A Pale View Of Hills Review: Kei Ishikawa’s Period Piece Lacks The Necessary Depth To Make An Impact

Straddling two time periods and several very different women, Kei Ishikawa’s A Pale View of Hills gives viewers a lot to chew on. It aims to be both a snapsH๏τ at a very specific moment in history and an exploration of motherhood, the impact of war, and grief. When I caught it at the Toronto International Film Festival, I very much wanted to enjoy it, but something held me back from connecting completely.

The dual timeline begins in 1952 Nagasaki, Japan, seven years after the atomic bomb. Housewife Etsuko (Suzu Hirose) is building a home with her husband Jiro (Kôhei Matsusнιтa) in a city gradually putting itself back together following the war. With Jiro often working, Etsuko finds herself drawn toward Sachiko (Shogun‘s Fumi Nikaidō), a mysterious woman who sparks intrigue due to her relationship with an American soldier and her wild young child.

Years later, in 1982 England, A Pale View of Hills turns its attention to an older Etsuko (Yoh Yoshida) and her daughter Niki (Camilla Aiko) as they clear out the former’s home in preparation of a move. Niki, a journalism student, is eager to learn more about her mother’s past life in Nagasaki, but as she asks her questions and learns more of the past, the memory of her deceased sister threatens to overwhelm them both.

A Pale View Of Hills Has Interesting Ideas And Gorgeous Visuals, But Not Enough Depth

Yoh Yoshida sitting in a chair with a cup of tea in A Pale View of Hills

Yoh Yoshida sitting in a chair with a cup of tea in A Pale View of Hills

Based on the novel by Kazuo Ishiguro, A Pale View of Hills is an ambitious film that, despite looking very beautiful, doesn’t make the impact that it wants to. Visually, Ishikawa gives the film a dream-like quality that is perfect for an introspective tale like this, weaving between the past and present as Etsuko shares more of her story.

There’s also a haunting tone within the film, with the theme of losing children looming large. Keiko, Etsuko’s daughter and Niki’s sister, died sometime before the start of the 1982 storyline, and her loss permeates that whole arc. It even seems to extend into the past, as there have been a string of child deaths in 1952 that are not far from anyone’s mind.

Along with the post-war scars most characters carry — some even literally — A Pale View of Hills has a lot of subtext to contend with. Still, outside of Etsuko, few characters feel very fleshed-out or accessible. One could argue that is by design, considering the twist that comes at the end, but it means we spend most of the film just trying to break through to the people we’re watching.

The cast is strong and makes an effort to bridge the gap. Hirose and Yoshida both resonate as the two generations of Etsuko, with Yoshida especially shining with a darker aspect of the character. Nikaidō is good as Sachiko, though her character is the most thinly-written and thus hard to pin down. Aiko gets several excellent moments as Niki gets closer to her mother’s truth.

When we learn the truth, which is one that reframes the whole movie, it rings hollow with shock value rather than something that was gradually built up. The signs were there, yes, but the tone of the overall ending is at odds with what we’d witnessed before. It comes across as something that perhaps belongs to a different film.

This leaves A Pale View of Hills in a strange position. So much of the film is melancholic and beautifully rendered, but when it comes to building up the characters and the necessary intrigue, it lacks any real weight. Ultimately, it is a gorgeous film that’s empty inside despite all of its interesting ideas and good intentions. I kept hoping for more, and I was instead left out in the cold.

A Pale View of Hills screened at the Toronto International Film Festival.

Related Posts

Couture Review: Angelina Jolie’s Vulnerable Performance Anchors Muted Fashion Week Drama

Couture Review: Angelina Jolie’s Vulnerable Performance Anchors Muted Fashion Week Drama

Angelina Jolie anchors a muted, contemplative drama in French director Alice Winocour’s Couture. The film, which premiered at TIFF, follows three women during Paris Fashion Week Jolie…

Code 3 Review: I’m Blown Away By How Much Of Rainn Wilson’s Dark Comedy Was Authentic & Meaningful

Code 3 Review: I’m Blown Away By How Much Of Rainn Wilson’s Dark Comedy Was Authentic & Meaningful

Code 3 is a heart-warming drama disguised as a cynical dark comedy, but that is precisely what makes it so good. Rainn Wilson is perfectly cast to…

10 Fantasy Movies I Knew Would Be Masterpieces After The First 10 Minutes

10 Fantasy Movies I Knew Would Be Masterpieces After The First 10 Minutes

Fantasy movies often take time to grow on viewers because they don’t all have interesting or engaging opening scenes and gradually build up the stakes as characters…

Star Wars Actor Wants To Appear In Spoof Follow-Up Spaceballs 2 After Fumble In Sequel Trilogy

Star Wars Actor Wants To Appear In Spoof Follow-Up Spaceballs 2 After Fumble In Sequel Trilogy

A Star Wars actor has an interest in joining another iconic space franchise, pitching himself for a role in Spaceballs 2. The original Mel Brooks parody was…

Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale Has A Sly Maggie Smith Tribute – Did You Catch It?

Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale Has A Sly Maggie Smith Tribute – Did You Catch It?

One of the most clever details in Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale found a way to pay a subtle tribute to Dame Maggie Smith. Smith’s Violet Crawley…

Predicting 10 ᴅᴇᴀᴅ Movie Franchises That Will Return By 2030

Predicting 10 ᴅᴇᴀᴅ Movie Franchises That Will Return By 2030

Movie franchises come and go, but there are some ᴅᴇᴀᴅ film series that Hollywood will definitely revive by 2030. In the 2020s, recognizable franchises have become more…