Second Serenade: Chapter 33
At first, Director Yamaoka had
rubbed him the wrong way—but as Kakegawa got to know him, he realized the man
was surprisingly interesting. The type he’d never encountered before—what you
might call a full-blown force of nature. The man had no sense of propriety, no
concept of money, no manners, and terrible taste. But when someone was that
far gone, you couldn’t even be annoyed anymore. It was almost admirable.
In the early days of shooting, the
crew’s attitude toward the amateur actor was noticeably chilly. Only a few
younger staff members made the effort to speak with Kakegawa. He could feel the
awkwardness in the air, so he made a point not to push himself forward. Most of
the time, he simply sat quietly off to the side, watching the shoot until his
turn came.
That day was no different—Kakegawa
sat alone on an upside-down beer crate in a corner of the studio, observing the
scene. The shot before his own featured an actress and a child actor, and they
just weren’t syncing up. They’d already run over schedule by more than an hour.
Kakegawa checked his watch: 6 p.m.
At this rate, even if his own scene went smoothly without any retakes, he
probably wouldn’t make it back to his apartment until after eight. He sighed in
frustration, half fed up—when one of the mid-level staffers casually spoke to
him from behind.
"Don't you think Director
Yamaoka is the kind of man who was born to be a director?"
The man speaking—Murashita—was in
his mid-thirties, tall and soft-spoken. He mainly handled props and their
placement, and among the senior and mid-level crew members who tended to be
cold toward Kakegawa, he was the only one who ever spoke to him.
"Well, I guess so..."
From the opposite side of the
studio, Yamaoka's shrill shouting echoed loud and clear. The young actress on
set, being forced to redo the same take over and over, looked on the verge of
tears, her face twisted with frustration.
"If a guy like that tried to
make it in regular society, it’d be a disaster. At best, he’d be a yakuza—or
maybe some woman’s leech."
Murashita said it with such a
straight face that Kakegawa couldn’t help laughing. Seeing him laugh, Murashita
gave a sly, meaningful grin.
"I’ve worked with him a few
times now, and even though he’s like that, there’s something about him when
he’s shooting a film. It’s strange—you end up thinking, damn, he’s good.
Just one word from Yamaoka and the actors suddenly come alive, completely
change. I really do think the guy’s got talent. But once he steps down from the
director’s chair, he’s just a drunken thug."
"Yeah, you’re right..."
Kakegawa thought back to how the man
would find any excuse to drink and wreak havoc. Murashita chuckled faintly,
just with the corners of his mouth.
"I think you’ve got talent too.
That’s why you should try taking this a little more seriously."
Someone called his name from afar,
and Murashita raised his voice in reply: “Be right there!”
“Well then, hang in there,” he said,
giving Kakegawa’s shoulder a friendly slap.
Kakegawa kept his head down, unable
to raise his face. He was glad Murashita had walked away. His face was burning,
and he didn’t want anyone to see it like that.
He made sure no one was around, then
got up from the beer crate he’d been sitting on. Darting into the washroom, he
splashed his face with water—again and again. His makeup came off, and his
carefully styled hair, now wet, clung limply to his forehead. The reflection in
the mirror was so pathetic he wanted to punch it.
People who take things seriously...
they can tell when someone’s just coasting. Kakegawa had been convincing
himself it didn’t matter whether the movie succeeded or failed. Telling himself
it was just a one-time thing and had nothing to do with him. He’d been plucking
that thought like a string over and over in his mind.
But for the people genuinely pouring
their efforts into making this film, that kind of attitude must have been
downright offensive. Of course the crew had gotten angry. Of course they’d
ignored him.
It was mortifying—realizing he’d
pretended not to notice until someone kind had gently pointed it out. And how
stupid he was to think he could keep faking it to the very end.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
Filming often dragged on late into
the night, and being dragged out for drinks by the director afterward was
gradually becoming part of the routine. Alcohol was a strange force—it could
soften a person’s demeanor, and at the same time, draw out truths no one
expected to hear.
At first, the staff had largely
ignored the amateur actor, but as shooting progressed and Kakegawa began to
show real dedication to the role, they started to acknowledge him here and
there with a word or two.
