432-433 Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters & Patriotism

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Gordon
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432-433 Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters & Patriotism

#1 Post by Gordon » Tue Jan 10, 2006 7:35 pm

Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters

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Paul Schrader's visually stunning, collagelike portrait of the acclaimed Japanese author and playwright Yukio Mishima (played by Ken Ogata) investigates the inner turmoil and contradictions of a man who attempted the impossible task of finding harmony among self, art, and society. Taking place on Mishima's last day, when he famously committed public seppuku, the film is punctuated by extended flashbacks to the writer's life as well as by gloriously stylized evocations of his fictional works. With its rich cinematography by John Bailey, exquisite sets and costumes by Eiko Ishioka, and unforgettable, highly influential score by Philip Glass, Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters is a tribute to its subject and a bold, investigative work of art in its own right.

DIRECTOR-APPROVED SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES:

• New, restored 4K digital transfer (Blu-ray) and restored high-definition digital transfer (DVD) of the director's cut, both supervised and approved by director Paul Schrader and cinematographer John Bailey, with 2.0 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu-ray
• Two optional English narrations, including one by actor Roy Scheider
• Audio commentary from 2008 featuring Schrader and producer Alan Poul
• Interviews from 2007 and 2008 with Bailey, producers Tom Luddy and Mata Yamamoto, composer Philip Glass, and production designer Eiko Ishioka
• Interviews from 2008 with Mishima biographer John Nathan and friend Donald Richie
• Audio interview from 2008 with coscreenwriter Chieko Schrader
• Interview excerpt from 1966 featuring Mishima talking about writing
The Strange Case of Yukio Mishima, a 55-minute documentary from 1985 about the author
• Trailer
• PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by critic Kevin Jackson, a piece on the film's censorship in Japan, and photographs of Ishioka's sets


Patriotism

[img]http://criterion_production.s3.amazonaws.com/release_images/380/433_box_348x490_w128.jpg[/img]

Playwright and novelist Yukio Mishima foreshadowed his own violent suicide with this ravishing short feature, his only foray into filmmaking, yet made with the expressiveness and confidence of a true cinema artist. All prints of Patriotism (Yukoku), which depicts the seppuku of a army officer, were destroyed after Mishima's death in 1970, though the negative was saved, and the film resurfaced thirty-five years later. New viewers will be stunned at the depth and clarity of Mishima's vision, as well as his graphic depictions of sex and death. The film is presented here with a choice of Japanese or English intertitles.

Disc Features:

• New, restored high-definition digital transfer of the Japanese and English versions, with optional Japanese or English intertitles
• A 45-minute audio recording of Yukio Mishima speaking to the Foreign Correspondents' Association of Japan
• A 45-minute making-of documentary, featuring crew from the film's production
• Interview excerpts featuring Mishima discussing war and death
• New and improved English subtitle translation
• PLUS: A new essay by renowned critic and historian Tony Rayns, Mishima's original short story, and Mishima's extensive notes on the film's production
Last edited by Gordon on Wed Jan 11, 2006 9:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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zedz
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Mishima

#2 Post by zedz » Tue Jan 10, 2006 10:46 pm

I share the admiration for this film, which I think is Schrader's best (and I think this is Glass's most effective score - for me the numbness started setting in shortly after!). Thanks to your report, I'll track down the DVD.

I find Schrader's output inconsistent, and a lot of his films seem to me to fall tantalisingly short of greatness, but even his worst films (such as Cat People) are interesting. When he fails, at least he doesn't fail for all the usual reasons.

I think he also, in this DVD era, deserves credit as a director who gives good commentary, at least as far as I've heard.

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htdm
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#3 Post by htdm » Wed Jan 11, 2006 8:25 pm

This is an interesting film and I appreciated Gordon and David's posts. Although it was never formally released in Japan (thanks to Yoko) it did raise a lot of interest in the Japanese film press at the time and there was a very informative book on its production that was published right about the time of its release. I remember running across an imported VHS of it in a video store in Tokyo many years back and renting it to see what, if anything, was missing. Only one scene -- the "mirror" scene in Kyoko's House -- had been crudely taped over for a few moments to obscure the nudity, otherwise the film was in tact. Ogata Ken mentioned in an interview at the time that many people were very upset that the film was being suppressed in Japan.

