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Pale Flower

Originaltitel: Kawaita hana
  • 1964
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 36 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,7/10
4989
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Pale Flower (1964)
DramaKriminalitätRomanze

Ein Gangster wird aus dem Gefängnis entlassen und muss mit den Machtverschiebungen zwischen den Gangs fertig werden, während er sich um eine aufregende Frau kümmert, die beim Glücksspiel in ... Alles lesenEin Gangster wird aus dem Gefängnis entlassen und muss mit den Machtverschiebungen zwischen den Gangs fertig werden, während er sich um eine aufregende Frau kümmert, die beim Glücksspiel in schlechte Gesellschaft geraten ist.Ein Gangster wird aus dem Gefängnis entlassen und muss mit den Machtverschiebungen zwischen den Gangs fertig werden, während er sich um eine aufregende Frau kümmert, die beim Glücksspiel in schlechte Gesellschaft geraten ist.

  • Regie
    • Masahiro Shinoda
  • Drehbuch
    • Shintarô Ishihara
    • Masaru Baba
    • Masahiro Shinoda
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Ryô Ikebe
    • Mariko Kaga
    • Takashi Fujiki
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,7/10
    4989
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Masahiro Shinoda
    • Drehbuch
      • Shintarô Ishihara
      • Masaru Baba
      • Masahiro Shinoda
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Ryô Ikebe
      • Mariko Kaga
      • Takashi Fujiki
    • 30Benutzerrezensionen
    • 50Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos37

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    Topbesetzung51

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    Ryô Ikebe
    Ryô Ikebe
    • Muraki
    Mariko Kaga
    Mariko Kaga
    • Saeko
    Takashi Fujiki
    • Yoh
    Naoki Sugiura
    • Aikawa
    Shin'ichirô Mikami
    Shin'ichirô Mikami
    • Reiji
    Isao Sasaki
    • Jiro
    Kôji Nakahara
    • Tamaki
    • (as Koji Nakahara)
    Chisako Hara
    • Yakuza's Lover
    Seiji Miyaguchi
    Seiji Miyaguchi
    • Gang leader Funada
    Eijirô Tôno
    Eijirô Tôno
    • Gang Leader Yasuoka
    Mikizo Hirata
    • Mizuguchi
    Reizaburô Yamamoto
    Reizaburô Yamamoto
    Kyû Sazanka
    Kyû Sazanka
    • Imai
    Hideo Kidokoro
    Akio Tanaka
    • Patron
    Hiroshi Mizushima
    Isao Tamagawa
    Shin'ya Mizushima
    • Sabu
    • Regie
      • Masahiro Shinoda
    • Drehbuch
      • Shintarô Ishihara
      • Masaru Baba
      • Masahiro Shinoda
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen30

    7,74.9K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    Akahige

    Japanese film adaptation of "On the Road"

    Whereas "Blue Velvet" is about the lengths that people go to for sexual gratification, "Pale Flower" is about that lengths that people go to for a few "kicks," kind of like a Japanese gangster adaptation of Kerouac's "On the Road."

    Upon attempting to release "Pale Flower," the studio's censor banned the film, and this fact says quite a bit about the temperature of Post-War Japan's pop culture, and the target audience of this film. While the director claims the film is about Japan's uncertain stance in the Cold War, it may be more accurate to say that the film is about Shinoda's Nihilistic stance towards Japan's relationship to the world's superpowers.

    And while nihilism describes Shinoda, existentialism may better describe Muraki and Saeko. Gambling, animalistic sex, drugs, all in an effort to just feel something, anything, and to get lost in the moments those emotions provide. Some would say that the gambling scenes are too long and do little to advance the plot, but this movie's script is made up mostly of unspoken dialogue and it is during the gambling scenes that the main characters are developed.

