Confetti (2023)

瞼の転校生 ‧ Movie ‧ 2023
Confetti (2023) poster
7.8
Your Rating: 0/10
Ratings: 7.8/10 from 19 users
# of Watchers: 47
Reviews: 1 user
Ranked #42718
Popularity #99999
Watchers 19

Yuki, a junior high school student, belongs to a traveling popular theater troupe and changes schools every month to match their performances. Due to attending school for a limited time, he has no expectations of meeting new people or trying to make friends. Even when he went to school, he would continue his usual routine of not talking to anyone and frequently leaving early. However, one day, their homeroom teacher asks him to deliver something to a classmate who is not attending school, and there, he meets Ken, who is not attending school but has excellent grades. Later, by chance, Yuki ended up going to a live performance of the underground idol group "Patty Five." There, by chance, Yuki meets Ken again. Ken is an idol otaku who supports Asaka from "Patty Five." As Ken starts to take an interest in Yuki, the two quickly become friends. Then, Ken's ex-girlfriend, Maya, joins in, and the time they spend together as a group of three gradually increases. Yuki begins to want the two of them to watch him perform on stage as an actor, but the month is soon coming to an end... (Source: Japanese = mabuta-no-tenkousei.com || Translation = kisskh) ~~ Release dates: Jul 15, 2023 (Festival) || Mar 2, 2024 (Cinema) Edit Translation

  • English
  • हिन्दी
  • Español
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Country: Japan
  • Type: Movie
  • Release Date: Jul 15, 2023
  • Duration: 1 hr. 20 min.
  • Score: 7.8 (scored by 19 users)
  • Ranked: #42718
  • Popularity: #99999
  • Content Rating: G - All Ages

Cast & Credits

Photos

Confetti Japanese Movie(2023) photo

Reviews

Completed
Saeng
1 people found this review helpful
19 days ago
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

What do you want?

"Confetti" is a good example why you don't always need an external conflict to tell an engaging story with depth.
Interesting characters, a relatable premise, a screenwriter and a director who know what they want, and, of course, outstanding actors -- if you have that, then even the most mundane plot can feel new and fresh. "Confetti" has all of these in spades.

Although the life circumstance of our main protagonist Yuki -- a kid who is growing up in a 大衆演劇 "taishu engeki" or "poular theatre" troupe -- are quite unusual, the central question for him is one most teenagers ask at a time in their lives: "What do you want?" With the end of middle school (and thus the end of compulsory schooling) growing nearer, he has to make his first life-important decision.

What I loved about the film is that it combines Yuki's unusual background with everyday topics in Japan: absenteeism in schools, parental expectations, exploitation of idols, the modern vs. the traditional arts and more. And quite a few of these themes are not addressed directly, but often just in a glance, a smile or a frown, a few words that are just said as an aside. What's not being said is just as important as what is being said in this film: and this is where the quality becomes very obvious. Because for something like this to work, all creative forces need to be in alignment about what story they want to tell -- and since they decided to tell their story mostly in the glances and side remarks, I'll leave the reading of this story to the attentive viewer.

Another thing that I loved: We get to see glimpses into the world of Japanese "popular theatre". I surely had never heard of it before, and liked that the film took us to see the genre and the inner workings of a theatre troupe. I would not be surprised if the actors for the troupe were a real 大衆演劇 group and the venue and the props were actually used in real life.

Let me take note of some technical aspects:
The screenplay is written concisely and every scene and every line has its own value. When Yuki speaks a few lines while sitting alone in his new classroom in the beginning -- and it's picked up again by a theatrical actor in the last minutes. When themes are gently introduced, and their importance is only revealed bit by bit.
The directing and the acting support the screenplay: A gentle nod, a crips bow, someone leaving and another standing by the door. None of this seems obviously out of the norm. Fit together, it makes for a cohesive whole where nothing is forced but everything can potentially be important.
And where these decisions would make another film feel slow-paced, this is strangely not the case for "Confetti".
I have to mention Yuki's actor, Matsufuji Shion, who has one of these round faces that don't naturally lend themselves to expressive acting -- but he does it anyway. His emotions are always very easy to read, his confusion, his melancholy, his joy. Very, very impressive for a 15-year-old!



Was it good?
I my view, this film is a little gem among Japanese films -- it's not pretentious at all, or flashy, but neither is it boring. But it tells a beautiful story about growing up and trying to find the answer to "What do you want?"

Did I like it?
A lot! Really, this is one of the films I'll definitely watch again.

Who would I recommend it to?
To those who like coming-of-age stories, definitely. To those who like to watch a film with their eyes and hearts as much as with their ears.

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Details

  • Title: Confetti
  • Type: Movie
  • Format: Feature Film
  • Country: Japan
  • Release Date: Jul 15, 2023
  • Duration: 1 hr. 20 min.
  • Content Rating: G - All Ages

Statistics

  • Score: 7.8 (scored by 19 users)
  • Ranked: #42718
  • Popularity: #99999
  • Watchers: 47

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