Gordon, you mentioned liking Ogata Ken in the role and I agree. Ironically, casting him was a large bone of contention. The consensus on the Japanese side (including Ogata himself initially) was that Ogata just didn't look enough like Mishima. He only got the part, if I'm not mistaken, because his acting skills were so far and above that of anyone else being considered for the role.

I think the film works well for several reasons. The biggest is that it approaches Mishima through his works rather than trying to be a straightforward biopic. Schrader wisely shot the film entirely in Japan, with a Japanese cast, in Japanese -- all of which I believe shows the regard he held for Mishima and created an atmosphere that is (thankfully) very different from something like Yakuza. That's also why I didn't like the Roy Scheider narration when I first saw the film as I felt it was out of place and cheapened the film in a general way. With Ogata's narration, this is an entirely different film. Especially the flashback scenes don't feel as contrived now (or as cooly distant).

One criticism I've heard by Japan scholars, etc. is that it doesn't feel like a Japanese film. And it doesn't. But in this case, that's not really a bad thing and might even be the best way to handle such a chamelon-like character as Mishima. Any straight biopic would have had to deal with the mass of contradictions that Mishima represented in much greater detail (i.e. his very "Western" tastes in music, architecture, wine, theatre, clothes, some literature, films, etc. versus his very studied "Japanese" sensibilities in those same areas that appear in his writings/interviews). It would also have had to deal more with Mishima's politics (including his writings on Bushido, Hagakure, Wang Yang-ming, the SDF, the Tatenokai as a neo-Fascist private army, etc.) as they were such a large part of his life and what polarized so many people's opinions of him. Not only would such a film have had a nearly incomprehensible story, it never would have found funding or gotten Yoko's permission (she initially gave it, you know) -- which was Schrader's real foot in the door. This granted him access to everything from locations to talent and even Mishima's private artifacts. And this was what really interested the Japanese press. For many Japanese, Mishima is(? was?) a taboo and it took a non-Japanese to pry open his tomb so to speak. No Japanese director could have touched upon Mishima without also dealing with the baggage of his legacy -- Mishima's links to the Japanese right, remilitarization, pro-Emperor-ism, and how he died. I was still pretty young but I remember the sense of embarassment many had about Mishima having killed himself the way he did. This was just the time when the Japanese "miracle" economy was taking off and offered hope that old stereotypes of Japan as a "feudal" or anachronistic nation would be buried. Then along comes Mishima who not only kills himself in what looked like surreal theatre, but he does this via ritual suicide. Even many Mishima supporters immediately distanced themselves from him after his death (Nakasone being one of the most famous).

Hmm...you know, I always thought that I liked Schrader's take on Mishima until I started writing this. Now I'm not so sure. I used to find the film refreshing because it looked at him through his works (and I especially find these particular 4 works an interesting set of choices). But now as I try to get a handle on Schrader's take on Mishima's politics, I'm not so satisfied.

Sorry for the conflicted post, but I wanted to respond in some way.

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Gordon
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#4 Post by Gordon » Fri Jan 13, 2006 1:27 pm

Mishima is way too complicated a figure for Cinema to fully realise in a concise, yet gripping manner. It would really take a great biographer around 500 pages to present a comprehensive portrait of the man. Paul Schrader and Leonard Schrader set out to create a unique, energised and I suppose a somewhat philosophical mosaic (or mandala?) of Mishima's fractured psyche with verve and immediacy. If they had dug deeper, they would have had to realise the script/film-in-itself in a different manner and it may not have been such an unique artistic triumph. This is often the case with exhaustive, chronological biopics.

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zedz
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Philip Glass

#5 Post by zedz » Sun Jan 15, 2006 4:11 pm

Phew! So no pistols at dawn then. I agree that Kundun is real Glass-by-numbers, and the film itself depressingly bland. Scorsese apparently adored the music for Mishima and saw this as his opportunity to get his own Glass score. (The apotheosis of Minimalism as fashion accessory?)

On Mishima Glass just seems to be working so much harder than he does on most of his scores: the themes are strong and intelligently developed, and there's a nice variety to the arrangements / orchestrations. I think the opening theme is gold: how can you not sit up and pay attention after those two minutes of eerie mood-setting, swirling, turbulent climax and ringing, fateful leitmotif. It's a credit to Glass and Schrader that the entire film isn't one long anticlimax after that.

