The Asian Cut
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Donate
  • Reviews
  • Features
    • Essays
    • Interviews
    • Columns
      • Criterion Recollection
      • The Queer Dispatch
    • Series
  • Literary
  • Contact Us
    • Write For Us
No Result
View All Result
The Asian Cut
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Donate
  • Reviews
  • Features
    • Essays
    • Interviews
    • Columns
      • Criterion Recollection
      • The Queer Dispatch
    • Series
  • Literary
  • Contact Us
    • Write For Us
No Result
View All Result
The Asian Cut
No Result
View All Result

‘Evil Does Not Exist’: The Poetry of Film and Music

Calvin Law by Calvin Law
May 10, 2024
0
Ryo Nishikawa as Hana standing in the woods staring up in Drive My Car.

Photo Courtesy of Films We Like

Revisiting a film can bring out so much more than the initial viewing — sometimes it can truly be a blessing. For me, the chance to watch Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s brilliant Evil Does Not Exist thrice over in various settings — the Venice Film Festival, its theatrical release, and at a special screening with an accompanying talk by composer Eiko Ishibashi in Hong Kong — has only amplified my love for the film and its cryptic, challenging ambiguities, and its refusal to give easy answers. 

In what is essentially his take on Bill Forsyth’s Local Hero, Hamaguchi presents us with the small insular community of Mizubiki Village and the intrusion by corporate outsiders who send representatives to the village to set up a ‘conversation’ with the locals before imposing upon their land with little regard for the environmental and social implications of their actions, notably how it will affect the water supply. The representatives try to work things out between both sides, while the village inhabitants grapple with this inevitable endangerment to their way of life. A beautifully shot mood piece and character study of these different groups and individuals, elegiac in its contemplation of nature and utterly haunting in its examination of the human intrusions and divides that cause chaos and conflict amidst it. 

Portrait of director Ryusuke Hamaguchi
Director Ryusuke Hamaguchi | Photo Courtesy of Films We Like

Initially this collaboration, which developed into such an acclaimed narrative film, was conceived as video footage by Hamaguchi to accompany a musical endeavour of Ishibashi’s, providing a visual accompaniment to her work as essentially a music video of sorts. By removing himself of the medium of dialogue, Hamaguchi has spoken about how he felt invigorated to challenge himself visually, and that comes through beautifully both in Evil Does Not Exist and Gift, a separate project which stemmed from the initial concept of the Hamaguchi/Ishibashi collaboration where it utilises footage also used in Evil Does Not Exist but in a dialogue-free context. In their different forms, two things are apparent in both: the stunning camerawork which captures Mizubiki Village and the natural world around it with such low-key yet breathtaking beauty, and Ishibashi’s music which drives along both projects with its shifting tones between the serene and the unsettling. 

Having had the chance to experience this partnership both in the form of the narrative film, and the live musical performance project, initially I was much more invested in the former and left a little cold by the latter. Where Evil Does Not Exist drew me in with its captivating storytelling, I found myself at times at arm’s length to the approach of Gift, which felt like a truncated form of what we got with the narrative film. While I could appreciate the splendour of the visuals and the music, I missed the expertly crafted editing and dialogue of the wonderful scene between the corporate lackeys in a car about dating apps and their goals in life; or the town hall sequence where Hamaguchi offers a heated discussion between the villagers and the outsiders with such deft precision. These are elements sacrificed in the dialogue-free Gift, rendering the film a frustrating watch when seeing footage repurposed in a form which removed so many of Evil Does Not Exist’s strengths. 

But as I evaluated more about what exactly I got out of this privilege seeing Gift and Evil Does Not Exist, I began to consider the way in which the origins of the former paved the way for the conception of the latter. It is through the objective of creating a purely visual and musically-driven piece that Hamaguchi and Ishibashi fashioned the extraordinary visual palette and unforgettable chords that exists in both films. And for Gift, Hamaguchi had found the general outline of the plot, the acting ensemble, and other such elements to provide the template that he soon realised had the potential to develop into a full narrative film. 

Portrait of composer Eiko Ishibashi
Composer Eiko Ishibashi | Photo by Jim O’Rourke / Films We Like

With that in mind, in retrospect, I’ve gained an appreciation for Gift both on its own merits, and also how it created the first spark that soon blossomed into Evil Does Not Exist. The differences between the two become more poignant, as well. In Gift, the lack of dialogue leaves the corporate outsiders as a looming, intruding presence, and the ways in which both films utilise music as a driving force, but also in abruptly cutting out the music while accompanying the visuals to wake us with these harsh blows. 

