Much of the documentary is spent watching the feline subjects do catlike things.Credit:Hi Gloss Entertainment
Then again,if you don’t like cats,do you even really like cinema? For us sensible people,anyway,the film offers many of the same pleasures as the most durable of all genres on YouTube.
Not millions of cats,as in the picture book classic,but at least a few dozen – tortoiseshell,marmalade and motley,with the scrawny look of strays (which they are).
Much time is spent watching them do catlike things:jostling and squabbling with one another,leaping for proffered fish,strolling up stone steps with a look of ownership,dozing under the slanted roof of a signboard or under a car where they’ve taken shelter from the rain.
The gathering place for the cats is a small Shinto shrine in the resort town of Ushimado in southern Japan,surrounded by cherry trees and high up on the edge of a bay. The steps lead down to a car park which doubles as a fishing spot,popular with older men who like the convenience of not having to walk far from where they’re parked.
Director Kazuhiro Soda at work on The Cats of Gokogu Shrine.Credit:Via Hi Gloss Entertainment
We become very familiar with the geography of this location over the course of the film,which like Soda’s earlier documentaries,appears to be basically a one-man job where he serves as his own camera operator,editor and producer.
In the observational tradition of America’s Frederick Wiseman,he does without music,voiceover or much in the way of narrative drive.