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#6 Post by David Ehrenstein » Sun Jan 15, 2006 8:43 pm

According to a very close gay Japanese friend, same-sexuality is much discussed in Japan since the mid-70's. There are several "out" performers and softcore gay homoerotica is very popular with Japanese women. Moreover Ozu's gayness is widely discussed today.

I can' imagine what Leonard Schrader's film about Edie Sedgewick might be like. Judging from the title her drug-fueled "accident" (in which she set herself on fire) would appear to be its focal point. When Edie was still holding herself together (roughly 1965-67) there was nobody like her. She lit up a room. It's a shame the films Warhol made with her (particularly Beauty #2) aren't distributed or available on home video. Ciao! Manhattan! shows Edie at the end of her tether -- not when she shined.

Judging from some set photos I've seen, Sienna Miller is entirely too fat to play Edie.

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Steven H
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Yokoku (Mishima, 1966)

#7 Post by Steven H » Fri Jan 20, 2006 2:12 pm

Yukoku will be released as a 2-Disc set in Japan.
Trond Trondsen wrote:Earlier this week, the original film negatives of Yukio Mishima's Yukoku (1966) were "discovered" at the late author's residence in Ota Ward, Tokyo. Shortly after his death, it was publicly announced that all copies of the film had been destroyed at the behest of Mishima's widow Yoko. About 40 reels have now been found in what Japanese media refer to as an "airtight tea box". According to Hiroaki Fujii (78), the movie's producer (who at the time apparently urged Yoko to keep the original intact), the recovered elements are in "pristine condition" ...

This is an image from the front page of yesterday's evening edition of Mainichi Shimbun, and the fairly long article continues on page 2. The article says that Hiroyuki Fujii (78) discovered the negative reels inside a tea box, which Yoko had carried when she married Mishima, deep within the darkness of a storehouse at the Mishima mansion [Ota Ward, Tokyo] in 1996. This was after Yoko died. Preserved negatives are about thirty rolls, including Japanese, English, French and German versions. They are in good condition, free from scratches and mold. Recently, Fujii, who was the film's producer, stated that "Awful bootlegs are being widely circulated. To help people fully appreciate the film, we need to screen it in a new print. This year falls on the 80th anniversary of Mishima's birth, and we find it to be a good opportunity." The film is being made into a DVD as an Appendix to The Complete Mishima (2006) from Shinchosha, to be published next spring. As for the English negative (also recovered, according to yesterday's article) we have been told by other sources that the "calligraphic intertitles for the English version were painted by Mishima himself. One striking aspect of these intertitles are the occasional misspellings, which Mishima simply smudged out with a finger. The imperfection left an auratic mark on the textual interruptions, amplifying the powerful experience of watching the real author/director rehearsing reality." Let us therefore hope that no-one decides to "restore" these English intertitles.

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Yokoku (Mishima, 1966)

#8 Post by a7m4 » Fri Jan 20, 2006 3:09 pm

I saw Yukoku as part of UCLA's International Preservation series in August on a double bill with Philippe Garrel's La cicatrice intérieure. I was completely stunned by both of the films and would love to have Yukoku on DVD (La cicatrice intérieure as well!). The version UCLA played was actually a restoration of the French version and someone translated the intertitles live. The intertitles comes before each part (I believe there were 3 or 4) of the film and explain the political situation and the characters motivations. The first intertitle is fairly long and scrolls up the screen, but as the film goes on the intertitles become much shorter. Hopefully the DVD will have English subtitles if not the other language versions of the film as well. Though if the DVD doesn't have any english version and you could get a hold of a translation of the intertitles it would work almost as well to print them out and read them between each part of the film.
UCLA Program Notes wrote:Yukoku (1966, Japan) Directed by Yukio Mishima

Leading postwar writer Yukio Mishima directed this stylized adaptation of his own novel. Mishima himself stars as a disgraced military officer duty bound to commit harakiri after a failed coup attempt. A minimalist yet profoundly romanticized depiction of ritual seppuku, the film testifies to Mishima's evident command of cinematic rhetoric at the same time that it hauntingly prefigures the method and rationale of his own suicide in 1970.

Screenwriter: Yukio Mishima. Cast: Yukio Mishima, Yoshiko Tsuruoka. with French subtitles. 35mm, (no dialog), 30 min.

