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Mishima - une vie en quatre chapitres

Original title: Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters
  • 1985
  • Tous publics
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
16K
YOUR RATING
Mishima - une vie en quatre chapitres (1985)
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Psychological DramaBiographyDrama

A fictionalized account in four chapters of the life of celebrated Japanese writer Yukio Mishima.A fictionalized account in four chapters of the life of celebrated Japanese writer Yukio Mishima.A fictionalized account in four chapters of the life of celebrated Japanese writer Yukio Mishima.

  • Director
    • Paul Schrader
  • Writers
    • Chieko Schrader
    • Paul Schrader
    • Leonard Schrader
  • Stars
    • Ken Ogata
    • Masayuki Shionoya
    • Hiroshi Mikami
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    16K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Paul Schrader
    • Writers
      • Chieko Schrader
      • Paul Schrader
      • Leonard Schrader
    • Stars
      • Ken Ogata
      • Masayuki Shionoya
      • Hiroshi Mikami
    • 53User reviews
    • 81Critic reviews
    • 84Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

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    Photos136

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    Top cast53

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    Ken Ogata
    Ken Ogata
    • Yukio Mishima
    Masayuki Shionoya
    Masayuki Shionoya
    • Morita
    Hiroshi Mikami
    Hiroshi Mikami
    • Cadet #1
    Junya Fukuda
    • Cadet #2
    Shigeto Tachihara
    • Cadet #3
    Junkichi Orimoto
    • General Mashita
    Naoko Ôtani
    Naoko Ôtani
    • Mother
    • (as Naoko Otani)
    Gô Rijû
    • Mishima, Age 18-19
    • (as Go Riju)
    Masato Aizawa
    Masato Aizawa
    • Mishima, Age 9-14
    Yuki Nagahara
    Yuki Nagahara
    • Mishima, Age 5
    Kyûzô Kobayashi
    • Literary Friend
    • (as Kyuzo Kobayashi)
    Yuki Kitazume
    • Dancing Friend
    Haruko Katô
    Haruko Katô
    • Grandmother
    • (as Haruko Kato)
    Yasosuke Bando
    Yasosuke Bando
    • Mizoguchi
    Hisako Manda
    • Mariko
    Naomi Oki
    • First Girl
    Miki Takakura
    • Second Girl
    Imari Tsujikoichi Sato
    • Madame
    • (as Imari Tsuji)
    • Director
      • Paul Schrader
    • Writers
      • Chieko Schrader
      • Paul Schrader
      • Leonard Schrader
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    7.915.6K
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    Featured reviews

    Dan1863Sickles

    Brilliant, Magnificent -- But Not Flawless

    Someone else put his finger on where this magnificent film falls short when he said, "Mishima has already said it all, the film simply repeats." Ultimately, Schrader has made a movie which refuses to comment on Mishima one way or another, and which becomes somewhat lifeless and stilted in the final segment as a result. Because he is bending over backwards not to criticize Mishima, Schrader simply refuses to examine the uglier implications of his public suicide.

    Ironically, this approach hurts the film precisely because Mishima himself was capable of much more perceptive self-criticism. In the first two chapters -- "Beauty" (THE GOLDEN PAVILION) and "Art" (KYOKO'S HOUSE) Schrader's work is nothing short of brilliant. With great subtlety, he interweaves black and white scenes from Mishima's early life with lush full-color scenes from his early novels. What makes these sections so haunting are the subtle, suggestive differences between Mishima and the people he is writing about. For example, Mizoguchi, the acolyte who destroys the Golden Temple, is not a homosexual, nor is he a talented writer. His stammering could be a metaphor for those things, or it could be a metaphor for nothing at all. The mystery of creation and imagination, wordless and inexpressible, really seems to come to life here -- particularly in the dissolve where the schoolboy Mishima "morphs" into the slightly older Mizoguchi.

    The problems start in the third chapter, "Action." Here Schrader films scenes from Mishima's RUNAWAY HORSES (one of my personal favorites) as if they are not just similar, but absolutely interchangeable with Mishima's militarist activities with the Shield Society. Schrader seems to assume that the hero of the novel, Isao, is simply a stand in for Mishima. How can you tell? Because Schrader cuts out precisely those sections of the novel in which Mishima actually analyzes Isao's emotions and his illusions. The Isao of this movie is merely a straw man who spouts platitudes about the emperor and Japan's greatness. The Isao of the book is a courageous, unselfish, but very human teenage boy, whose callous and narrow-minded parents are unable to love and who plainly have had a crushing effect on his psyche. Mishima, whether consciously or not, included some truly vile scenes of parental cruelty and manipulation in this book precisely because he understood on some level that Isao's decision to end his own life was not entirely unselfish. The connection between the sordid ugliness of Isao's loveless home and his desire to die a violent death is clear enough in the book. But it is absent from the movie. Oddly enough, Schrader thinks he is protecting Mishima in the last section, by not moralizing about the suicide, but he is actually diminishing him as an author.

    The RUNAWAY HORSES section is by far the weakest of the movie. The final scenes, in which Mishima at the moment of death attains "oneness" with his heroes, really are quite exhilarating. But they would have been still richer if Schrader had taken a more nuanced approach to RUNAWAY HORSES, instead of just viewing it as a "blueprint" for the last events in Mishima's life.