Still, there remained a certain
awkwardness between Kakegawa and the crew—like a lingering trace of discomfort
that never quite went away, even when it felt like they were warming up to him.
But once the drinking sessions began, the staff—once they had enough liquor in
them—started getting unusually chummy with Kakegawa.
That day was no different. When
Kakegawa pleaded, “I’ve got a first-period lecture tomorrow, so I’d really
like to skip tonight,” the director simply waved him off with, “So what
if you repeat a year or two?” and shoved him into their usual hangout, the
bar called AO.
Whenever they went there, the
director would drink like a man possessed, go on a rampage, and pass out dead
drunk. Until he finally collapsed, no one could handle him. Kakegawa, half in
disbelief and half impressed, often wondered how a place could keep welcoming
such a disastrous customer with open arms—until, sure enough, someone let slip
that the bar owner was the director’s cousin.
Once he was pushed all the way
inside, Kakegawa had no choice but to surrender. Grasping the glass of beer
poured for him, he focused all his energy on figuring out how to make a single
drink last the entire night without affecting tomorrow’s class.
“Memorizing your lines is the most
basic thing for an actor, you know,” said Taneyama—a longtime staff member
who’d worked with the director since his very first film. Before Kakegawa
realized it, the man had plopped down beside him and was holding out a beer
bottle with a casual, “Here.”
He couldn’t exactly refuse—he wasn’t
incapable of drinking. So he emptied what was left in his glass in one go and
held it out toward Taneyama.
“Now that’s how you drink,”
Taneyama said, narrowing his eyes in satisfaction. This was the same man who
hadn’t even returned Kakegawa’s greetings in the beginning.
“When the director first brought you
in, I thought you were some stuck-up punk and didn’t like you at all. But after
getting to know you, you’re actually a decent guy. No matter how long filming
drags on or how many times you have to redo a scene, you don’t complain or
whine. A real man should be like that. You’ve got character, even though you’re
young.”
He swayed the still-heavy bottle in
his hand, clearly hinting that Kakegawa should hurry up and empty his glass
again. Their faces nearly touching over the brim of the cup, Kakegawa smiled
wryly to himself, keeping it strictly internal.
“Taneyama-san, I’d like to talk to
Kakegawa-san too, so don’t hog him all to yourself,” said a younger staff
member around Kakegawa’s age, cutting in.
Taneyama responded by kicking the
younger guy in the back with his heel.
“The hell did you just say, you
little punk? Can’t you see I’m in the middle of a conversation here? And what’s
this ‘I want to talk’ crap? What are you, gay?”
Cup after cup, they kept pouring
drinks until Taneyama finally drank himself under the table. Watching him go
down in drunken defeat, Kakegawa let out a quiet sigh. He reeked of booze—he
could tell even without anyone saying so.
Lying flat on his back, Taneyama
snored away loudly. The younger staff member leaned over and stuck his tongue
out dramatically at the drunk’s face before sliding into the now-vacant seat
beside Kakegawa. He was clearly more than halfway gone himself, and the way he
looked at Kakegawa had a strange glimmer—his eyes unusually moist.
“We see each other all the time on
set, so this might sound weird, but… I dunno, Kakegawa-san, you’re kind of hard
to approach. You’ve got this… presence, I guess? But I think I get why the
director dropped the last actor just to bring you in. It’s like—you can’t take
your eyes off you. You want to keep watching. The old-timers might not get it,
but…”
He gave a warm, boyish grin.
“Whatever you wear, whatever you
hold—it just works on you. You look the part. Honestly, even as a guy, I
find myself kind of dazzled. I bet the girls don’t stand a chance.”
His gaze was unfocused, almost as if
he weren’t looking at Kakegawa at all, but past him—at something only he could
see.
“Do you like me?”
“Well, yeah, of course…”
The young staffer’s mouth curled
into a sheepish grin.
“What would you do if I tried to hit
on you right now?”
“Huh? Me? Hit on me…? I, uh… huh?”