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Donald Trampoline
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Yokoku (Mishima, 1966)

#9 Post by Donald Trampoline » Fri Jan 20, 2006 5:58 pm

I was at that UCLA screening too, and I was floored by the film. Really excellent and overwhelming.) The quality of the print seemed excellent too. I wonder who you were!

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htdm
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Yokoku (Mishima, 1966)

#10 Post by htdm » Sat Jan 21, 2006 12:24 am

The original English and Japanese versions of Yukoku are shown from time to time in the states but I've never seen the French or German versions (I envy you both). At a screening of the Japanese version at the Japan Foundation several years ago, long time Mishima friend, biographer, translator (and filmmaker) John Nathan also related the story about Mishima writing the intertitles himself.

But the intertitles aren't just expository, they are passages taken from the short novel Yukoku (published the year before the film was produced) which describe the emotional state of a young officer (Mishima) who misses his chance to die with his other officer colleagues in the failed military coup of Feb. 26, 1936.

Since the news article said that they found 30 well-preserved reels and the original film itself is only 4, I imagine that there would be enough material for a second disc.

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Antoine Doinel
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Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters

#11 Post by Antoine Doinel » Sun Apr 02, 2006 5:15 pm

I think Mishima was first Paul Schrader directed film I ever watched, and I loved it. Great, great underappreciated movie.

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Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters

#12 Post by stroszeck » Mon Apr 03, 2006 2:23 am

Mishima is a masterpiece. It's the one that got me addicted to all of Schrader's films. It introduced me to the world of foreign films as well; before seeing Mishima I wasn't into Kurosawa and all that, but when I was a kid and rented the movie because I saw how cool the box looked, the rental guy recommended some other foreign stuff. A film which combines an interesting biography, beautiful visual compositions, and a couple of seppuku scenes can only be a great film...right?

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MISHIMA

#13 Post by pemmican » Wed Apr 05, 2006 2:48 am

Just some trivia -- I lived in Japan for awhile, and occasionally you'd see things that were considered "collectable" being sold for outrageous prices. One such item was an American VHS edition of MISHIMA, being sold at a collector's video store for something like $1000! (The VHS version WAS out of print at that point, but not THAT hard to find -- the people who were selling it were clearly clueless). I'm not sure if anyone's mentioned this -- I only skimmed the above -- but I don't believe this film received much/any distribution in Japan, due to the controversy over his homosexuality. The Japanese I talked to about it were unaware that an American filmmaker had made a biographical film on Mishima.

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Polybius
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Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters

#14 Post by Polybius » Wed Apr 05, 2006 9:03 pm

It's been so long since I've seen Mishima that I can't venture a worthy opinion on it. I didn't care for it when I saw it (my lingering perception was that it was a little too indulgent of Mishima's rather untenable worldview, something that I always find a little suspicious, even a touch patronizing, coming from westerners toward certain aspects of Asian culture...they can come off a little like Dern's character in Tattoo), but, as I said, that was long, long ago and I probably would have different impressions, now.

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zedz
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Eiko Ishioka

#15 Post by zedz » Thu Apr 06, 2006 12:10 am

davidhare wrote:If anything, Schrader's treatment of the material is extremely effective in "unpeeling" the layers of Mishima's personality, and the formally beautiful staging of the stories is something new in Shrader's work.
I think the collaboration with Eiko Ishioka is crucial here. If you like the look of the film, you may even get something out of the utterly ridiculous The Cell. Ishioka's distinctive contribution can also be seen in Coppola's Dracula (and then there's that great Bjork video).

It's to Schrader's credit that the production design doesn't outclass everything else in the movie (as seems to be the common thread in the rest of Ishioka's filmography) and is smartly integrated into the overall structure of the film.

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davida2
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Mishima

#16 Post by davida2 » Sat May 27, 2006 6:01 am

I just finished reading John Nathan's Mishima bio - and was wondering if that's the definitive one or if there's something better out there. Nathan - and Richie's Japan Journals give a lot of insight into the non-discussion of homosexuality, but if anyone has a recommendation for a better bio, I'm all ears.
David Ehrenstein wrote:According to a very close gay Japanese friend, same-sexuality is much discussed in Japan since the mid-70's. There are several "out" performers and softcore gay homoerotica is very popular with Japanese women. Moreover Ozu's gayness is widely discussed today.
I'd be very shocked to discover otherwise. Any number of things like Hush! and Okoge have appeared globally, and Oshima's Gohatto is quite intriguing: I found it to be rather tepid as a film, but it presents scenarios that aren't exactly unusual, historically speaking, and in many ways is quite consistent thematically with his other work.

