Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Onoda and the Magellan Movies

While looking For Old Movies, I discovered this Gem:
During the final months of World War II, Lieutenant Hiroo Onoda was stationed on Lubang Island in the Philippines and given orders to defend the territory until reinforcements arrived.
Remarkably, unaware that the war had ended, Onoda remained hidden in the dense jungle for nearly three decades.
Despite repeated attempts to inform him the war was over, Onoda dismissed all news as enemy propaganda.
His existence was only confirmed in 1974 when traveler Norio Suzuki tracked him down.
Onoda surrendered only when his former commanding officer personally relieved him of duty.
Upon returning to Japan, he was greeted as a hero, capturing international attention and symbolizing extreme loyalty and resilience.
His incredible story inspired a bestselling memoir and a critically acclaimed film, “Onoda: 10,000 Nights in the Jungle.”
Onoda: 10,000 Nights in the Jungle(JapaneseONODA 一万夜を越えてHepburnOnoda: Ichiman'ya o Koetelit."Onoda: Over ten thousand nights", FrenchOnoda, 10 000 nuits dans la jungle) is a 2021 war drama film directed by Arthur Harari and co-written with Vincent Poymiro, with the collaboration of Bernard Cendron. It is inspired by the life of Hiroo Onoda (Yuya Endo) a Japanese soldier who refused to believe that World War II had ended and continued to fight on a remote Philippine island until 1974.

It is an international co-production between France, Japan, Germany, Belgium, Italy, and Cambodia. And was particularly inspired by Cendron and Gérard Chenu's 1974 biography Onoda, seul en guerre dans la jungle, Cendron's archives, and Harari's conversations with the author. Harari did not base it on Onoda's own memoir; he considers the film to be fiction inspired by history rather than a biographical book.The film had its world premiere at the Un Certain Regard section of the 2021 Cannes Film Festival, on 7 July 2021. It was theatrically released in France on 21 July 2021, and in Japan on 8 October 2021. It was received with critical acclaim, winning Best Original Screenplay at the 47th César Awards.

Critical reception

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 97% of 35 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.70/10. The website's consensus reads: "With absorbing patience and palpable empathy, Onoda: 10,000 Nights in the Jungle finds poignant drama in one real-life soldier's stubborn pursuit of honor." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 78 out of 100, based on 12 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.

On RogerEbert.com, Ben Kenigsburg writes: "Technically, "Onoda"... is a biopic, but it never plays like one. This austere, bleak, occasionally even darkly funny film is, at nearly three hours, more like an absurdist slow burn.James Lattimer, writing for Sight and Sound, called it "...a nearly three-hour wannabe existentialist war drama intended as an exercise in the sort of big-screen immersion that has been impossible of late... [T]he film's humdrum dramatization lacks the necessary visual or narrative finesse to keep viewers absorbed."

Accolades

The film won the Prix Louis-Delluc for 2021. At the 11th Magritte Awards, it received a nomination in the category of Best Foreign Film in Coproducti

The Movie is free from TUBI.. It's quite long almost 3 hours, It may be boring to those people whose lives were not directly affected by the Japanese-American War in the Philippines, 1941-1945. But to me, it is nostalgia time again,    

My Food For Thought for Today:

https://www.facebook.com/reel/4084237285150626

Lastly, The Movie-Magellan



#LavDiaz’s film “Magellan”, the Philippines’ official Oscars entry for Best International Feature Film, won the Golden Spike (Best Picture) at the 70th Valladolid International Film Festival (SEMINCI) in Spain.
It shared the top honor with Kelly Reichardt’s “The Mastermind.” The jury praised “Magellan” for its powerful reimagining of colonial history, stunning visuals, and bold storytelling that connects the past with the present.

The Film Academy of the Philippines celebrated the win, calling it a proud moment for Filipino cinema. The movie, starring Gael García Bernal as Ferdinand Magellan and Ronnie Lazaro as Rajah Humabon, premiered at Cannes 2025 before its release in the Philippines.

Thursday, May 1, 2025

The Narrow Road to the Deep North- A War and Love Story TV Mini Series

The Narrow Road to the Deep North is a 2025 Australian drama miniseries. It is based upon the novel of the same name by Richard Flanagan and directed by Justin Kurzel. It stars Jacob ElordiOdessa Young, and Ciarán Hinds. The series follows Dorrigo Evans across three periods: before his deployment to the Second World War, during his time as a Far East prisoner of war, and several decades after the war. Each period reveals different parts of Dorrigo's love affair with his Uncle's wife, Amy. The series was released on Amazon Prime on 18 April 2025 to critical acclaim.

The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating with an average rating of 8.3/10, based on 21 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "A difficult watch made riveting by director Justin Kurzel and star Jacob Elordi's sterling work, The Narrow Road to the Deep North chronicles the inhumanity of war with fierce intelligence."  Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 84 out of 100 based on 7 critics, indicating "universal acclaim " reviews.

In a review for The Guardian, Luke Buckmaster awarded the show 4 out of 5 stars, noting the strength of the performances and the complexity of the relationships depicted. He also complimented the direction, writing: "You never doubt the show’s realism, or the compassion underpinning it". Hugh Montgomery of the BBC praised the acting of Elordi and Young and described them as possessing "smouldering chemistry".

