Following the iconoclastic
Japanese rogue surrealist’s termination from Nikkatsu after Branded to Kill in 1967, the late Seijun
Suzuki after becoming embroiled in a heated lawsuit which resulted in his films
being briefly withdrawn from circulation and he was blacklisted from the film
industry for nearly ten years. It was
arguably one of the most heated public battles between filmmaker and studio in
cinema history, eclipsing the fallout generated by Terry Gilliam’s battle with
Universal Studios over his film Brazil.
During his hiatus from
mainstream film production as the trial and blacklist ensued, Suzuki kept
himself busy publishing books of essays as well as numerous television films,
miniseries and commercials. While the
industry all but forced Suzuki out of film production, the public feud made the
director a countercultural icon and soon after his films became midnight movie
sensations playing to packed houses. It
was around this period in which Suzuki became acquainted with producer Genjiro
Arato and began work in 1980 on what would soon become known as The Taisho Trilogy.
Set during the era of
Emperor Taisho’s reign from 1912 to 1926, the loosely connected series of films
shared kindred themes focusing on the democratization and Westernization of
Japan including but not limited to art, attire, literature and interior
décor. Tinged with surrealism and a
touch of the supernatural, the Taisho
Trilogy marks a grand departure from the anarchic and manic Nikkatsu
pictures he became infamous for and as of current represents the director’s
most celebrated works in his native country.
Released on blu-ray by Arrow Video in an ornate collectible boxed set,
the Movie Sleuth takes a close look at the late Japanese auteur’s eclectic film
trilogy chronicling a short lived moment in time when Western ideas and norms
became more and more infused within the fabric of Japanese society.
Zigeunerweisen
(1980)
In a bloody crime scene amid
a small seaside village beach, two former Japanese professors and long lost
friends strike an unusual if not contentious reunion. After Nakasago (Yoshio Harada), a former
aristocratic intellectual turned feral nomad in traditional clothing, is
suspected of the murder of a fisherman’s wife and surrounded by an angry mob
with police, Aoichi (Toshiya Fujita) a well-dressed professor of German in Western
clothing, vouches for his friend and the crowd disperses. Soon the two estranged men catch up over dinner
before falling for the same geisha, Koine (Naoko Otani) and indulge in affairs
with one another’s wives and increasingly random sexual encounters.

Unlike the Nikkatsu genre
pictures he began subverting with manic energy and a wild imagination across
the panoramic widescreen, Zigeunerweisen
shot handsomely by Kazue Nagatsuka in
contrast brings the frame down to a stately 1.33:1 academy ratio with much of
the action framed at the center of the screen with a decidedly more nuanced and
methodical pace. While eliminating the
panorama he became known for prior to his exile, the imagery on display is no
less complicated than anything the director has ever attempted with so much
picture information taking place within the square frame it would take a
lifetime’s worth of repeat viewings to internalize all it has to offer. The soundtrack is also far more minimalist
this time around, aided by a haunting score by Kaname Kawachi, sounding very
like the score adorning Masaki Kobayashi’s Kwaidan.
Part historical period drama
chronicling a peculiar moment in Japanese history when Western cultural norms
became more and more enmeshed with Japanese society, part elusive erotic ghost
story/avant garde art installation, Zigeunerweisen
is above all a hypnotic viewing experience of a director’s idiosyncratic
style free of the constraints of bigwigs who tried in vain to reel in the
director’s feverish imagination from orbit.
Rather than take viewers through the Taisho period with traditional
formalism seen in directors like Yasujiro Ozu or Akira Kurosawa, Suzuki’s
approach instead drops you in the middle of a fragmented dreamscape where the
pieces never quite fit together but enough are bobbing around for the viewer to
begin making sense of the mystery.
Instead of creating a standard period drama, Suzuki filters the period
through memories and dreams that are closer to how those who lived through the
time would recall them rather than documenting them verbatim.
