Watch an innocent and naive newcomer fight opponents, his own side & even his own wife to try and win in a few weeks.A cliched fantasy film?
No, the story of a Japanese council election!! No, it's not boring, really. Before you go to
YouTube to watch kittens savaging woollen balls , check out
Campaign! The Kawasaki Candidate.
In
Kazuhiro Soda's first feature length film, he follows an old student friend, Kazuhiko Yamauchi, who was plucked out of obscurity as a Tokyoite coin and stamp dealer and parachuted into a Kawaski council election where defeat would hand control to the opposition Democratic party.
This would be a coup as his party, the
Liberals (LDP) has been in national government for nearly all of the last 50 years.
It's a real-life
Being There comboed with
Mr Smith Goes to Washington.
During the film, we see Yamauchi's wife complain that she has to call herself his
housewife rather than his
wife. She also gets stroppy when she's told that she should leave her job to help her husband's future, particularly when he has to pay for all election expenses himself.
The workings of the LDP are exposed when we realise that he's a pawn who's there to fill a bye-election vacancy and when the main elections occur in 2 years, he'll be without support.
If he gets elected, he'd have to recruit his own supporters and raise money. He compares the LDP to the military and moans about all the criticism he's getting including the angle of his bows. This is crucial as he is commanded to bow to telephone poles. When he says he is "pissed off", is this atypical Japanese frankness or a hyperbolic interpreter?
Find out
what happened after the election [spoilers].
There is a gratuitous moment which has no relevance to the film: a packed commuter train gets going after 4 train "pushers" cram overhanging passengers so that the doors can shut.
Campaign! The Kawasaki Candidate is part of the
Why Democracy? project
to start a global conversation about democracy. This version is about 50 min long. The DVD, titled "Campaign", with the theatrical version, is 120 min long and can be bought from Film Baby.
Labels: Being There, Campaign, candidate, democracy, documentary, election, film, Japan, Japanese, Kawasaki, Kazuhiko Yamauchi, Kazuhiro Soda, LDP, Mr Smith Goes to Washington, politics, Soda, Why Democracy, Yamauchi