8/10
Deeply poignant film, depressing but beautiful!
9 May 2020
The Labyrinth of Dreams is a very unusual film and a new phase in Sogo Ishii's work, Inspired by a short story by Yumen Kyusaku , the experimental psychological-romantic/mystery as the title suggests, lulls you into a state similar to a paralyzing dream.

'In Labyrinth of Dreams" we are dealing with a story going around during pre-war Japan, a serial killer who seems to be rampant on the bus lines, murdering fellow female bus conductors when given the chance. The serial killer has already killed other girlfriends, including a friend of Tomiko will be his new business partner and sharing his routes and working as a ticket collector in the bus. When a Tomiko receives a letter from Tsuyako, to avenge her friend, she agrees to team up with him, but soon falls in love too. What if she had imagined everything?

Sogo Ishii presents characteristics quite the opposite of this genre, with long still shots, without music, in which the characters are silent or only exchange a few words using traditional narrative means in a completely unconventional way, making even the most banal dialogues and Tomiko's written confessions sound like pure poetry. His earlier rebellious punk rock films, like Crazy Thunder Road (1980), Burst City (1982), or Electric Dragon 80000 V (2001), cannot be described in this manner, but his Labyrinth of Dreams (1997) very much can be.
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