The Foreign Duck, The Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker (Review)

Rob Simpson

Director Yoshihiro Nakamura came to prominence with his 2009 with Fish Story, since then the prolific director has gone on to direct a further 4 features, with 3 more projects in the post-production phase. Back in 2007, the director adapted Kotaro Isaka’s novel, the unwieldy piece entitled [the] foreign duck, the native duck and coin in a god locker.

In which Nakamura plays with time and narrative to tell the story of Shiina (Gaku Hamada), a Tokyo born university student who moves to Sendai to do his studies. Upon arriving he gets involved in a plot to steal a Japanese dictionary (Kanji Garden), which grows further to include pet shop owners, pet killers, a Bhutanese neighbour and a man named Kawasaki. This is all kicked off by Shiina singing the Bob Dylan classic, blowing in the Wind, as he is unpacking, a song that has great relevance to the twisting story-line.

The most important aspects of the aforementioned are in the telling and retelling, which allows Eita (Nagayama) to conjure a fascinating performance, he plays two roles (the details of which are spoiler-heavy) and they both feel like different people

THE FOREIGN DUCK, THE NATIVE DUCK AND GOD IN A COIN LOCKER

The foreign duck … is defined as the winding nature of the narrative, composed of flashback, interpretation and re-interpretation. Meaning this film is as much about the process of storytelling as it the characters and scenario. The most important aspects of the aforementioned are in the telling and retelling, which allows Eita (Nagayama) to conjure a fascinating performance, he plays two roles (the details of which are spoiler-heavy) and they both feel like different people. Not many actors as young as he can successfully play two roles in a film, but he does this and provides the film with its heart. The other significant leading role is Hamada (Shiina) who has much less of a demand put on his shoulders; instead, he infuses the film with a sense of fun bashfully bumbling his way through town.

The narrative composition is an important component of the film, whereby the film comes to resemble a mystery film and the way Nakamura tells the story through multiple actors, revealing part by part in this (Haruki) Murakami styled town of eccentrics and pop culture references, not only makes this a uniquely interesting film but an intensely watchable one too. Foreign Duck, Native Duck and God in a coin locker see Nakamura use his characters to develop a fable on what foreign means in Japanese culture, lending a more sophisticated background to the drama. The only problem as someone who doesn’t like Dylan, Blowing in the wind is overemphasized like any station mandated hit on Radio 1 would be, and contrary to what the station executives might believe, repetition reduces the impact.

The Foreign Duck, The Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker is on Third Window Films DVD

CLICK IMAGE BELOW TO THE FOREIGN DUCK, THE NATIVE DUCK AND GOD IN A COIN LOCKER FROM AMAZON
The Foreign Duck, The Native Duck and God in a Coin Locker

Thank you for reading our review of THE FOREIGN DUCK, THE NATIVE DUCK AND GOD IN A COIN LOCKER

For more Movie talk, check out our podcast CINEMA ECLECTICA

Next Post

The Woodsman & The Rain: Enter Shuichi Okita, the new king of Gentle Japan (Review)

The Japanese film industry is in a state of instability now, many of the old masters have passed on and the more fashionable names are proving to be inconsistent at best. There a few new names emerging in your Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Sion Sono or Yoshihiro Nakamura’s who have only come […]
The Woosdman & The Rain

You Might Like