The serenity of the Daibutsu was missing from the 1954
set-in-Kamakura Mikio Naruse film I saw one day after the
2015 Hong Kong International Film Festival came to an end
Sound of the Mountain (aka The Echo) (Japan, 1954)
- Mikio Naruse, dir.
- Starring: Setsuko Hara, So Yamamura, Ken Uehara
The 2015 Hong Kong International Film Festival drew to a close on April 6th but my film viewing -- and reviewing -- goes on, including of some fest offerings that also are being screened this and next month in the Hong Kong International Film Festival Society's HK Cine Fan program. Most notably for me, the Mikio Naruse cinematic feast continues -- with not only with additional screenings of such as Repast and Daughters, Wives and a Mother side but other films starring Setsuko Hara and Hideko Takamine, two legendary Japanese actresses whose exalted reputations are well earned, which did not play at this year's fest!
Among these additional Naruse offerings is Sound of the Mountain, in which Setsuko Hara and Ken Uehara once more play a married couple. In this adaptation of a novel by Nobel Prize winner Yasunari Kawabata
though, their characters -- housewife Kikuko and businessman Shuichi --
reside in the lovely temple town of Kamakura (where the actress retired
to in 1963 and has remained a resident) with Shuichi's parents, who are
far more grateful of the care and respect that their daughter-in-law
accord them than their son is of his wife.
So
affectionate is Shuichi's father Shingo (So Yamamura) towards Kikuko
that his wife Yasuko (Teruko Nagaoka) is moved to point out that he's
not as nice towards their own daughter Fusako (Chieko Nakakita). Even
so, Yasuko herself chastises Fusako, who ran away from her husband's
household on two separate occasions -- what is it with wives
running away in Naruse's movies?! -- by telling her that her in-laws
would treat her better if she behaved well towards them, the way that
Kikuko does towards Shingo and Yasuko.
In
contrast, Shuichi finds his wife wanting -- criticizing her for being
too child-like, with the implication being that she's not as sexually
sophisticated as he would like. Dissatisfied with Kikuko, he has an
affair with another woman, and so obviously that his parents and wife
know what's going on (despite his mistress living in Tokyo, where
Shuichi and Shingo regularly commute to work from Kamakura). And after
Shingo -- who also happens to be Shuichi's boss -- decides to try to put
a stop to his son's philandering ways, further revelations are made
that really are pretty shocking -- especially in a 1954 mainstream
Japanese domestic drama!
Once
again, it seems almost effortless for Setsuko Hara to play the kind of
woman with both inner and external beauty, whom only a callous cad and
moral degenerate would not be able to appreciate. At the same time,
behind her luminous smiles, there is so much suffering, sorrow, and
sufficient steel to carry out the kind of dramatic action that shows
that, socially constrained as she may be -- given her being a married
woman of a certain class in 1950s Japan -- she still can exert
significant control over certain parts of her life and that of others.
For
his part, So Yamamura convincingly portrays a good-hearted
establishment patriarch whose rule nonetheless sadly is found wanting,
leading his children to stray from the respectable ways one would have
expected them to follow while Ken Uehara once more manfully takes on the
thankless role of a husband who doesn't appreciate having the spouse
that so many other people would love to have. In their own way, both of
their characters reveal how men who appear in privileged positions
still can't always have what they want, in the domestic sphere, if not
professional one. In so doing, they collectively help to paint a
portrait of the Japanese family that's far more complex than the stereotypes
would have it being.
My rating for this film: 8.0
4 comments:
Does your area have a lot of film festival? Our little town just brought some up resently.
Coffee is on
Hi peppylady --
Yes, Hong Kong has a number of film festivals. The biggie is the the Hong Kong International Film Festival but we also have the Summer International Film Festival, the Hong Kong Asian Film Festival, the Chinese Documentary Film Festival, the European Union Film Festival, the Hong Kong Jewish Film Festival, etc., etc.! And to add to all this, since 2013, we've had HK Cine Fan -- which is year round -- and regular programs at the Hong Kong Film Archive. ;b
Great shot and an interesting post.
Hi Carver --
Thanks -- and this may be the first film review of mine that you've read, right? ;b
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