‘Renoir’ review: Quirky 11-year-old girl processes her dad’s imminent death

‘Renoir’ review: Quirky 11-year-old girl processes her dad’s imminent death


Japanese filmmaker Chie Hayakawa isnโ€™t afraid to look death in the eye. The writer-directorโ€™s 2022 feature debut, โ€œPlan 75,โ€ imagined an unsettling future in which the elderly are offered a subsidy by the government to be euthanized. For her follow-up, she travels into her own past, drawing from memories of her fatherโ€™s battle with cancer.

But while โ€œRenoirโ€ features no sci-fi elements, the nearness of oblivion remains just as prominent. Shorn of sentimentality, this gentle drama follows a quietly observant fifth-grader who feels the grim shadow of mortality all around her. How the character will absorb that realization is anyoneโ€™s guess โ€” including Hayakawaโ€™s.

Newcomer Yui Suzuki stars as Fuki, who lives in a nondescript Tokyo suburb in 1987. Her soft-spoken dad, Keiji (Lily Franky), is suffering with terminal cancer in its final stages, the emaciated man spending as much time in the hospital as he does at home. Fukiโ€™s mother, Utako (Hikari Ishida), doesnโ€™t seem very despondent, though: One senses an emotional exhaustion that comes from preparing so long for the inevitable that sheโ€™s now mostly numb, her anticipatory grief having given way to frayed nerves.

Fukiโ€™s pre-mourning process is equally complicated. Outwardly, she shows no signs of being devastated by her dadโ€™s imminent passing, happily playing with him, almost in denial of his fate. But โ€œRenoirโ€ subtly suggests the impressionable girl is more aware than she lets on, surrounding her with random reminders of death. Local news breathlessly reports on random domestic murders. Even when Fuki gets away from the city, the camera lingers on her watching a campfireโ€™s dying embers. The film derives its title from the girlโ€™s interest in โ€œLittle Irรจne,โ€ a painting by influential French impressionist Pierre-Auguste Renoir. She asks if Renoir is still alive. No, heโ€™s dead too.

Hayakawa pulls from her childhood in multiple ways for her sophomore feature, which premiered in competition at Cannes last year. โ€œRenoirโ€ takes place in 1987 specifically because thatโ€™s the year she turned 11, and, like her protagonist, she was infatuated with โ€œLittle Irรจne.โ€ But thereโ€™s a refreshing absence of nostalgia in Hayakawaโ€™s conception of Fuki and her quizzical processing of her fatherโ€™s fatal illness.

For school, Fuki writes an essay about her wish to be an orphan. She becomes obsessed with hypnotism and mind-reading, an unorthodox strategy to create a sense of control. And, occasionally, she wanders into daydreams that Hayakawa presents so matter-of-factly that viewers may sometimes be unsure if what theyโ€™re seeing is actually happening. In โ€œRenoir,โ€ Fukiโ€™s flights of fancy are as naturalistic as her everyday life โ€” a sharp reminder that, for children, imagination and reality are often indistinguishable.

If death has been integral to Hayakawaโ€™s two features, itโ€™s societyโ€™s callous reaction to aging that is her primary focus. โ€œPlan 75โ€ eschewed dystopian-thriller conventions to ponder how Japan might one day treat its senior citizens, viewing them as little more than a drain on resources. โ€œRenoirโ€ makes a similar point within a memory piece. Keiji is the one dying, but itโ€™s telling that Hayakawa centers the story on Fuki and Utako, who each, in their own way, seem more concerned about their own personal dramas.

As Keijiโ€™s situation grows more dire, Utako enters the orbit of Toru (Ayumu Nakajima), a workplace advisor with whom sheโ€™s instantly smitten, pondering pursuing him romantically. Ironically, Toru preaches the importance of good communication skills in the office, a lesson the filmโ€™s guarded family would be wise to heed. While Utako hides her feelings for Toru, Fuki begins a secret odyssey in which she impulsively joins a phone dating service, engaging in conversations with a creepy college student (Ryota Bando) who pushes her to meet in person. This potentially traumatic subplot is the closest โ€œRenoirโ€ gets to traditional suspense, but even here Hayakawa adopts a muted approach, sidestepping shock value for bittersweet commentary about young peopleโ€™s confusion around love. Both Utako and Fuki chase after human connections fraught with danger, each trying to insulate themselves from the tragedy waiting at home.

โ€œRenoirโ€ may be a delicate wisp of a film, but itโ€™s flecked with thoughtful questioning about whether childhoodโ€™s sorrows leave permanent scars on us as adults. Suzuki exudes the fragility and buoyancy of adolescence, playing Fuki as someone constantly imbibing the world, rarely revealing what sheโ€™s doing with that stimulus. The simplest moments resonate the strongest, such as when the moody 11-year-old holds a balloon over the balcony of her familyโ€™s high-rise apartment, casually releasing her grip so that it tumbles to the ground far below. Does it speak to a desire to jump herself? โ€œRenoirโ€ wonโ€™t say, but the character is so poised you feel confident sheโ€™ll survive her fatherโ€™s death. Who knows: Maybe years from now, sheโ€™ll even make a touching, emotionally astute movie about it.

‘Renoir’

In Japanese, with subtitles

Not rated

Running time: 1 hour, 56 minutes

Playing: Opens Friday, June 5 at Landmarkโ€™s Nuart Theatre

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