Kumiko the
Treasure Hunter ***
Dir: David
Zellner. Starring: Rinko Kikuchi, Nobuyuki Katsube, Shirley Venard, David Zellner,
Nathan Zellner. 12A cert, 105 min
Increasingly it seems as though the most valuable legacy of Fargo, that cherished neo-noir of 1996,
were the footsteps the Coen brothers left behind in the snow for others to
pursue. First came Noah Hawley’s recent TV spin-off, which dug new pathways
around this frozen Minnesota backwater, fixing up the Coens’ shoddier plotting
en route; there now follows the Zellner brothers’ Kumiko the Treasure Hunter, a thoroughly oddball item of Fargo marginalia that, unlike its
inspiration, has its roots in a quantifiably true story.
For Takako Konishi, a Japanese woman found dead in a Minnesotan field in
2001, read Kumiko (Rinko Kikuchi), a bored Tokyo secretary whose obsession with
a chanced-upon Fargo VHS leads her to
jet off to the New World in search of the spot where Steve Buscemi buried his
filthy (and, crucially, fictional) lucre. This Fargo is less a place than a
state of mind: where Hawley punched up the connections between the Coens’
universe and the real world, the Zellners push towards long-take abstraction.
One woman’s death is transformed into another’s death dream.
Your response to Kumiko may
depend on the extent to which you feel it’s examining, rather than merely
endorsing, its fragile heroine’s mindset. It’s a funny idea to have the locals
– from a Jesus-flogging tourist info team to the deaf taxi driver carrying her
into the wilds – feel like refugees from the original movie, certainly. Yet
around the time a baffled if good-natured cop (played by the director) enters
the picture, the indie-quirk approaches saturation point: you want him to dial
out for psychiatric help, not take her to a Chinese restaurant.
Consolations include Sean Porter’s knowing framing – frequently
alighting upon a swaddled Kumiko retreating into the snow – which provokes tiny
frissons of déjà vu while offering
its own distinctively chilly take on this expansive American frontier. And the
sheer amount of concentrated trudging inherent to the scenario makes it a
strangely effective showcase for the underemployed Kikuchi (Babel). Strange as it sounds – and is – Kumiko comprises a lingering display of
empathy for its heroine, marching stridently on through her own peculiar
headspace.
Kumiko the Treasure Hunter is now playing in selected cinemas.
No comments:
Post a Comment