Obscure Japanese Film # 259
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| Eijiro Tono and Yoko Minakaze |
After
a man trying to find oil in order to revive the fortunes of his dying
seaside town commits suicide, the locals blame Fumiko (Yoko
Minakaze), a young woman who had rejected his sudden offer of
marriage. Fumiko lives with her father, Tokinosuke (Eijiro Tono,
great), who has been going to pieces since his wife ran off with
another man. Ostracised by the townsfolk, Fumiko heads towards the
sea with the intention of ending it all, but is spotted by an
itinerant oil worker (Shuji Sano) who prevents her from going through
with it. He and four other men have been left stranded since the
suicide of their boss and Fumiko is moved by their kindness and
relates to their outside status.
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| Shuji Sano |
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| Sachiko Hidari, Minakaze and Yoko Kozono |
It
emerges that Fumiko has two female friends, Yoko (Yoko Kozono/Kosono)
and Taniko (Sachiko Hidari), with whom she has made a suicide pact,
each carrying a deadly pill in a locket around their necks. Yoko’s
reason for being miserable is that she’s the daughter of a
concubine (Sadako Sawamura), while Taniko’s is that she’s
physically disabled and has to walk with a crutch. The women have
agreed that they will all commit suicide together. Meanwhile, the
stranded workers are debating whether to flee the town and escape the
debts they’ve incurred or stick it out, hoping that a long-awaited
telegram will arrive telling them to come to a new oil field. Then
Kurama (Yunosuke Ito), an embezzler on the run from the police,
arrives and claims to be an oil surveyor who intends to restart the
drilling…
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| Yunosuke Ito |
This
Shintoho production has an unusual story which is a creation of Rinzo
Shiina (1911-73), who wrote the original screenplay and had written
the novel on which director Heinosuke Gosho’s Where Chimneys are
Seen (1953) had been based. However, there are certain
similarities to Vittorio De Sica’s Miracle in Milan (1951),
which I strongly suspect influenced this film. With all the talk of
suicide, it first appears to be a rather bleak drama, but gradually
transforms into a comedy. It’s not like any other Gosho film I’ve
seen, and I found it quite engaging and charming in the way it takes
delight in continually subverting our expectations. For example, when
Fumiko’s wealthy aunt who has been turning down her father’s
requests for money appears, we expect that she’ll be a terrible
harridan – especially as she’s played by Eiko Miyoshi – but
this proves not to be quite the case.
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| Eiko Miyoshi |
It’s
surprising to see Yoko Minakaze (1930-2007) in the lead role. She
doesn’t look like a film star and, indeed, wasn’t one, but for
some mysterious reason I felt her lack of star quality somehow worked
in this film’s favour. Coming from the theatre, she enjoyed a long
career on stage as well as screens both big and small, but this may
well be her most major role in movies.
It’s
worth noting that screenwriter Rinzo Shiina had converted to
Christianity in 1950 and it’s easy to see how his beliefs
influenced this work. It’s also perhaps the reason composer Toshiro
Mayuzumi used choral music for his score, although this is one
element I didn’t particularly care for. In most respects, though,
this film is a gem and it’s also beautifully shot by Joji Ohara,
who won a Mainichi Film Concours Award for Best Cinematography for
his pains, making this a film crying out for a good quality release.
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