There are plenty of directors who masterfully tackle diverse genres and types of films, but few can compare to Takashi Miike, who literally has more than 100 films to his name and hasn’t shown any signs of slowing down. Miike is sometimes reduced to an excessive, sensationalist filmmaker who gleefully pushes boundaries. This is certainly […]
There are plenty of directors who masterfully tackle diverse genres and types of films, but few can compare to Takashi Miike, who literally has more than 100 films to his name and hasn’t shown any signs of slowing down. Miike is sometimes reduced to an excessive, sensationalist filmmaker who gleefully pushes boundaries. This is certainly true to some extent, but Miike has also directed his share of more intimate character-driven dramas that don’t feel the need to drench the screen in blood or…other fluids.
Miike’s fearlessness can create a numbness to these extremes where the audience takes these spectacles for granted. For a director where nothing is off limits, the most impressive thing is sometimes to show restraint and rein things in. Sham is an emotional uppercut that is hardly Miike’s most “normal” movie. However, it uses the everyday horrors that hide in plain sight to remind the audience that the real world can be just as frightening as any deranged serial killer, bloodthirsty serial killer, or rabid monster. In fact, it can be so much worse.
Based on a harrowing true story that was chronicled in Masumi Fukuda’s 2007 book Fabrication: The Truth About The ‘Murder Teacher’ in Fukuoka, Sham unpacks a situation that’s simultaneously simple and infinitely complex. A teacher, Seiichi Yabushita (Go Ayano), is accused of bullying one of his students to the point of suicide, only for it to later come to light that these accusations may or may not be credible, regardless of any damage that’s already been done to Yabushita’s reputation and career. This is rewarding material for Miike to dig into, especially due to the way in which this information is presented to the audience.
Sham begins with sequences of intense violence between Yabushita and his students before anyone understands whether these events are credible. At this point, this first impression has already conditioned the audience to feel a certain way about Yabushita that’s comparable to the general public’s toxic view of him. It’s a particularly brilliant, subconscious touch that strengthens the emotions behind this story. The audience would have a completely different feeling going into