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The Life of Oharu (1952)

Director: Kenji Mizoguchi

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From Time Out Film Guide

This chronicle of the decline of a woman, from service in the imperial court of 17th-century Japan through exile, concubinage and numerous stages of prostitution, should further enhance Mizoguchi's reputation as the cinema's greatest ever director of women, and one of the most meticulous craftsmen of the period film. To place too much emphasis on the period setting is misleading, however; for despite the historical distance from feudal Japan, the social evils exposed have an unmistakable contemporary relevance. Feminists should unequivocally applaud the narrative simplicity and the clarity with which the second-class status of women is implicitly questioned almost everywhere in the film. It's also an extremely elegant movie whichever way you look at it: tiny details of movement by the actors, beautiful compositions and photography throughout, single fluid takes often serving to state a whole scene.

Author: RM 0000-00-00 00:00:00

Time Out Film Guide


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User reviews of this film

  • Technoguy said...
    Posted on Jun 13 2008 00:33 I felt this film showed how a woman's life deteriorates
    if she's in a backward society.The feudal order was
    a way of commenting on his own times.It brought to mind Bresson's 'Au Hasard Balthasar'.We see how a donkey's life deteriorates as it passes to successive owners.It was a deeply religious film.Similarly 'O-Haru'
    is brilliantly realized and just as shocking aspecially when she's shown by a teacher to his students as an
    example of life's transcience-'a goblin cat'.She becomes an outcast,an exile as she is a mere part of
    each man's possessions.
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