Obscure Japanese Film #144
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Ayako Wakao and So Yamamura
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Having delivered a
mega-hit for Daiei studios with Shinobi
no mono (1962) and also directed its first sequel the following year,
director and lifelong Communist Party member Satsuo Yamamoto was in a strong
position to make what he wanted, and so chose the latest novel by Tatsuzo
Ishikawa, a writer who shared his political sympathies and had previously provided
the source material for Yamamoto’s The
Human Wall (1959).
Adapted by one-man scriptwriting
machine Kaneto Shindo, The Tycoon
stars So Yamamura as the titular character, Kappei Arima, a business magnate
with his fingers in numerous pies who has plans to build a new railway line and
buy up as much land as possible around the proposed locations of the rail
stations. Protests by residents are dealt with through bribery or intimidation.
Although married, Arima also has two mistresses, and his wife and both
mistresses each have a grown-up son. However, he feels that these women are all
past their prime so, when he notices an attractive young woman, Mitsuko (Ayako
Wakao), working in his office as a poorly-paid bean counter, he hatches a plan
to make her his new mistress.
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Keizo Kawasaki
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Mitsuko is living with Sakai (Keizo
Kawasaki), a struggling artist who believes that he could be successful if he
could only study in Paris. She is largely supporting him on her meagre salary,
and is thoroughly fed up with living in poverty. One day, she finds herself
unexpectedly summoned to Arima’s office and receives a shocking proposal: Arima
offers to pay to send Sakai off to France for three years and provide Mitsuko
with an apartment and an ample allowance if she will be his mistress while
Sakai’s away. Understandably shocked, she initially refuses, but, after talking
it over with Sakai, thoughts of the money encourage them to take a more
pragmatic view, and they decide to accept the offer. Meanwhile, Arima’s
illegitimate sons have both become dissatisfied with their status and decide in
their different ways to do something about it…
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Mitsuko makes her Faustian pact
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Arima’s avarice and
selfishness leave a trail of broken lives in his wake, which explains why the
Japanese title translates as something like ‘Mountains and Rivers of Wounds’.
The character was loosely based on the real-life Yasujiro Tsutsumi, who passed
away at the age of 75 just three weeks after this film was released. Oddly, opera
singer Yoshie Fujiwara (1898-1976) was originally cast as Arima at the
suggestion of producer Masaichi Nagata. According to Satsuo Yamamoto in his autobiography,
it quickly became apparent that Fujiwara could not act, so he was replaced by So
Yamamura – who had actually been Yamamoto’s first choice but was unavailable,
then luckily became available again. Yamamura proved to be the perfect choice
and won a Kinema Junpo Best Actor Award for his performance. The strength of
his portrait is the way in which it shows Arima not as a mere bully, but as a
charismatic man of some humour and charm who knows how to persuade people to
come round to his way of thinking, as he does very effectively with Mitsuko.
Like many Yamamoto
films, The Tycoon is rather long (152
minutes), and in this case it feels it. There’s no real development of the main
protagonist – Arima is a greedy capitalist bastard at the beginning of the
film, and he’s still a greedy capitalist bastard at the end – and it all gets a
bit repetitive as he lights another big cigar and steamrollers the opposition
in yet another board meeting. The sons do not make for very compelling
characters, and Mitsuko’s chance meeting with Arima’s only legitimate son,
Akihiko (Koji Takahashi), which leads to an affair, just seems like a clumsily
contrived excuse to pile on the melodrama. That’s not the silliest part, though
– that prize must be reserved for the scene in which Sakai explains to Mitsuko
that he has been visited by a private detective wanting to investigate the two
of them without saying why and Sakai has told him everything he wanted to know
instead of telling him to sod off as any sane person would do.
Yamamoto was a good
(but in my opinion not great) director, and this is a well-made film, but
sometimes his ideological stance veers too close to communist propaganda, and I
feel that The Tycoon is a case in
point. It’s certainly true that people like Arima exist, but it’s not clear
what the film has to tell us other than that greed is bad, so the
two-and-a-half-hour running time feels unwarranted. Wakao manages to give her
part more depth than most would have managed, and we can see how conflicted Mitsuko
is, but still, it’s a supporting role and the focus is not on her for the most
part. However, despite its flaws, the film was well-received at the time and
ranked 7th on Kinema Junpo’s best films of the year list.
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Yatsuko Tan'ami as one of Arima's mistresses, with a Noh mask of Ko-omote perhaps representing her long-lost innocence
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Thanks to A.K., and to
Coral Sundy for the English subtitles which can be found here.
DVD at Amazon Japan.