The first in a trilogy
comprising the countercultural Japanese auteur’s return to the director’s
chair, Zigeunerweisen was initially
refused theatrical exhibition by Japanese distributors. Rather than accept the defeat of his film
being shelved, director Seijun Suzuki and producer Genjiro Arato decided
instead to tour the film across Japan in a giant inflatable dome tent dubbed Cinema Plaset screening. The tactic worked and the once exiled auteur
who was told he made films that ‘made no sense and no money’ played to great
commercial success despite only being toured in limited screenings. The film went on to garner nine Japanese
Academy Award nominations and won the Best Picture and Best Director
Awards. While the tamest of the
increasingly bizarre and radical Taisho
Trilogy, Zigeunerweisen to this
day is cherished by cinephiles the world over as an enduring classic of
Japanese cinema and cemented the once disgraced and exiled Seijun Suzuki as a
master of the visual medium who broke the mold for how Japanese movies are made
and shown.
Score:
Kagero-Za
(1981)
After the warm welcome back
to Japanese filmmaking with his underground smash hit Zigeunerweisen, Seijun Suzuki reteamed with producer Genjiro Arato
and quickly followed that film up with Kagero-Za,
the least accessible and most radical entry in the trilogy. Set in 1926, Tokyo while sharing some of the
same cast members and set pieces in Zigeunerweisen,
Kagero-Za (translated to Heat Haze Theater) posits playwright
Matsuzaki (Yusaku Matsuda) amid a series of random encounters with a peculiar
woman named Shinako (Michiyo Ookusu) who may or may not be the late wife of the
gunslinger aristocrat Tamawaki (Katsuo Nakamura) or, further still, might just
be a geisha who resembles Shinako when her hair doesn’t turn bright blonde or
her eyes don’t turn bright blue at the turn of a dime.
Working again with Yozo
Tanaka based upon the novel by Kyoka Izuma, Kagero-Za
is something of an even more anarchic reworking of Zigeunerweisen with the series of dopplegangers, ghosts, eroticism
and abrupt changes in tone, narrative, time and space. Kagero-Za
also in contrast turns up the absurdity level to even greater heights, including
but not limited to altering the tone of an actor’s voice to a chipmunk, freely
shifting between slow motion and jump cuts.
In a move precluding Suzuki’s eventual Pistol Opera, a send-up of Noh and Kabuki theater in a larger than
life children’s play whose set breaks down revealing a bladder cherried gateway
to…another dimension? The waking
state? Death or rebirth? Suzuki doesn’t tell.
Far more abstract and
incongruent than Zigeunerweisen and
maybe even the wildest offering in Suzuki’s oeuvre, Kagero-Za reunites the director with the same cinematographer and
composer of his previous film and the results this time around are startlingly
even more unhinged than the film before it.
If the aim of Zigeunerweisen was
to utilize dream logic to express the inner turmoil felt among the characters
as they watch their once traditional Japan slowly grow more Westernized, Kagero-Za plays somewhat like a Dadaist
extremist reworking of the first Taisho
Trilogy entry. Considerably more provocative
with increasingly violent and frequently sexual imagery including a sequence
involving a set of dolls with explicitly detailed genitalia hidden inside, Kagero-Za no doubt would pave the way
for filmmakers such as Shinya Tsukamoto and Takashi Miike for the use of
sexualized props and set pieces.
Kagero-Za
is
arguably the least accessible entry in the Taisho
Trilogy and as such is a comparatively more difficult watch. Much of the imagery playing out over the
final scenes with paintings of naked Japanese women being mutilated comes
across as anarchic, bold and violent, giving Kagero-Za a leg up on Zigeunerweisen
in terms of edginess but ultimately is the weaker entry in hindsight. Whereas Zigeunerweisen
placed the viewer within the state of mind of a set of characters caught in
a transitional period of Japanese history, Kagero-Za
is far more interested in subverting narrative structure and coherence
until the standard beginning, middle and end of a movie becomes
inapplicable. A bolder experiment and
visually more daring exercise, yes, but so far the weakest link in the great
director’s, at times, transcendental trilogy.