    This is unquestionably a brilliant, inspiring film, but it's not quite flawless.
    Baroque

    Magnificent

    A story told in four chapters and in three levels. Flashbacks of Yukio Mishima's life, dramatizations of his written works, and the events of his final day of life.

    If Mishima was a fictional character, I doubt if anyone would believe or accept such a creation. But he was a real, flesh and blood, human being, which makes the film all the more incredible. Granted that some of the facts have been dramatized or "enhanced" for the screen, but the story is quite factual.

    A man of many contrasts: A devoted family man who kept a gay lover. A writer who saw his words being "not enough". A patriotic man at home in the present who yearned for a return to Imperial Japan's past glory. A man who struggled to unite movement with action, and saw everything he strove for fall apart at the most critical moment.

    The film is lovingly made, magnificently acted, painstakingly edited and the musical soundtrack by Philip Glass will stay with you for days. The film's tight budget doesn't show at all.

    Now available on DVD, this film is a worthy addition to the collections of true cinemaphiles.

    My rating: 10/10
    9Reel07

    Amazing

    Mishima is one of the greatest films ever made. Now I think Paul Schrader is the greatest screenwriter of all time, but I don't really like the films he's directed of what I've seen (with the exception of this and Affliction), but this is an amazing, disturbing, and highly 3-dimensional character study. It follows the life of Yukio Mishima, Japan's most celebrated writer, combining the last day of his life with flashbacks and his stories. I don't know how, but Paul Schrader manages to combine all of those in a very artistic way. The acting is great, so is the photography, and a perfect score by Philip Glass. Although confusing the first viewing, this is one of the few films that becomes richer with each viewing. Truly an underrated gem of a film.
    8loganx-2

    Like A Boy At A Window Or A Sword In A Sheath

    The only pure life, is one that ends with a signature in blood.

    So says Mishima anyway, a young sheltered boy who becomes a celebrity author. The life of one of Japans most celebrated literary voices, is told from three perspectives, his life just before he and four members of his private army take over a Japanese military base and commit ritual suicide(shown in color), flashbacks(shown in black and white), and scenes from his novels(shown in a kind of dreamy Technicolor set design somewhere between traditional Noh Theater and "the Wizard Of Oz". These stories are often told at the same time, but are edited to reinforce, the slow fusing of Mishima's life with his fictions, until the end(or the beginning) when like the ancient samurai he so admires, he will be at a balance of pen and sword (when his words and actions are the same, and he is a full and "pure" being).

    Paul Schrader wrote the screen play for "Taxi Driver", and directed "Cat People"(a bizarre erotic horror film, which left strange impressions on me as a boy), and in Mishima, he comes closest to making a really excellent film.

    Whats interesting is to watch the poet, the homosexual, the shy and awkward man with a low body image who overstates his Tuberculosis to get of of WW2 (of which he seems forever ashamed), become a body building, samurai obsessed, a-sexual, media phenomena, all the while still writing prolific amounts of novels, plays, and short stories.

    A short and sweet version is to say Mishima has no father, and becomes obsessed with masculinity, beauty, sex and self destruction, in some tragic attempt to feel connected to something bigger than himself, that he was always missing. Watching him with his fellow suicidal cadets, you see him happy, delivering his big paternal speech, giving orders, and loving the control...until the speech itself, the point where pen and sword meet? Of course, this ignores the subtlety of the story telling craft here which makes this transformation so natural and remarkable.

    Though the story, fascinating at times, really isn't this movies greatest success. The cinematography, performances, editing,music(by Philip Glass), and set designs, are really what make this worth seeing, and more than a traditional bio-pic.

    One day I will pick, up a Mishima book, he does seem to have an ear for prose, and for staging ideas, but for now I'm satisfied with the film.

    Those interested in Japanese Literature, and post-war culture, should check out. Fans of inventive combinations of facts and fictions, should enjoy as well.
    Solipsis

    John Bailey's cinematography makes this film sparkle

    Not many films can make a scene where a sado-masochist couple slice each other with razor blades appear beautiful, but Mishima pulls it off with plausible insight to a life style which is difficult to imagine. The film is intercut with lavishly produced scenes from Mishima's plays, but even the main biographic scenes of the film are highly theatrical.

    John Bailey deserves a lot of credit for the lustrous visual quality of this film.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Yukio Mishima's family originally cooperated with the making of this film but when their request that the gay bar scene be removed was denied, they withdrew their help.
    • Goofs
      Mishima didn't exaggerate his illness. He was declared unfit for military service because of an inexperienced Army physician's misdiagnosis.
    • Quotes

      Yukio Mishima (Narrator): [voice over] The average age for a man in the Bronze Age was eighteen, in the Roman era, twenty-two. Heaven must have been beautiful then. Today it must look dreadful. When a man reaches forty, he has no chance to die beautifully. No matter how he tries, he will die of decay. He must compel himself to live.

    • Crazy credits
      Yukio Mishima is acknowledged to have been a real person, but his acts have been fictionalized by writers. Other persons and events in this film are fictitious. Any similarity to actual persons and events is unintentional.
    • Alternate versions
      On Japanese television, the gay bar scene is cut out.
    • Connections
      Featured in Mardi cinéma: Episode dated 14 May 1985 (1985)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 20, 1985 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Mishima: Una vida en cuatro capítulos
    • Filming locations
      • Tokyo, Japan
    • Production companies
      • Zoetrope Studios
      • Filmlink International
      • Lucasfilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $437,547
    • Gross worldwide
      • $569,996
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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