Based on a screenplay by the late filmmaking legend Akira Kurosawa, Kei Kumai's THE SEA IS WATCHING follows the lives of women residing and working at a brothel in Edo-era Japan. Amidst the daily rountines of tea and gossip, the ladies of the Ashi No Ya house, inevitably get emotionally involved with their clients. Young, naive .. Read more
| Starring | Nagiko Tono, Masatoshi Nagase |
|---|---|
| Director | Ken Kumai |
| Genres | Drama, Romance, World Cinema |
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Based on a screenplay by the late filmmaking legend Akira Kurosawa, Kei Kumai's THE SEA IS WATCHING follows the lives of women residing and working at a brothel in Edo-era Japan. Amidst the daily rountines of tea and gossip, the ladies of the Ashi No Ya house, inevitably get emotionally involved with their clients. Young, naive O-Shin (Nagiko Tohno) falls for an inexperienced samurai, even though he is from a higher social class. Meanwhile, her big-sister figure, Kikuno (Misa Shimizu), has both a thuggish boyfriend and a kind, older man vying for her affections. Eventually, Ryosuke (Masatoshi Nagase), a troubled wanderer, visits the brothel, and he forms an unlikely connection with O-Shin--one that may have a lasting effect on her life.
Filmed entirely on a set that recreates pre-20th-century Japanese village life, THE SEA IS WATCHING focuses on the brothel and its denizens with a tight lens. Although the actors turn in fine performances, the real stars of the show are the costumes and sets, which recall an era of Japanese history that few contemporary films touch on. Surprisingly romantic, this tribute to Kurosawa is an enjoyable outing, strengthed by Kumai's vivid vision of the past.
| Starring | Nagiko Tono, Masatoshi Nagase |
|---|---|
| Director | Ken Kumai |
| Studio | SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 55 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama, Romance, World Cinema |
| Language | DVD: Japanese |
| Dubbed | Italian, Spanish |
| Subtitles | DVD: Arabic, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Portugese, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish |
| Released | DVD: 21 Jun 2004 Production year: 2002 |
| Format | DVD |
Under-rated director Kei Kumai assumed control of this tale set in a 19th-century brothel on the death of Akira Kurosawa. An air of what might have been under Kurosawa's direction hangs heavy over the story of geisha Nagiko Tohno's encounters with disreputable samurai Hidetaka Yoshioka and Masatoshi Nagase. Kumai's adaptation of a brace of Shugoro Yamamoto short stories never quite gels; while he ably re-creates the atmosphere within Tokyo's infamous Okabasho district and conceives some affecting monochrome flashbacks to Nagase's childhood, he's saddled with parallel plots that are only resolved by a dismayingly gauche contrivance. However, Misa Shimizu impresses as Tohno's sagacious colleague.
If you expect it to be a Kurasawa film you may get disappointed, but than again, it is not a Kurasawa film. The factor of realism is great, impressive visually (isnt it what a cinema is all about). I loved it it is a very "kind" movie.
The life and loves of a prostitute in a Geisha house who seem to have difficulty in finding or accepting love but no problem attracting losers.The photography is superb and some of the scenes seem to be homages to the Ukiyo-e paintings of Hokusai and Hiroshige. The final storm is impressively filmed but they don't seem to have made enough of an effort to get away. The story is by Akira Kurosawa and the accompanying documentary tries to play up the feminist angle, with which I disagree, the wives in Ran and Throne of Blood would be stronger feminists then these women who are mainly victims of bad luck.