Score:
Yumeji
(1991)
After finishing the second
entry in his loosely defined Taisho
Trilogy, director Seijun Suzuki would only go on to direct two more
features in 1985 and wouldn’t return to finishing the trilogy until 1991 with
the eccentric and frequently bizarre biopic, Yumeji. Chronicling the life
(somewhat anyway) of poet and painter Takehisa Yumeji, the film functions as a
loose biography of the artist’s life and his constant pursuit of creative
expression. Akin to Paul Schrader’s Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters and Ken
Russell’s Savage Messiah in their
kindred efforts to giving view to the painter’s own interior struggle to make
the best possible artistic creations he can while freely using dream logic and
surrealism to show what he is thinking, Yumeji
winds up being the most accessible of the trilogy while never letting go of
the director’s uncompromising approach to editing, framing, composition and
narrative structure.
While loosely a nonfiction
piece, this is clearly through and through a Seijun Suzuki film in all of it’s
frustratingly confounding and visually arresting glory. Coincidentally the titular Yumeji is played by Japanese rock star
Kenji Sawada (also in Mishima and
Suzuki’s Pistol Opera) who at the
time proved to be a divisive and controversial casting choice but in hindsight
fits the bill perfectly as an iconoclastic figure yearning to stand out in an
already decidedly zany Japan caught in the throes of tradition vs. modernity. Differing this time around are both the
cinematographer and the soundtrack composer, giving viewers a sensory
experience that is unmistakably part of the Taisho
Trilogy yet with a somewhat more traditional original score.
While maintaining composer
Kaname Kawachi’s services from Zigeunerweisen
and Kagero-Za which tended
towards the atonal and minimalist musical design, Yumeji utilizes a far more haunting and emotionally invested
orchestral score by Shigeru Umebayashi who would go on to score Wong Kar Wai’s In the Mood for Love and 2046.
Curiously, the composer’s theme for Yumeji
wound up being reused to more popular effect in Wai’s In the Mood for Love and anyone familiar with it and 2046 will point to the soundtrack’s
overwhelming influence in our emotional connection to the proceedings
onscreen. It’s a startling departure
from the far more removed and experimental scores of the first two films in the
Taisho Trilogy and one that would
forecast the composer’s eventual collaboration with one of China’s most
celebrated auteurs.
Also swapped out this time
around is cinematographer Kazue Nagatsuka’s 1.33:1 Academy ratio camerawork,
instead opting for 1.66:1 widescreen photography by Junichi Fujisawa, providing
a slightly larger visual scope than previously offered in the first two Taisho films. Suzuki also utilizes far more slow motion
this time around than previously, including a first-person point of view shot
seen from Yumeji’s perspective as he saunters through the red light
district. There’s also more frequent use
of special effects techniques and elaborate set moving set pieces though Zigeunerweisen and Kagero-Za comparatively exploited greater use of blue-screen
matting and superimposition effects work.
Yumeji
is
at once the easiest Taisho film to
digest for being somewhat grounded in nonfiction while providing a more
memorable visual approach and an infinitely more accessible soundtrack. The casting of a well known rock star in the
lead role at the time may have worked against the film’s credibility among film
critics and audiences but in the end left an indelible impression not felt in Kagero-Za. Taken as a biopic while those who look hard
enough will find many of the details to be an accurate portrait of the artist, Yumeji may well be too radical for it’s
own good and will no doubt disappoint those strictly looking for the
facts.
As a Suzuki film, while lacking
the solidarity of Zigeunerweisen, Yumeji is a worthy closing chapter to
his loosely connected Taisho Trilogy which
sport a lifetime’s worth of astonishing and eccentric vistas that stand on
their own as moments of pure visual imagination bubbling up to the surface from
deep within the surrealist madcap Suzuki’s subconscious. All in all, a fitting end to a series of
films that play less like traditional narratives with the hypnotic pull and
power of a dream that surely affected every Japanese man and woman who lived
through one of the strangest times in their history where their sense of self
increasingly began to give way to Western ideals and motifs.
Score:
- Andrew Kotwicki