I watched
Shinjuku Thief a few weeks ago and found it to be a total slog. Maybe I wasn't in the mood for it, but it did nothing for me, and I found the ambiguity and evolution of the film painful rather than thought-provoking. It hasn't stuck with me at all.
Boy on the other hand lived up to the hype and then some that I've built up in the ten years since learning about the film. Like
Death By Hanging it uses an absurd premise and repeatedly plays it over and over to dramatic effect. Whereas that film obviously does so satirically, however,
Boy does so to a devastating effect. I haven't yet dived into the extras, but the epilogue makes clear that the theme of the film is the lasting impact of a broken home and what it means for society writ large. I'm not sure I loved the need to emphasize the ending that way
explaining that both of the boy's parents were also victims of broken upbringings
and almost found the film more powerful without it. Ultimately, I found the film incredibly moving.
Can I also just say that this film is one of the most gorgeous transfers I've ever seen? The three newer restorations I've watched in the set are all beautiful, but
Boy is on another level. The color photography is sublime, and the way the film moves as we watch cars cross a bridge or the clouds in the sky of a monochrome shot is just beautiful. Oshima uses the widescreen frame to an incredible effect of the film, whether putting you in the dazed POV of one of the characters or emphasizing the space between them. Here the film's style really does start to complement the narrative in my opinion.