Our boy is clearing out his life. He quits his job, sells his collection (of something,) and empties his bank account to leave an envelope full of money next to a sleeping person.
Ishida has a chance (or maybe not chance) encounter with Shoko outside his sign language class. He wants to return her communication notebook, which he's held on to all this time.
Shoko has fallen for Ishida. She gives him a gift and tells him she loves him. Out loud. This is no good, because her pronunciation is off enough that Ishida thinks she said "The Moon" and doesn't understand.
(Moon/Love puns are traditional in Japanese for some reason.)
Ueno tries to engineer a reconciliation between Ishida and Kazuiki Shimada, who was Ishida's best friend in elementary school, but threw him under the bus.
This fails.
Ueno blames Shoko for... roughly everything. She pulls her aside and suggests a peace treaty.
I guess, but the real meat of it must happen off screen then. Ishida learns sign language and works hard to pay back his debts before the movie begins.
He obviously regrets what he did, at least for how it hurt everyone around him.
Then what redemption is there to take place during the meat of the movie?
If the movie is about him overcoming his social isolation, then Shoko's deafness is a distraction from that story that takes up a huge chunk of screen time. That can't be it. But the ending leans that way.
I know Japanese movies don't do Oscar Bait, but it kind of feels like Shoko's deafness is a kind of pandering to make audiences feel like they're partaking in a minority culture.
Comments elsewhere say that a bunch of stuff got cut that made Shoko a bigger burden on her family.
I'd like to appreciate the way they handle Yuzuru. Initially, her gender is ambiguous. But even once it's clarified, her style remains. And when you see her in her uniform, she looks uncomfortable.
They capture her discomfort with her gender role without ever mentioning it.
That sounds like a lot of criticism, but it's mostly confusion over what the point actually is.
The movie is generally good, but the fact that I guess I didn't really get it leaves it somewhat hollow to me.