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Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

Posted By: Someonelse
Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

Like Someone in Love (2012)
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | 01:49:43 | 8,11 Gb
Audio: Japanese AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps | Subs: English
Genre: Drama | The Criterion Collection #708

Director: Abbas Kiarostami
Stars: Rin Takanashi, Tadashi Okuno, Ryô Kase

Abbas Kiarostami has spent his incomparable career exploring the spaces that separate illusion from reality and the simulated from the authentic. At first, his extraordinary and sly Like Someone in Love, which finds the Iranian director in Tokyo, may appear to be among his most straightforward films. Yet with this simple story of the growing bond between a young student and part-time call girl and a grandfatherly client, Kiarostami has constructed an enigmatic but crystalline investigation of affection and desire as complex as his masterful Close-up and Certified Copy in its engagement with the workings of the mercurial human heart.


"I'm not lying to you," is the first phrase, spoken in Japanese, in a crowded bar in Abbas Kiarostami's dangerously enchanted drama. The young female voice continues to talk, obviously lying, in an attempt to convince someone she must be on the phone with, that she is where she is not. Kiarostami has us scan all the faces on the screen to locate that bodiless free floating voice. Why is it so disturbing not to see the source, when this happens all the time in movies, with voice-overs and counter shots? Right here begins a sublime lesson in emotional manipulation through cinematic traditions.

Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

A grandmother's visit to Tokyo is mentioned, enough to crack open the universe of Ozu, which indeed stays as a point of reference, not in clumsy reverence with low static shots or trains rolling by in the distance. The genius of Yasujiro Ozu's Tokyo Story (1953) is put aside, or rather placed in the middle of the nightly square by the station, right next to the grandmother, who came to the big city for the first time with her packages, from a small fishing village, we presume, and now sits on the bench under the statue, waiting in vain to see her granddaughter Akiko (Rin Takanashi).

Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

This scene is the heart of the movie, and my thoughts keep going back to the taxi with Akiko, asking the driver to please drive around the square one more time, as in a memory loop.

The second time Ozu comes to mind is in the context of a neighbour, nosy and demanding, another free floating voice that finds its body eventually and reveals more than expected. The third is a middle-aged former student recognising his old professor, a detail with shattering consequence.

Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

The central figures in Like Someone in Love, the young woman Akiko, who finances her sociology studies by selling her body, and the retired professor (Tadashi Okuno) who is the client she is sent to see that night, are not types, and we learn less about them personally than about human entanglements, fears, and protective mechanisms that concern us all, everywhere, not only in a French co-produced film, by an Iranian director, set in Japan.

Kiarostami surprises at every turn. Listening to phone messages, seven in a row, is mesmerising here. A Japanese painting called Training A Parrot opens into a discussion of resemblances and identity. What happens when a woman believes she resembles every woman she sees? Decidedly more than a clever trick to hide and be Everywoman for sale.

Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

A broth with little shrimp, a local specialty from Akiko's hometown, which the old man prepared before the prostitute's arrival, perhaps in order to make their interaction seem less like the business of the flesh, is rejected right away: "I can't stand it. Grandmother made it all the time."

So much for shortcuts to the heart.

Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

Both of my two favorite films of this fall so far employ Ella Fitzgerald's fantastic voice to set the tone in pivotal scenes, when emotions are ardent and containing bewilderment is a strain. In The Master, Paul Thomas Anderson has Fitzgerald cast a spell with Get Thee Behind me Satan in an elegant department store. Here, the song Like Someone In Love mingles with the noise of trucks rolling by outside in the night and asks what a paid, naked little girl is doing in the bed of a man who could be her grandfather, while the man, fully dressed, in the other room, lights candles and looks at the trucks. "This city is merciless," says Akiko's volatile fiance (Ryo Kase), who works at a garage and is the third leg in the story's mutable triangle.

Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

Cars are important, and windows, and startling reflections in windows. Kiarostami gives unprecedented room for you to think about doorbells, parking spots, microwaves, and miraculously guides you to thinking about betrayals, deceptions, and longings, like someone in love.
Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

It's definitely a minimal piece of art but it's as deep as life. It looks simple but it doesn't mean you can't elaborate. Kiarostami highlights lifelike stories. Stories which belong to us, ordinary people! Aren't they important? And Kiarostami doesn't conceal this fact that he likes Haiku and Japanese culture but he doesn't have any idea how this feelings came up to him. He started writing poems that resembled Haiku when he was just 20! The serene, nonchalant, and often profoundly philosophical language of haiku allows the poet to swiftly touch on the core of the universal human condition: love, despair, humor, death; as his movies do and now Kiarostami made his last movie (and one of the best ones) where Haiku was blossomed: Japan. All these said, I can't ignore the innovative cinematographic techniques he used in "Like Someone in Love" that adds to the beauty of this movie. Remember the first scene in the bar with Camera fixed on a table, the girl is talking in behind while we see other people activities. We don't know what we should track. The other scenes in the car which camera plays with lights and shadows are just magnificent. I'm really amazed how delicately he sets up these all. Every detail is deliberated. Briefly, if you are bored of the stupid stories we see in the movies nowadays and instead want to know what's behind go and check this out.
IMDB Reviewer
Like Someone in Love (2012) [The Criterion Collection #708]

Special Features:
- New digital master, approved by director Abbas Kiarostami
- Forty-five-minute documentary on the making of the film
- Trailer
- New English subtitle translation

All Credits goes to Original uploader.

No More Mirrors, Please.


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