
‘Desert of Namibia' Review: Ups and Downs
It's rare that a movie portrays the kind of messy and absurd arguments that can unfold in relationships, so there's a special awe to seeing a movie that goes for it. Yoko Yamanaka's brilliantly observed 'Desert of Namibia' often boils over with the anger of its young protagonist, Kana (Yuumi Kawai), but it often also just simmers with her frustrations about her place in the world.
Outright fights are just one facet of the film's unvarnished fidelity to Kana's state of mind. She upends parts of her life, sometimes for the better in the long run, but can't always reassemble the pieces into a satisfying future. Her boyfriend, Honda (Kanichiro), dotes on her at their shared apartment, but she lurches into another relationship with a writer, Hayashi (Daichi Kaneko), whom she's seeing on the side. Her mind-numbing job at a hair-removal salon doesn't help.
What clinches the portrait is the sure-handed direction and Kana's organic performance of a daunting character. Dramatically, Yamanaka finds unpredictable ways into and out of scenes, and she has an eye for the poignant details amid the angst, like neatly packed baggies of food in a refrigerator, and for underplaying other moments, like the breeziness of a doctor who diagnoses Kana over a video call.
Kana's spikiness (which recalls Kit Zauhar's similarly candid triumph 'Actual People') segues into an eventual need for stability. But Yamanaka is admirably in no hurry to simplify or explain what Kana is still sorting out for herself.

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New York Times
15-05-2025
- New York Times
‘Desert of Namibia' Review: Ups and Downs
It's rare that a movie portrays the kind of messy and absurd arguments that can unfold in relationships, so there's a special awe to seeing a movie that goes for it. Yoko Yamanaka's brilliantly observed 'Desert of Namibia' often boils over with the anger of its young protagonist, Kana (Yuumi Kawai), but it often also just simmers with her frustrations about her place in the world. Outright fights are just one facet of the film's unvarnished fidelity to Kana's state of mind. She upends parts of her life, sometimes for the better in the long run, but can't always reassemble the pieces into a satisfying future. Her boyfriend, Honda (Kanichiro), dotes on her at their shared apartment, but she lurches into another relationship with a writer, Hayashi (Daichi Kaneko), whom she's seeing on the side. Her mind-numbing job at a hair-removal salon doesn't help. What clinches the portrait is the sure-handed direction and Kana's organic performance of a daunting character. Dramatically, Yamanaka finds unpredictable ways into and out of scenes, and she has an eye for the poignant details amid the angst, like neatly packed baggies of food in a refrigerator, and for underplaying other moments, like the breeziness of a doctor who diagnoses Kana over a video call. Kana's spikiness (which recalls Kit Zauhar's similarly candid triumph 'Actual People') segues into an eventual need for stability. But Yamanaka is admirably in no hurry to simplify or explain what Kana is still sorting out for herself.
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Vogue
15-05-2025
- Vogue
Director Yôko Yamanaka on Her Freewheeling Sophomore Feature, ‘Desert of Namibia'
The first moments of Desert of Namibia, the second feature from Japanese writer-director Yôko Yamanaka, instantly declare a new entrant to the canon of indelible mercurial female protagonists. Twenty-one-year-old Kana (played by 24-year-old Yuumi Kawai) ambles loosely down a Tokyo sidewalk, mouth ajar, swinging her bag wide at her sides, surveying the bustle around her, seemingly content. It's intriguing because it's so unusual. 'In Japan women are expected to behave and move in a certain way, almost like wearing a uniform,' Yamanaka recently told Vogue through a translator, sporting long, ornate nails bedecked with hologram confetti. 'As children, we're free and don't care, but as we grow up, go to school, and start working, we start acting in expected ways. I didn't want Kana to conform to that, and that's most apparent in how she walks, with sloppy gestures and movements. She behaves outside in ways usually reserved for home. Instead of how Japanese women normally act, I wanted Kana to use her body like a child. Mothers have said she reminds them of their very young children.' By the time the title cards appear onscreen some 40 minutes later, we'll have seen her prove an inconsiderate friend, a careless partner, a messy drunk, a listless worker, impulsive, self-absorbed, and reckless—a bit of trouble, in other words, but fascinating and irresistible. She struggles to care for herself properly but surrounds herself with attentive, patient, caring men who do what they can to manage her antics. She's manic and pixie, perhaps, but far from a dream girl, hurtling toward an uncertain future in a rule-bound, patriarchal society (and bound to be subject to some level of psychological analysis by audiences).
