Dans le bidonville d'Osaka, où la pauvreté est omniprésente, les agressions, les vols et la prostitution sont le quotidien des habitants. Pour leur subsistance, ces derniers peuvent vendre l... Tout lireDans le bidonville d'Osaka, où la pauvreté est omniprésente, les agressions, les vols et la prostitution sont le quotidien des habitants. Pour leur subsistance, ces derniers peuvent vendre leur sang à la belle Hanako.Dans le bidonville d'Osaka, où la pauvreté est omniprésente, les agressions, les vols et la prostitution sont le quotidien des habitants. Pour leur subsistance, ces derniers peuvent vendre leur sang à la belle Hanako.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
Avis à la une
This is, by Ôshima's standards, a happy ending, but it does raise the question of why she couldn't have left earlier. The answer I imagine is that Ôshima felt a need to organize the lumpenproletariat to destroy their essentially bourgeouis, vampiric masters, before she could abandon them to their own fate. What they're going to do is not clear to me. There are still no jobs. What Miss Honoo is going to do is also unclear to me. Her skill set seems to consist of whoring, selling her blood, and incitement to riot.
I suppose it's symbolic. Having cleaned up the Osaka slum, she is now going to clean up the rest of Japan and possibly the world. Film, however, is a very literal medium, and therefore I am more concerned with the rather lackadaisical manner in which people riot, particularly the big guy with the wooden pole.
None of which has anything to do with the movie's impact in 1960, when it was novel, shocking and had something to say that needed to be said. Nowadays, after more than half a century of increasing violence on the screen, it lacks snap.
The movie is modern in both: style and themes. I dare saying that this style marked many great contemporary directors (as different as Tarantino, Jia Zhang-KE or Michael Mann). It has, for instance, a questioning and a renewal of the dramatic content that a scene can exhibit. Another novelty in Oshima's style is the manner in which he treats social themes: a mixture of documentary-style and fiction-style, greatly developed later by Jia Zhang Ke, and having an affiliation with the French nouvelle vague (the time overlap is no coincidence).
As for the themes: even if Mizoguchi was already interested in social problems and their reflection upon the individual, he was never so pessimistic as Oshima. Watch the movie and you'll see what I mean. But, in spite of a much more cruel view upon society, Oshima has the same deep message as Mizoguchi: the beauty. You can see it in every scene. Look carefully: there is much light in this dark movie!
Le saviez-vous
- Citations
Shin, leader of gang: As soon as you stop moving, it's over.
New gang member Takeshi: You mean like a top?
Shin, leader of gang: A top?
New gang member Takeshi: A spinning top.
Shin, leader of gang: What do you mean?
New gang member Takeshi: If falls when it stops spinning.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Les cent et une nuits de Simon Cinéma (1995)
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 27min(87 min)
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1