The staffer stammered like he had
the hiccups, his pink cheeks turning beet red. Kakegawa laughed, amused by his
reaction. Once the staffer realized he was being teased, he scratched his head
with a face that was still bright red.
“Come on, that’s not funny. You’re
mean, Kakegawa-san.”
“Oi, Kakegawa!”
The young staffer was yanked back by
the scruff of the neck and dragged away. Taking the now-empty seat beside
Kakegawa was the last person he wanted to see right now. The director’s outfit
today—a black glittery shirt and white slacks—gave him the look of a wannabe
gangster.
Director Yamaoka leaned in and
grinned at Kakegawa. Click—too late. He’d been caught. Yamaoka had one nasty
habit: if he got drunk while in a bad mood, he’d start rampaging. But if he was
in a good mood when drunk, he’d launch into endless stories from his
past. Tonight, it seemed to be the latter.
There was one time Kakegawa had to
listen to the entire History of Director Yamaoka whispered in his ear
until morning. He’d once heard someone say, “I could write the guy’s
autobiography,” and frankly, it wasn’t far from the truth—Kakegawa knew
firsthand.
If he started nodding off in the
middle of the story, the director would shake him awake to continue. If he
tried to slip away under the excuse of needing the bathroom, the director would
follow him. He couldn’t escape until the guy finally passed out.
“I was anxious back in college too,
y’know. There’s no guarantee you can make a living off movies…”
I’ve heard this one before, Kakegawa thought, but he nodded
along anyway. As long as you kept your eyes open and stayed nearby, the
director was satisfied. So Kakegawa let the words wash from one ear out the
other, and started mentally reviewing tomorrow’s dialogue.
“After college, it was hell trying
to get people to come to amateur film screenings. Just selling the tickets was
brutal. I dug out my high school alumni list and went door-to-door selling to
anyone who still lived nearby. I knew it was a nuisance, but I was
desperate.”
Director Yamaoka sniffled
mid-story—he had a surprisingly weepy streak.
“Some folks bought tickets and said
good luck, which was nice. But others were just plain nasty. One of them was
this guy—he was a year below me in high school and college, I think… Hashi…
Hashimoto, that’s it…”
The name snagged on Kakegawa’s
eardrum.
“He was technically my junior, but I
repeated so many years we ended up graduating together. I went to his place to
sell a ticket, and at first, he seemed polite and soft-spoken. Lived in a fancy
apartment. I thought it’d go well. But then, right there at the door, he starts
lecturing me.”
The director sighed, as if reliving
the moment.
“Handsome guy, I’ll give him that,
but he had this snooty, snide way of talking. Said, ‘I’ll buy your ticket this
once, but don’t come back. It’s a bother.’ Then he dropped the money on
the floor, like he was tossing me a bone. And get this—he tore the ticket in
half right in front of me. I seriously thought about punching him out.
After that he went on and on—‘stop messing around,’ ‘face reality,’ blah blah
blah. I swear, I went home and cried. Just couldn’t take it. He didn’t know
anything about me. It pissed me off so much. That’s when I decided—I’m going
pro. I’m gonna show that bastard someday.”
It had to be that Hashimoto.
Kakegawa could practically see the guy in his mind—how he must have spoken, how
he must have looked.
“I know Hashimoto-san.”
“Huh? Wait, don’t tell me you two
are related!”
The director turned around, eyes
still red, panic on his face.
“I’ve heard that story from
Hashimoto-san too. Said some guy came trying to sell tickets, so he gave him a
scolding. That was you, huh?”
“That bastard… I oughta go burn his
house down.”
Yamaoka clenched his fist, grinding
his molars.
“Hashimoto-san really is a jerk.”
“Right? I knew it! I knew I
wasn’t the only one who thought so! He is a jerk!”
The director shook Kakegawa’s hands
vigorously, as if he’d found a powerful comrade-in-arms. It was a small, petty
victory, and Kakegawa gave a faint, bitter smile.
He closed his eyes. He wondered,
just for a moment, how much longer Hashimoto’s face would keep appearing so
clearly in his mind.
Woah Hashimoto was talking about this director!
ReplyDeleteYes!! That little connection was such a cool detail 👀
Delete