    While I loved 95 percent of this film's moody and atmospheric lighting, at times it's so dark you can't tell what's going on. Still, the shots are well constructed, the actors well directed, and their performances subtle yet effective. Dig the sexual tension that is constantly building between Muraki and Saeko, and how this tension is dealt with. Somehow I felt myself sympathizing with this killer in a very real way, and this says something about Shinoda's and "Pale Flowers" success.
    9Prof-Hieronymos-Grost

    Beautiful Japanese Noir

    Yakuza, Muraki is released from prison after three years for stabbing and killing a member of a rival gang. He is shocked to find out that his bosses have since amalgamated with the rival gang to fight off the advances of another gang from Osaka which is muscling in on their patch. Muraki is addicted to gambling and soon finds himself back in illegal gambling dens, where he meets with the alluring and seemingly very rich Saeko, a young woman who is addicted to living fast and seeking new thrills to keep her entertained. Through his contacts he introduces her to bigger games where the crime bosses play for much bigger stakes. Shinoda was part of the "New Wave" of Japanese film-makers that were frowned upon in many circles, not least by the Shochiko studio, generally a family orientated studio made famous by Ozu. To make matters worse the author Masaru Baba was less than impressed by the directors visual flair, (a flair that has been compared to that of Jean Pierre Melville and the French New Wave). He believed the visuals clouded his story, as a result the film was banned in Japan due to its over elaborations on illegal gambling. This quickly led Shinoda to the opinion that making films independently was the only way to go in the future, as even Tôru Takemitsu's superb score was frowned upon in Japan. Shinoda's visuals are exceptional and evoke memories of Noir Classics of the past, with all the staples catered for, rain drenched neon lit streets, chiaroscuro lighting, jaunty camera angles, our hero, cigarette on his lip wandering through the night with his lady of dubious past and intentions. As Muraki's affections grow for his new found platonic playmate, it would also seem to mirror the demise of his affections for all things Yakuza, he is a world weary man, an intelligent man, certainly more so than anyone in his own circles, he realises his own merits and deficiencies and comes to the conclusion he could have done better with life. Even Muraki's long time girlfriend who loves him dearly, wants to move on, Muraki is powerless to hold on to her as his infatuation grows, to the point where he is having lucid nightmares concerning Saeko. Pale Flower is not all doom and gloom though, there are respites of wryly dark humour, usually found in the mundane day to day workings of the Yakuza. Pale Flower is an astonishingly rich and layered character study that will keep even those with an aversion to subtitles entertained.
    9evilhinata

    Different type of yakuza movie

    Most of the Asian gangster movies I have seen, promote the brotherhood and the comradery between members, like Young and Dangerous, or have denounced gangster activity, showing if as degrading and evil. This movie does neither. It instead shows how gangster life has both good and bad; however in the end proves to be a pointless cause. The main character, is just released from jail, and immediately reunites with his own yakuza. His life is changed when he meets Saeko, a young woman who is addicted to high stakes life of the yakuza. Together they journey through a city and time, where everything is changing constantly; yet in the end, it becomes apparent that none of these things really matter. This movie is really good. I recommend it.
    10Quinoa1984

    cool as ice, but also on fire too...

    There was never a moment in the first two thirds (or three quarters, whatever the stretch of time) where I had any dislike for Pale Flower, far from it, I was entranced and involved in this world of back-room gambling parlors in Japan where men put down money they know more than likely they'll lose. But there was a moment at that point I mention where I fell in love with the film: our resident anti-hero Muraki (an incredible-if-only-for-his-presence Ryo Ikebe) is having a dream, only it's a fever dream, or a nightmare, or one of those, involving a girl, Saeko (the oddly pretty Mariko Kaga) who he is infatuated with (but doesn't really love exactly, it's hard to point what it is) and a strange half-Chinese drug-peddler, Yoh (a man who doesn't have a line in the whole film, far as I can tell, aside from possibly some creepy-stalking singing, which I'll get to later). The way the director Masahiro Shinoda has Muraki framed is out of the classic nightmare-scenarios - stuck in slow-motion, dark corridors and shadows where he peers in on the characters that stick in his mind in an inverse tint, and he can't take it.

