52-Hertz Whales movie review: Japanese tear-jerker starring Hana Sugisaki as abuse victim an immersive character study

3/5 stars

The title of 52-Hertz Whales alludes to a theory upheld by oceanographers that a lone cetacean navigates the seas, conversing at a lower sonic frequency than all other aquatic mammals. Its song has been recorded numerous times, but the creature never spotted, earning it the distinction of “world’s loneliest whale”.

In Izuru Narushima’s punishing tear-jerker, a solitary woman who has sustained years of physical and emotional abuse attempts to save a young boy from a similar fate, and both seek solace in the melancholy crooning of the 52-Hertz whale.

Adapted from Sonoko Machida’s award-winning 2021 novel, the film stars Hana Sugisaki as Kiko, who arrives in a beautiful seaside town near Oita, Japan, hoping to start a new life.

Rumours circulate about why she fled Tokyo, but Kiko is more concerned about a mute, long-haired boy known only as “Bug” (Tori Kuwana), who appears to be living destitute.

She tracks down the boy’s mother (Nanae Nishino), who is working as a waitress and wants nothing to do with the child she claims ruined her life. Kiko takes him in and, through a series of flashbacks, we learn of her own similarly traumatic upbringing.

The cause of much of Kiko’s abuse was her mother (Sei Matobu), who routinely beat her while blaming her for everything going wrong in her own life. Not allowed to pursue a career, Kiko is forced to stay at home and care for her bedridden stepfather while her mother goes out to work.
Hana Sugisaki (left) as Kiko and Hio Miyazawa as Chikara in a still from 52-Hertz Whales.
A chance meeting with an old classmate (Karin Ono) and her friend An-san (Jun Shison) encourages Kiko to finally leave home, but even then, she is unable to prevent herself from falling into another abusive relationship with Chikara, Hio Miyazawa’s spoiled rich kid.

As one has come to expect from Japanese melodramas of this ilk, Narushima directs with an unhurried, understated hand, positioning the audience as a captive witness, forced to endure relentless scenes of sustained suffering and torment without much levity or respite.

Sugisaki’s diminutive frame and fragile demeanour only accentuate her plight as a perennial victim, but her performance extends beyond mere histrionics and eventually taps into a determined resilience.

Jun Shison (left) as An-san and Hana Sugisaki as Kiko in a still from 52-Hertz Whales.

Around the halfway mark, the film’s plot becomes unnecessarily complicated by a curveball revelation that adds little to the already weighty drama and is never satisfactorily resolved.

Despite its hot-button nature, Narushima might have done well to exorcise it from his film entirely, as it only serves to detract from what is otherwise a tough yet genuinely immersive character drama.

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