Kamikaze Girls: Reviews

Reviews Reviews:
Kamikaze Girls
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    by Viz Media

ALTERNATE SYNOPSIS:
Meet Momoko, a self-absorbed dreamer who fantasizes about fleeing her backcountry home and living life in 18th century Versailles. When she unexpectedly meets the rebellious Ichigo, a rough-and-tumble biker chick, the two misfits form a unique friendship--together, nothing can stop them!

Born from the pages of favorite cult author Novala Takemoto, "Kamikaze Girls" is a frenetic roller-coaster ride brimming with day-glo visuals and wild hilarity that you will never forget!

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    by DVDTalk
    www.dvdtalk.com




Momoko (Kyoko Fukada) likes to dress up, Lolita style. For those unfamiliar with this uniquely Japanese fashion trend, it's a cross between old renaissance era French design, gothic culture, and a bit of sassiness. At any rate, her life hasn't been easy thus far, her mother left her right after she was born to run off with the doctor soon after her birth and her father is a crackpot thief who has been kicked out of the town they lived in for selling bootleg handbags. It's with her father and her crazy old grandmother (a strange old woman who sports an eye-patch) who Momoko has been living with for the last little while, in a small town out in the middle of nowhere.

Because of the downbeat area that she lives in and the dire circumstances that have put there, Momoko's mind tends to wander a bit and she spends a lot of time fantasizing about living in a different time and a different place – reflected in her style of dress, another characteristic that sets her apart from the locals. When, seemingly by chance, she meets a biker girl named Ichiko (Anna Tsuchiya), and the two become very fast (and very strange) friends. Once they become friends, their lives change forever and they set out to try and find their place in life.

From the opening scene, where Momoko gets plowed by a truck while cruising around on her scooter leading into a series of fast cutting flashbacks and historical bits and pieces, through to the ending of the movie, Kamikaze Girls is a really visually interesting piece of eye candy filled with some keen contrasts. Momoko and Ichiko both look totally out of place in the small, rural town where they meet and it's interesting to see them looking as they do, sporting very urban fashions, in what could easily be described as a slightly backwards community.

While the movie isn't heavy on either plot or character development, we get to know enough about the two girls that the movie works more often than not. Momoko in particular grows a bit during the events that unfold in the film and this is the strongest point of the movie – Fukada injects just enough cuteness into the role that it works really well, but is careful enough not to go so far as to make her character annoying (a mistake that would have been really easy to make). On the other hand, we have Tsuchiya as Ichiko, an unpredictable girl who might hug you and get your back in a stressful time or spit on you or head butt you just because she feels like it.

There's a randomness to the film that both helps it and hurts it at the same time. When the movie all of a sudden turns into a cartoon, it's a neat trick that gets the attention of your eyes, but also disrupts the flow of the storyline completely and it's actually a little bit jarring, no matter how fun the brief animated sequence might be. Moments like this, coupled with the editing, give Kamikaze Girls a very disjointed flow that, had it been a bit more fluid, would have made for a stronger movie.

That being said, there's still enough going on in here that is of worth to hold your attention and bring a genuine smile to your face. Momoko and Ichiko are quite likeable and it isn't hard to identify with the teenagers who don't necessarily fit in, as it's a universal theme that extends to all cultures.

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