During her talk after Evil Does Not Exist, Ishibashi raised an interesting point about how music should never control the mood of a film or the audience’s contemplation or emotions. Instead, must should act as an accompaniment. This could be interpreted in a number of ways, from modesty regarding her craft to an overarching discussion of how much music manipulates film. 

Hamaguchi, in both Evil Does Not Exist and Gift, crafts such distinct rhythms to his storytelling, pacing and accompanying them with sound, music, dialogue (and lack thereof) in such different ways. Ishibashi’s control over the two works is so unique, where in Gift, her music is at the forefront, the central focus and where the visuals are an accompaniment, whereas in Evil Does Not Exist the music reverts to being the accompaniment to what is onscreen, without diminishing its potent impact.

Ishibashi’s words put me in mind of the rhythm of cinema and how this collaboration between her and Hamaguchi truly exemplifies how their two artistries come together: directors are composers, and composers are directors. 

Now Streaming On

JustWatch
Tags: Eiko IshibashEvil Does Not ExistJapanRyusuke Hamaguchi
ShareTweetShare
Calvin Law

Calvin Law

Calvin Law is an amateur film critic. He has completed a master's degree in film studies in the United Kingdom, and is currently based in Hong Kong. Calvin runs his own personal film blog, Reel and Roll Films, and his interest in spotlighting Asian and Asian diaspora stories led him to write for The Asian Cut. All of Calvin's content for Reel and Roll Films and other publications can be found on his Linktree.

Related Posts

Naoko Yamada and a photo still from The Colors Within.
Interviews

Naoko Yamada on Light and Religion in ‘The Colors Within’

January 22, 2025
Empty movie theatre
Festival Reports

Many Happy Returns: Notes on the 18th Five Flavours Asian Film Festival

January 15, 2025
Shiori Ito in Black Box Diaries
Reviews

Harrowing ‘Black Box Diaries’ Documentary Allows Director To Be The Subject Too

December 31, 2024
Author Mina Ikemoto Ghosh and her latest book Numamushi
Interviews

The Monstrous and Beautiful: Mina Ikemoto Ghosh on ‘Numamushi’

December 18, 2024
Film still from documentary Ashima
Reviews

Reel Asian 2024: A Family’s Ascent in ‘Ashima’

November 19, 2024
Film still from Plastic, directed by Daisuke Miyazaki.
Reviews

‘Plastic’ Uses Music to Capture Youthful Nostalgia

October 8, 2024
Next Post
George Lam as Shiomi Akutagawa taking a photo around soldiers sitting on tanks parading through the streets in Boat People.

'Boat People' Confronts the Ideas of 'Civil War' with More Complexity and Issues of Its Own

RECENT POSTS

Han Gi-chan, Youn Yuh-jung, and Kelly Marie Tran in The Wedding Banquet.

‘The Wedding Banquet’ is Less Like a Feast and More Like a Cosy Potluck

by Rose Ho
April 25, 2025

Ally Chiu as Shaowu stands across from Jack Kao as Keiko at an airport with a full luggage trolly between them in The Gangster's Daughter.

‘The Gangster’s Daughter’ Avoids Tropes and a Committed Direction

by Wilson Kwong
April 9, 2025

Photo still from Monisme, directed by Riar Rizaldi.

Riar Rizaldi’s Cryptic Indonesian Docufiction ‘Monisme’ Is a Fascinating Avant-Garde Take on the Conceptual Film

by Olivia Popp
April 6, 2025

Choi Min-sik in Exhuma

‘Exhuma’ Unearths More Than Bones

by Lauren Hayataka
March 30, 2025

A black-and-white image of Jayden Cheung as the unnamed protagonist in Jun Li's Queerpanorama

‘Queerpanorama’ Asserts Beauty in Gay Hook-Up Culture

by Jericho Tadeo
March 26, 2025

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Literary
  • Contact Us

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2025. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Donate
  • Reviews
  • Features
    • Essays
    • Interviews
    • Columns
      • Criterion Recollection
      • The Queer Dispatch
    • Series
  • Literary
  • Contact Us
    • Write For Us