is surprised by Aoyama's son returning home. Then there is a flashback to a scene of Aoyama waking at a beachside resort with Asami resting peacefully next to him. Then the film goes back to the present, which Asami fails to disable Aoyama's son with a spray bottle of paralyzing fluid, and is kicked down the stairs, breaking her neck. Her body is paralyzed from the neck down, and Aoyama tells his son to call the police.

[edit] Critical response

Audition had its share of audience walk-outs. For its unflinching graphic content, the film has been likened to Stephen King's Misery and Nagisa Oshima's In the Realm of the Senses. Critics have also favorably compared it to Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo for its use of suspense and exploration of the themes of romantic obsession and hidden personas. Among filmmakers, notable horror directors including John Landis and Rob Zombie found the film very uneasy to watch, given its grisly content.

Feminist critics responded to the way women were portrayed as so many car colors to choose from, and to Aoyama and Yoshikawa's definition of the ideal woman. However, Audition can also be seen as a subversive commentary on these themes. Though initially presented as a passive model of Japanese femininity, Asami is revealed to be far more dangerous than she appears and ultimately holds power, wreaking terrible vengeance on those who objectify or seek to exploit her. Contradicting both readings, Miike himself has denied that the film is meant as social criticism at all.

Audition also found its place at the number 11 spot in Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments.

[edit] Trivia

  • The Channel 101 series Phone Sexxers' first episode was based on the torture events of Audition.

[edit] External links

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