Sunday, November 27, 2022

'Plan 75' - A Quiet Contemplation of Life and Death in Dystopian Japan

The film's premise is simple. It's an imagined time in Japan where the elderly aged 75 and above can choose the time of their own deaths. It's a government program where it's advertised as something positive and is akin to the country's culture of suicide--their way to get burden off of their families, or so they say. 

Plan 75 carefully dissects this culture by opening it with a brutal suicide, not of an elderly person, and then proceeding it with an introduction of the protagonist Micho who's at 78 struggles to find an apartment, a stable job, and love and care from loved ones. Life ain't easy for the other characters--a Pinay nurse (Stefanie Arianne) working in Japan who needs more income for her daughter's surgery living in the Philippines; and a Plan 75 employee who coincidentally received the processing inquiry of his old widowed uncle he hasn't seen for years.


Photo Credit: TBA Studios

The simple premise becomes complicated once it introduces the lives of these several strangers. The narratives seem disjointed at first until the film reveals that they're interconnected with each other one way or another because of the program. It's a long, quiet journey to get there and I am not quite sure it showed the importance of each characters to the story in the end.

Micho, played by the wonderfully subdued veteran Chieko Baisho, seems to get the complete focus and storyline treatment as a senior citizen brimming with life despite her misfortunes. Her character alone could achieve the film's message about life and death in Japan but the film is also busy showing different ironies for the Pinay OFW and a Plan 75 employee who tries to stop his uncle from availing the program. The result sometimes ends up being uneven especially for the Pinay character whose existence is only to make a point about another character’s life, and another country’s culture and government.

Still, there's a lot to admire in this quiet film. The film captures a consistent melancholic vibe which enhances its life-affirming ending, at least for some of the characters. It's also very clear about its stand about the program and there's a warm abundance of love about life even when its subject is also evidently depressing.

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PLAN 75 opens in Philippine cinemas nationwide on Dec. 7.

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