I would be interested in seeing a Celluloid Closet-type look into Japanese film; there's a much more academically-inclined 'Queering Bollywood' site that makes for awfully interesting reading.

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Scharphedin2
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Mishima

#17 Post by Scharphedin2 » Sat May 27, 2006 5:51 pm

I just finished John Nathan's Mishima bio - and was wondering if that's the definitive one or if there's something better out there. Nathan - and Richie's Japan Journals give a lot of insight into the non-discussion of homosexuality, but if anyone has a recommendation for a better bio, I'm all ears.
Davida, John Nathan's biography and Henry Scott Stokes "The Life and Death of Yukio Mishima" are generally considered to be the two key works by westeners on Mishima. Both were written by people, who knew Mishima personally, and, as far as I remember they complement each other nicely.

Scott Stokes' book was not quite as literary as Nathan's (if I remember correctly), but he used Mishima's concept of the "four rivers" in his life very effectively in strucuturing the latter part of his biography. Shortly before committing suicide, a big exhibition was staged in Mishima's honor. It was an exhibition to display the huge body of work that Mishima had created in his life up to that point. This body of work included the voluminous writing, the plays, acting, directing, song writing, photo modelling, interest in martial arts sports and body building, etc. On Mishima's request the exhibition was designed as four rivers representing the four currents that ran through his work, as he saw it himself. One "river" was dedicated to his writing, another to his dramatic work, a third to the physical side of his life/work, and the last to "action."

I saw Schrader's film quite a while ago, and do not remember the extent to which he incorporated this thematic structure into his film, although he clearly used the idea from an aesthetic standpoint.

Aside from Nathan and Scott Stokes, I remember reading a short, and very different appreciation of Mishima's work by Marguerite Yourcenar. The literary works of Mishima that stand out the clearest in my memory are his first book "Confession of a Mask," "The Sound of Waves," "Temple of the Golden Pavillion," the novellas "Patriotism" and "An Act of Worship," the book length essays on "Hagakure" and "Sun and Steel," and, above all, his final work, the cycle of novels called "The Sea of Fertility." However, I think Mishima is the kind of author that once you become smitten with him, you will probably want to read everything you can get your hands on. There are very clear stylistic and thematic phases in his authorship, but there is also a very strong throughline thorugh it all, and I think it helps to read his works alongside the biographies by Nathan and/or Scott Stokes. Enjoy!

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davida2
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#18 Post by davida2 » Sat May 27, 2006 6:24 pm

Well, cinematically Okoge, Hush!, Taboo (Gohatto), Shinjuku Triad Society & Slight Fever Of A 20 Year Old are all out internationally on DVD, along with a lot of anime - series like Kizuna, Descendants Of Darkness and some others; and also some 'pink' films.

I haven't run across any translated film-specific writing, but Ihara Saikaku's Great Mirror Of Male Love is one of many books that add a bit of context a film like Oshima's Gohatto. I'd be willing to bet there's at least a little film writing, just nothing translated...

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davida2
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Mishima

#19 Post by davida2 » Sun May 28, 2006 6:36 am

Scharphedin2 wrote:However, I think Mishima is the kind of author that once you become smitten with him, you will probably want to read everything you can get your hands on. There are very clear stylistic and thematic phases in his authorship, but there is also a very strong throughline thorugh it all, and I think it helps to read his works alongside the biographies by Nathan and/or Scott Stokes. Enjoy!
Thanks for the recommendations - already picked up The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea, Confessions and Temple - I've been a fan of the Ichikawa Enjo for a while, so I'm pretty eager to start that last one especially. I've been spending lots of time lately with Nabokov - another of those 'want to read everything you can get your hands on' writers - and I actually need to shift to something else worthwhile for a bit.
davidhare wrote:Thanks for that - I always found it impossible as a geijin to even come near gay Japan, outside of commercial junk like Roppongi.
Sure - most of these were suggested to me - most of the films (apart from Gohatto and Okoge) got zero promotion or critical attention. Thus far at least, we don't have an internationally famous (at least in critical circles) out, contemporary Japanese filmmaker of the stature of (for example) Stanley Kwan or Tsai Ming-liang, so comparatively it doesn't look like much is happening; but I think that's an incorrect assumption, and there are definitely those classic filmmakers...

