Those noises in your head can really do a number on your sanity. Just ask the narrator of Poe’s “A Tell-Tale Heart.” However, it is not clear whether Takuji Matsuoka truly hears them. Regardless, it seems that he “contracted” the insanity of someone who did in director-screenwriter Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s 45-minute short-ish film, Chime, which opens this Friday together with Kurosawa’s classic The Serpent’s Path (the original, not Kurosawa’s recent remake).
Matsuoka works as continuing ed. culinary instructor, but he clearly yearns to return to the kitchen as a head chef. He is not a great teacher, but to be fair, most educators would struggle with a weirdo like Ichiro Tashiro. When Tashiro complains about hearing chimes inaudible to the rest of the class, Matsuoka tries to ignore him. However, he can’t ignore what comes next.
Does Matsuoka inherit his craziness, or did he always have it? Did Tashiro’s horror show simply provide a catalyst for releasing it? Kurosawa clearly wants to keep the answers to such questions ambiguous, perhaps even unknowable. Regardless, Matsuoka takes a sinister turn that even surpasses Tashiro.
Arguably, Chime feels like Kurosawa, the horror master, taking a stab at more subtle and slippery “elevated” “post-horror.” There are shocking moments, but Kurosawa too coyly toys with the horror elements to sustain much tension.
As Matsuoka, Mutsuo Yoshioka’s performance is defined by an utter soullessness, even before his apparent insanity kicks in. Yet, Seiichi Kohinata is more disturbing as Tashiro, due to his twitchy, awkward sadness.
Kurosawa has fruitfully experimented with mid-length roughly hour-long films before, notably exemplified by the highly entertaining Beautiful New Bay Area Project and Seventh Code. Indeed, both were more successful than Chime, perhaps because those prior films more fully embrace their genres. In contrast, his new film comes across uncharacteristically restrained.
Still, few filmmakers can match Kurosawa’s knack for immediately creating an atmosphere of dread and foreboding, which is certainly true again in Chime. Frankly, it leaves his fans just wanting more, but not in the optimal way. It is a decent “throw in” to accompany Serpent’s Path, but the celebrated full feature remains the main attraction. Mostly, recommended for fans, the Kurosawa combo opens this Friday (3/27) in New York, at the IFC Center.