Yahoo
05-11-2024
- Yahoo
Taiwan Creative Content Fest: Volos Films Unveils Co-Production Slate as Country Goes Global
Taiwan-Italy production outfit Volos Films has unveiled a diverse slate of features and documentaries at the Taiwan Creative Content Fest (TCCF). The feature film lineup includes 'Polaris,' directed by Yamanaka Yoko, whose 'Desert of Namibia' screened at Cannes' Directors' Fortnight. Set in a Tokyo bar, the film follows women from different backgrounds whose lives intersect. The project marks Volos's first Japan co-production, with producers Chang Chuti, Chuma Kusuke, Mao Okuno and Stefano Centini attached. Vietnam's Lost Cinema Era Inspires TCCF Project 'Waiting for Godard' Pablo Larrain's Fabula, Venice Winner Tana Gilbert Team on TCCF Series 'Where Is Narumi?' Paz Vega Thriller 'Death Has No Master' Lands at Tokyo Gap-Financing Market - TIFFCOM Stefanos Tsai's 'Sunshower' centers on a Chinese-American man visiting his grandmother with dementia, who mistakes him for her first love. Jonathan Hsu produces, with Centini executive producing. In the documentary section, Hong Kong director Frankie Sin presents 'Nomads of the Island,' exploring his family's fishing heritage and migration to Taiwan. Sin's previous documentary 'Another Home' won the BIFF Mecenat Award at Busan 2024. Chiu Ping-Yu and Centini produce, with Peter Yam and Huang Hui-Chen are executive producing. 'Pony Boys,' from 'Divine Factory' director Joseph Mangat, follows young horse handlers in the Philippines' mountain tourism industry. Alember Ang and Stefano Centini produce. Through the TAICCA x Produire au Sud Workshop, Wang Chun-Hong pitches 'Midnight Inn,' his follow-up to 'Far Away Eyes.' The project, about a night-shift hotel worker during COVID, recently pitched at Rome's MIA market. Chiu produces. The company will also present two projects at the following week's Taiwan's Golden Horse FPP Project market: 'The Fundamentals,' a Taiwan-set drama series from Venice competition title 'Stranger Eyes' director Yeo Siew Hua, which is a co-production with Akanga Film Asia, and 'The Songs Within Us,' a documentary from Taipei festival Grand Prize winner Elvis A-Liang Lu, presented at Cannes Docs, Gotham Week and Since establishing its Italian office in 2022, Volos has built an Asian-Italian co-production slate including Lav Diaz's 'Essential Truths of the Lake' and Dechen Roder's Tallinn Critics' Pick competitor 'I, The Song.' The company's Italian slate features projects in development: Italian-Filipino DoP Andrea Benjamin Manenti's debut 'I Have to Fuck Before the World Ends,' Kenneth Dagatan's 'Molder,' a co-production with the Philippines' Epicmedia and Felipe Galvez's 'Impunity.' Films in production include Federico Cammarata and Filippo Passarini's 'On the Serbian Border,' Alessio Rigo de Righi and Matteo Zoppis's 'Heads or Tails' (co-produced with Ring Film, Cinema Inutile and RAI), and Jorge Thielen Armand's 'Death Has No Master,' which recently presented at Venice's Gap-Financing Market and TIFFCOM. 'As we are starting to build a stronger slate for the Italian company with more European centered themes, we feel it's important to keep our roots in Asian independent cinema and support new upcoming voices, encouraging them to tell their stories with a fresh and critical perspective in these challenging times,' said Centini. 'As the Taiwanese film industry continues to globalize, we believe now is the ideal time to showcase projects by local filmmakers with a distinctive vision and worldwide appeal. Midnight INN by Wang Chun Hong is one such film,' added Chiu. ''Polaris' is our first collaboration with Japan and we are very excited to work with Yoko and the team at 21 First Century to bring a true Taiwanese-Japanese coproduction to life,' said Chang. 'The story is adapted from the book of Li Kotomi, who is a Taiwanese and lives in Japan. I believe this book and film offer the perfect opportunity for collaboration between Taiwan and Japan.' New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week What's Coming to Netflix in November 2024 The Best Celebrity Memoirs to Read This Year: From Al Pacino to Lisa Marie Presley