 Here's one of the reviews, that I concur. I enjoyed the TV mini-series very much.  I cried because of the cruelty and inhumanity of war. It reminded me of my childhood experiences during the Japanese- American War in the Philippines. The incidence of brutality by the Japanese to the Australians is similar to the brutality committed by the Japanese to the Filipino and American Prisoners during the Bataan Death March.   

https://chateaudumer.blogspot.com/2024/07/tears-in-darkness-my-book-review-update.html

W

What do we want from our war stories? That's a question at the core of this new five-part adaptation of Australian author Richard Flanagan's Booker Prize-winning novel. Preparing to make a speech for a book launch, World War Two veteran Dorrigo Evans (Ciarán Hinds) ruefully says people just want tales "of heroism and mateship" – where he would rather give them "the truth".

It's certainly true that in general cultural discourse, there can be a tendency to present war history through a romanticised, "inspirational" lens – but on screen there is also a strong lineage of works that have sought to lay bare its abjectness, from Apocalypse Now to All Quiet on the Western Front. However, if this miniseries is not radical in that respect, it is, on the evidence of the first two episodes that have premiered at the Berlin Film Festival, set to be a stunning, shell-shocking piece of work nevertheless – as well as an impressive showcase for Jacob Elordi, the in-demand star who made his name with HBO series Euphoria and, after working with the likes of Sofia Coppola and Paul Schrader, continues to make judicious choices.

It sets out its stall right from the opening scene, in Syria in 1941, in which a group of Australian soldiers' blokeish banter is cut through by a bomb explosion that gruesomely takes out one of their number and a Syrian child: filmed with tight, disorientating camerawork by  director Justin Kurzel, the visuals drained of colour amid the murk of the landscape, it immerses you completely in the horror. 

From there the story moves between three timelines. There's young Dorrigo (Elordi) in 1940, as he is stationed to Adelaide for military training and forms an intense connection with his uncle's young wife Amy (Odessa Young); Dorrigo in Thailand in 1943, now one of thousands of prisoners of war in the Thai jungle forced by the Japanese to help build Burma's notorious "Death" railway; and 77-year-old Dorrigo in 1989, an affluent surgeon with a happy-ish marriage who nevertheless can never hope to forget what he witnessed all those decades ago – "the strange terrible neverending-ness of human beings," as he puts it – or make others who didn't experience it understand.

(Credit: Curio Pictures)

(Credit: Curio Pictures)

The older Dorrigo's sense of alienation is deftly sketched in an early scene in which he is interviewed by a combative young journalist, prepared to question his blanket definition of the Japanese as "monsters". It's a measure of Shaun Grant's skilled writing that as she prods him, and with his rebuke, you sympathise with both characters' point of view. Similarly impressive is the way the show deals with Dorrigo's extra-marital affairs, as both young and old man, with no crude judgements. There are no heroes and villains in either set-up, exactly, just messy feelings and a search for connection.

It's a show as much about love as war, and it's good that the romance has equal impact, thanks to the smouldering chemistry of Elordi and Young

Where the drama possesses clearer moral definition is in the indisputable evil of the sadism directed at the captured Australian soldiers. It is in these prisoner of war scenes that Kurzel, known for films like Snowtown and True History of the Kelly Gang, really excels himself, creating grimly powerful images – take a scene early on of a heap of dehydrated men being transported in a truck, sticking their tongues out ecstatically as rainwater comes through the slats of their container. But he also deftly colours in the bravado and, yes, mateship, that (barely) sustains them in the most terrible of situations, as they share penis jokes and impromptu comedy skits amid the unbearable slog of their labour.

When it comes to their Japanese captors, meanwhile, the dangers of presenting them as one-dimensionally malign are counterpointed in part by the character of a conflicted young major. At the same time, the way one of his seniors talks about how cutting off someone's head feels both "euphoric and horrible" could not be more chilling. It will be interesting to see how their perspective develops, as the episodes progress.

But this is a show as much about love as war, and it's good that the romance has equal impact, thanks to the smouldering chemistry of Elordi and Young. Young gives a beguiling sense of a woman with a wisdom and self-knowledge beyond her years, while Elordi has simply never been better: returning both to the small screen and his homeland Australia, he holds the screen with a particular kind of reserved charisma, suggesting his character's hidden recesses of pain and desire with mere flickers of expression. And even if he hardly resembles Elordi, Hinds is equally superb in the older timelines, his natural lugubriousness put to good use.

As for Kurzel, he brings an auteur's confidence to everything here, creating a seamless symphony of visuals, editing and music. The Narrow Road to the Deep North feels like a searingly "true" account of war, indeed, but also one founded on the finest artistry, if that's not too much of a contradiction. I watched this on Prime Video. 

Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/culture/article/20250215-the-narrow-road-to-the-deep-north-review-this-ww2-miniseries-is-a-stunning-showcase-for-jacob-elordi

Meanwhile, another new TV Series on Starz is Etiole ( pronounced it tual), that I enjoyed also very much this week. Etiole is a French word meaning-Star. This TV series has mixed reviews. If you love Ballet and Comedy, this is a must view TV show. Amazing Choreography! 

 For Details visit: 


https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/etoile/s01

Finally, here are two photos of Grand Daughter Carenna Katague Thompson on her recent trip to the Netherlands.