The Geisha House (1999)

Review: The Geisha House (1999)

Director: Kinji Fukasaku

Cast: Maki Miyamoto, Sumiko Fuji, Mai Kitajima, Masahiko Tsugawa, Kaho Minami,

Maki Miyamoto
Maki Miyamoto
Sumiko Fuji
Sumiko Fuji
Mai Kitajima
Mai Kitajima
Masahiko Tsugawa
Masahiko Tsugawa
Kaho Minami
Kaho Minami

Plot: Set in the late 1950s, when geisha culture was threatened by moral crusades, it tells the story of Omocha (Miyamoto Maki), a young girl who sees the geisha life as a way to lift her poverty-stricken family from their hand-to-mouth existence. Through her eyes, we see the protocols and complex financial relationships which dictate the running of the geisha house. Fukasaku's film is a work of great delicacy with moments of hypnotic beauty, and his tender direction, often touched with a sense of wonder, fills the screen with lovingly constructed scenes. At its heart is the poignant situation of the women who must sacrifice their normal relationships to live an ambiguous life in which they are a key part of society while being kept, for the most part, on its periphery, like perpetual mistresses.

Read More

DVD (actually Blu-Ray) of the Week: <i>Battle Royale</i> (2000)

DVD (actually Blu-Ray) of the Week: Battle Royale (2000)

It was unfortunate that until the very end of his career, the Japanese director Kinji Fukasaku was known in North America mostly for his worst film: The Green Slime. This was an “international” production, shot in Japanese studios with an […]

Read More