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IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES (1972)
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Screening on
World
Movies
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SYNOPSIS:
May contain spoilers... |
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The shocking, controversial and influential film that outraged
censorship boards the world over, and was banned for twenty years. Based
on the true story of geisha Sada Abe, it's the story of a passionate,
but ultimately destructive, sexual obsession.
Director: Oshima Nagisa.
Starring Fuji Tatsuya, Matsuda Eiko.
Running time 100 mins.
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HEROIC-CINEMA'S REVIEW:
I'd probably have to call this one an example of hardcore arthouse
erotica. You might call it a stick film with subtitles. Whatever we call
it, it's a challenging film with an awful lot of sex. An awful lot. The
frequency of the sex gives rise to serious questions about abrasion and
probably exhaustion. Sex sex sex sex sex, lashings of it. Phwoooar.
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Now that the obligatory sleazy response is done with, I can get on with
a more measured review. And this film does deserve a measured review, as
it's a good film dealing with a troubling subject. Abe Sada's obsession
with her lover Kichi, their month-long bonkfest, and the ultimate fate
of the relationship, have been the subject of at least two cinematic
treatments beside this one: The Abe
Sada Story (1975) and Sada (1996).
The story itself, dating from 1936, is well-known in Japan, combining
as it does the topics of sex and death.
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This film, unlike the others, does not attempt to treat Sada's sad
history, something that may have contributed to her rather odd
behaviour. Far from pretending to be a documentary, this view considers
only the snippet of life between Sada's first meeting with her lover,
and the end of their relationship, which was after all only a short
interlude in Sada's apparently long life. But this short snippet is full
of action.
And director Oshima uses this action to try to lure us into the heady
sensual world inhabited by the lovers. He does so with some of the most
explicit sexual scenes I've seen in quite a while: they overshadow
corresponding scenes in Romance, the recent controversial
French film. For something that was made in 1976 in Japan, and released
in some mainstream cinemas, that's quite astonishing. Oshima tricked his
way around the Japanese censorship board, however, by using the French
co-production status to ship the salacious scenes to France for
"production".
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Oshima succeeds to a certain extent: he manages to evoke some sense of
the insular, desire-driven, obsessive world of the lovers. But this
sense is continually being broken by the disjointed nature of the
narrative. We see scenes without any connecting tissue, and have to
spend time inferring from the current scene the missing events.
Disconcerting. Not to mention the frequent and enthusiastic sex, which
tends to distract from the main story. |
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The setting of the mood is probably most successful in one scene where
the pensive Sada turns away a maid offering to clean the room. When told
that it smells (and one can just imagine), Sada replies that "We like
it". And she is disconsolate when she returns to find that the room has
been cleaned in her absence, and their carefully cultivated smell is
gone. Alas, the transitory nature of love. Or something like that.
I can't say I loved it, but I can't say I hated it. A complex film that
produces a complex response, is perhaps how I'd describe it.
Or perhaps as a raving Japanese bonkfest.
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Six detached
penises
of ten.
Reviewed by Alison Jobling
FURTHER READING:
Tom Mes from Midnight Eye.
Freda Freiberg from Senses
Of Cinema.
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H E R O I C - C I N E M A
http://www.heroic-cinema.com
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