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Sakuran (2007)

Director: Mika Ninagawa

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From Time Out London

As the filmmaking debut of a world-class photographer, one rightfully expects ‘Sakuran’ to look stunning. But director Mika Ninagawa’s aesthetic aptitude still manages to impress, crowding the frame with a striking richness of detail, flush with floral prints, shimmering patterns and blocks of warm primary colour. The story struggles for equal impact: in eighteenth-century Japan, a young girl is trained as a courtesan, with all the tradition and ceremony such a position demands.

The characters are likeable but thin and, despite a few raw, persuasive scenes, the script feels emotionally stunted. But the film’s most unforgivable flaw is its soundtrack: another period film aching for that modern touch, ‘Sakuran’ is drowned in jazz piano, digital beats and the unmistakable sound of a young woman passionately strangling her cat.

Author: Tom Huddleston

Time Out London Issue 1984, Aug 28-Sept 3 2008


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Cast & crew

Director: Mika Ninagawa

Cast: Anna Tsuchiya, Kippei Shiina, Yoshino Kimura, Hiroki Narimiya full cast

Rated: 15

Duration: 110 mins

UK Release: Aug 29 2008



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