Quantcast

Details

  • Last Online: 6 hours ago
  • Gender: Female
  • Location: Tornado Alley
  • Contribution Points: 219,721 LV90
  • Roles: VIP
  • Join Date: August 24, 2019
  • Awards Received: Finger Heart Award114 Flower Award407 Coin Gift Award15 Reply Goblin Award2 Lore Scrolls Award5 Drama Bestie Award2 Comment of Comfort Award7 Hidden Gem Recommender8 Gaslight, Gatekeep, Girlboss3 Clap Clap Clap Award9 Award Hoarder Enabler1 Wholesome Troll1 Free Range Tomato1 Notification Ninja1 Mic Drop Darling2 Emotional Bandage4 Reply Hugger7 Soulmate Screamer4 Big Brain Award9
Blue Spring japanese movie review
Completed
Blue Spring
5 people found this review helpful
by The Butterfly Flower Award1
4 days ago
Completed 1
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 7.5
Rewatch Value 7.5

"People who know what they want scare me"

Blue Spring was a slice of life in a violent boys’ school filled with disaffected youth and indifferent teachers. Backed by a blaring rock score, the film was as much mood as it was message.

Seniors Kujo and Aoki take part in the Clapping Game on the school roof in order to see who will lead their gang. The boys stand on the ledge, let go and clap before saving themselves by grabbing the railing. Whoever claps the most times in a row, wins. With either nerves of steel or complete detachment, Kujo easily triumphs. Aoki is geared up to rule the school with an iron bat by his friend’s side, but finds Kujo disinterested in but not above the violence. The students are facing a black hole that is dragging them toward a future none of them is prepared for. Their days in the graffiti covered high school are filled with violence, monotony, even death, and yet the crumbling building still seems a better place than what awaits them.

None of the boys had much of a plan. One student bet his future on his arm, playing baseball. One wrong pitch and he believed his chances had evaporated. Every day the boys treaded water hoping to not drown or be dragged under. Outside the fence, the yakuza lurked, waiting for boys with a penchant for violence to succumb to them. Old dreams of becoming Ultraman or a pilot sank into the murky depths of despair. With nothing to look forward to, there were only thin safeguards between the teens and death. Most teachers were scarcely staying afloat themselves, writing rote memory notes on the blackboard, unconcerned about the students wandering in and out of the classroom. A teacher who tended the gardens attempted to throw a lifeline to the disillusioned youth. Few were willing to grab it.

Unlike Kdramas where the bullying took place in classrooms, the bullies in Blue Spring operated in the hallways and stairwells. The brutality escalated, becoming uglier and deadlier as frustrations and crushing disappointment grew. Empty lives searching for meaning and a sense of control without any guidance were doomed to pain. Yet even under the dirt and cigarette butts, there were flowers hoping to bloom. Not an easy watch, more experiential than plot driven, but worth a try if you are interested in the darker side of education and how some teens view their lack of opportunities in a world that feels out of reach to them.

"Even if my body is broken
and all my tears and sweat dry up
My dreams remain
The Nationals
No regrets for my youth
Loser."

20 May 2026

Trigger warnings: Violence though often more implied than graphically shown. One backside naked scene. What amounted to suicide in one scene.
Was this review helpful to you?