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Scharphedin2
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Yukoku

#20 Post by Scharphedin2 » Sat Aug 19, 2006 3:08 pm

I went ahead and ordered the Japanese DVD of Yukoku. It contains, as described above, four separate versions of the film, the difference in each print being the hand-printed (by Mishima) intertitles, which really are scrolls of text from the short story Patriotism

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HerrSchreck
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#21 Post by HerrSchreck » Sat Aug 19, 2006 3:16 pm

Once I was walking across Central Park inna summertime just before a date hookup and a bunch of young, pretty, rich college girls sunbathing on the lawn looked at the book I was carrying while walking and one yelled out "I love guys who read Nietzsche," whereby a couple of the chicks with her started cracking up, thinking she was just coming on to me and didn't really mean the kind of guy who'd carry the book. "But I'm serious," she insisted loudly.

I had an imminent date so I have no poot & spoot story as windup w this pack of chicks.

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Scharphedin2
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#22 Post by Scharphedin2 » Sat Aug 19, 2006 3:43 pm

:shock: Nietzsche I tried, didn't work... then of course the book I chose to bring with me was "The Gay Science."

In fact, I was not entirely truthful... I have met women while reading books. One really sweet girl struck up conversation with me once... the book I was reading then was "The Sorrows of Young Werther," which is almost as funny as the Mishima debacles. Another fantastic story was a girl I slightly knew... she was the epitome of Goth, beautiful girl in fact (and unbeknownst to me, she was putting herself through college as a dominatrix). I ran into her at a coffee shop while reading "The Street of Crocodiles" by Bruno Schulz. She happened to be a big fan of the Brothers Quay and owned their films on VHS. I was quick to accept an invitation to come over and watch the films at her place... of course, no one will ever believe that it was strictly out of an interest to see the work of the Quays again.

My very favorite "book encounter," however, happened in the Chicago subway. It was summer, and I had had my eyes on the latest book by Milan Kundera in a hard cover edition all year. I had found it discounted at 50% and had taken the plunge on it. Now, I was waiting for the train with the book tucked under my arm. Suddenly, someone next to me commented that it was a really nice book. I looked up, and here there was the most gorgeous girl dressed in a black summerdress, deeply tanned, long raven hair... a real Mediterranean beauty. Always at that time preoccupied with my literary pursuits, I made some hasty, stumbling remarks about Kundera and how much I loved his books... A train pulled up, as I asked her if she liked him too. She threw me this really funny smile that told me in so many words that I was just not getting it, and right before turning and entering the train, she said: "... I just like new books." The train pulled away from the platform, and I looked down at the nice book in my hand, and I had to smile to myself at its title... "Slowness."

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Ashirg
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Yukoku

#23 Post by Ashirg » Wed Aug 15, 2007 10:39 pm

Now that Mishima has been confirmed, I wonder if Criterion will include Mishima's Yukoku as an extra?

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Steven H
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Yukoku

#24 Post by Steven H » Thu Aug 16, 2007 12:26 am

Ashirg wrote:I wonder if they will include Mishima's Yokoku as an extra?
But do you include the Japanese intertitle version, or the English that Mishima personally translated (which has all kinds of corrections)? I'm going with "both" (there's a German, Dutch, and French titled version as well.) Here's an interview with Mishima in English, and another, and the entire English version of Yukoku on Google video (from a poorish VHS, apparently).

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Cronenfly
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#25 Post by Cronenfly » Sat Aug 18, 2007 10:46 pm

Anybody care to speculate on who Criterion is getting the rights for Mishima from? I'm well aware of Warner having R1 rights before now, but is it possible that the rights have been shifted (i.e. in trade for the Lightness commentary)? Schrader mentions on his commentary that Toho put a good chunk of money in: is it possible that, like the 400 Blows reissue being licensed directly from MK2 with no nod to Wellspring, Toho could be the licensee? Just to arouse some more speculation. For Mishima I know that American Zoetrope has been suggested, but that would be a first (that I know of), though there are always first times (e.g. Lionsgate).

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