I reckon there are things that western audiences will not get, as someone else suggested. That being said and always taking into account the different sensibilities, the story is quite coherent. The acting is good - and if you dig where it will take you ... you will be entertained or rather have the suspense throughout.
Moral conclussions are all yours to make. Just remember that not all questions can be answered easily.
Plot summary
Born in a regional city, a young girl named Ai (Sairi Ito) is sent to a cult commune by her religious maniac mother and lives there for seven long years. After the cult is exposed by the police, Ai starts a new, normal life going to a regular middle school, but can't find a place to fit in normal society. Ai drops out to continue finding her path in life, first living with a rock-bottom delinquent family, then moving on to be part of a middle-class family, all along trying to find her place in this world. The only person who understands Ai is Ryota (Kenta Suga),another drop-out and cast-off from society. Ryota finds his path in a shady world of delinquents while Ai ends up working in the sex industry. Two teens' purity gets swallowed up by the urban jungle of a big regional city. A black comedy depicting lives of modern youth and their struggles in a place where there is no way out.
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Culture and all that
Compelling but Disturbing
A terrific film with many excellent shots and sequences, including underwater photography, although not an easy watch. There is much violence and sexual exploitation, although it is sensitively handled and does not dominate the story. Instead the overall effect is a tender tale of first love and seeking affection in the wrong places.
The script sometimes makes big leaps between cause and effect but never loses touch with plausibility. We first meet Ai / Ananda as a primary school-age child, but can already see her trajectory towards a difficult adolescence. We follow Ryota (a stereotypical sullen teen, perhaps the least convincing character) as his life intersects with hers, always wanting to rescue her but never quite making the right connection.
In a separate thread, we see Kenta offered a chance to leave his violent life and make a new one with Reika, and the impact it has on her.
There are contrasts between the sometimes frenetic gangster world and the more serene one lived by bit part players, children and young people who cut across the central story to keep the main characters grounded in their town, their schools and communities.
I admit to being confused at times by cuts between scenes, and I am not familiar with Japanese culture, although this did not spoil the effect. I could see where things were going wrong and how easily they could have been different if minor events had gone in favour of our protagonists.
A great piece of work, and I will seek out more from this director.
trapped in the under
To have a place in this every day even more huge and complicated society, is a not an easy task. You need luck and in my opinion, there are people with luck and those without it. No doubt that to take the right decision in the wrong environment could save you but normally that do not occur and the flow would get you in the end.