No One's Ark
No One's Ark
| 26 April 2003 (USA)
No One's Ark Trailers

Daisuke and his girlfriend have failed at selling a smelly health drink named Akajiru in Tokyo, amassing five million yen in debts. In order to recover financially, they retreat to Daisuke's island hometown.

Reviews
GazerRise Fantastic!
CrawlerChunky In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.
Brendon Jones It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.
Stephan Hammond It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,
nmegahey Disillusioned by their failure to establish a business selling a new health drink in Tokyo, Daisuke (Hiroshi Yamamoto) returns back to his hometown in the country with his girlfriend Hisako (Tomoko Kotera), hoping to make use of contacts through his friends to get the product on the shelves. Apart from the problem that they have already amassed considerable debts and Daisuke's marketing strategy is impractical if not actually non-existent, there is also the fact that the drink itself smells terrible and is not particularly appetising.Yamashita's film is a comedy, and the much of it seems to be at the expense of life out in the sticks, but there's rather more to it than that. It does have a point to make about enterprise and the lack of opportunity for young people, who are unable to compete with the commercial backing of large corporate businesses that have the market sewn-up, using their influence and money to keep competition out. The effect is to stifle creativity and enterprise, maintaining the division between rich and poor, the city and the provinces.That may make the film sound somewhat preachy and academic, but it's far from it. Dryly funny in a droll, abstract, unpredictable and sometimes even slapstick manner, the message and the humour is principally in the characterisation. The camera's viewpoint switches between close-ups of the faces of its leads and the isolation of their environment and finds in both an expression of a situation that does indeed seem to be hopelessly beyond their means to change.
velvetons The young Sakai Daisuke (Hiroshi Yamamoto)and his girlfriend Shimada Hisako (Tomoko Kotera) are in debt five million yen. They leave Tokyo in a small motorboat and go off to Daisuke's hometown, a small island in an attempt to persuade the locals to buy a health drink named "Akajiru" which, due to its awful taste, they haven't been able to sell in Tokyo. However, not even his own family and childhood friends are willing to support their enterprise. Besides, Daisuke's ex-girlfriend and her younger sister complicate matters in his relationship. Set in the early 90's, this picture shows how it's hard for the young generation to find a place in the economy of its country.