    I went back and watched just that scene twice, just to see how Shinoda framed those shots, where he and his DP chose to pull back with the camera. Throughout the film he and his cameraman have an intelligence to their noirish drama, even in the gambling scenes (which, frankly, I still don't totally understand, though this shouldn't be an issue for Japanese audiences so I let it slide), and it culminates with this dream scene. What made it stand out was that the filmmakers tried to not let us in TOO much into this Muraki, and hey, why not? He's an ex-con with three years in the pen for a murder that he is not sure why he did - or rather, he says it was a simple "him or me" survival thing, and doesn't dwell on it much - and drifts from one place to the next. Saeko does give him some sort of lift or interest in the game of gambling they go for, even as Saeko isn't good at it and has a kind of frightening need to have a RUSH for excitement. When they start to drive past 100 (or SHE does I should note) with another car in the middle of the night, there's little explanation, and less so for why she finds this hysterically funny when they're done.

    But this dream does give us a small window into this man's twisted but empathetic soul. He does want things, or has things he doesn't want, which is this girl he has some care for to not end up with a man who, at one point, stalks him down an empty street at night as if a sinister cat (or a young Harry Lime) was prowling the streets. The plot, as much as it is in the film, doesn't fully kick into gear until the third act anyway as the truce between Yakuza gangs is split by a murder that needs avenging, which, as a sort of self-imposed fate by Muraki would have it, goes where you think it will. The real focus and power and entertainment in Pale Flower is how Shinoda looks at these characters, the rough side that Muraki has just embedded in him, and what humanity (if any) is left in him. This is hard-boiled, existential noir with some experimental beats; it doesn't go quite as far as Branded to Kill, for example, but coming a few years before it is groundbreaking in its small ways.

    It feels hyper-realistic in an exciting way: a sudden attack at a bowling alley is shocking for how it just seems to be part of the way of things at a bowling alley with a high-profile yakuza like Muraki (more to do with how its shot, that it's one long shot this happens in before the angle finally changes as the assassin is taken away - this too has a twist with the young upstart looking up to Muraki, but this is a supporting story). This is about a man who resides in the shadows since its what he knows best, and is not a total shut-out from his bosses, but is so cold as to seem to more 'normal' gangsters as impenetrable. Indeed it speaks to what Shinoda was going for that he cast Ikebe, who wasn't keen on learning a ton of lines, for his walk(!) Add to that a helluva dame in Saeko with a 'big' performance by Kaga mostly in her eyes, and the strange not-quite-but-yes adversary of Fujiki's Yoh, and you got a gritty noir that has the daring to not just be a B-thriller. Look no further than the climax, which aspires to operatic heights long before HK thriller went for all that jazz, and you get the idea.

    To put it another way, this is like what I'd imagine, if he saw it, one of a handful of films the author Donald Westlake would be jealous he didn't get to write.
    9jameselliot-1

    The king of super-cool

    Ryo Ikebe is perfect as the super-cool, sharply dressed ex-con who willingly seals his own fate despite his obvious intelligence and powers of perception. His body language is crisp and economical and his life experience is etched into his face. He is the Japanese doppleganger of the under-appreciated (except by Tarrantino) American actor Robert Forster. This is actually worthy of a remake starring Forster but I heavily doubt if any filmmaker can recreate the style and panache that Mr. Shinoda injected into every shot of the astonishing cinematography. In an interview on the DVD extra, he says that nihilism was his main theme but it's a quiet, shadow-covered nihilism, not explosive and bombastic. There are very few scenes of violence; action is not the show here. The heart of the film is the undefinable relationship between the adrenaline-loving rich girl and the yakuza hit man. Shinoda likens his position in life as the embodiment of post-war Japan caught between the Soviet Union and the USA. The climactic hit is brilliantly choreographed, shot and scored. Certain elements of Pale Flower evoked memories of The Face of Another, a totally different type of film that also explored the existential subjects of solitude, isolation and alienation.

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      Star Ryô Ikebe had considered his career finished. He had frozen on stage, unable to do his lines and left in public humiliation. When contacted to play the lead, he thought it was a cruel joke. The director, however, felt he could draw on this experience to give the performance of his life, which he did.
    • Zitate

      Saeko: I wish the sun would never rise. I love these wicked nights.

    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 319: Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 18. Mai 2023 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Sprache
      • Japanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Flor pálida
    • Drehorte
      • Tokio, Japan(Opening sequence)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Shochiku
      • Bungei Production Ninjin Club
      • Ninjin Club
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 36 Min.(96 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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