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Le soleil

Original title: Solntse
  • 2005
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Le soleil (2005)
DramaHistory

Third part in Aleksandr Sokurov's quadrilogy of Power, following Moloch (1999) and Taurus (2001), focuses on Japanese Emperor Hirohito and Japan's defeat in World War II when he is finally c... Read allThird part in Aleksandr Sokurov's quadrilogy of Power, following Moloch (1999) and Taurus (2001), focuses on Japanese Emperor Hirohito and Japan's defeat in World War II when he is finally confronted by General Douglas MacArthur who offers him to accept a diplomatic defeat for su... Read allThird part in Aleksandr Sokurov's quadrilogy of Power, following Moloch (1999) and Taurus (2001), focuses on Japanese Emperor Hirohito and Japan's defeat in World War II when he is finally confronted by General Douglas MacArthur who offers him to accept a diplomatic defeat for survival.

  • Director
    • Aleksandr Sokurov
  • Writers
    • Yuriy Arabov
    • Jeremy Noble
  • Stars
    • Issei Ogata
    • Robert Dawson
    • Kaori Momoi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Aleksandr Sokurov
    • Writers
      • Yuriy Arabov
      • Jeremy Noble
    • Stars
      • Issei Ogata
      • Robert Dawson
      • Kaori Momoi
    • 31User reviews
    • 69Critic reviews
    • 85Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 10 nominations total

    Photos18

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Issei Ogata
    Issei Ogata
    • Emperor Shouwa-Tennou Hirohito
    Robert Dawson
    • General Douglas MacArthur
    Kaori Momoi
    Kaori Momoi
    • Empress Kojun
    Shirô Sano
    Shirô Sano
    • The chamberlain
    Shinmei Tsuji
    • Old servant
    Taijirô Tamura
    • Scientist
    Georgiy Pitskhelauri
    • McArthur's warrant officer
    Hiroya Morita
    • Suzuki, Prime Minister
    Toshiaki Nishizawa
    Toshiaki Nishizawa
    • Yonai, Minister of the Navy
    Naomasa Musaka
    • Anami - Minister of War
    Yûsuke Tozawa
    • Kido
    • (as Yusuke Tozawa)
    Kôjirô Kusanagi
    Kôjirô Kusanagi
    • Togo, Minister of Foreign Affairs
    Tetsuro Tsuno
    • General Umezu
    Rokuro Abe
    • General Toyoda
    Jun Haichi
    • Abe, Minister of the Interior
    Kôjun Itô
    • Hironuma
    Tôru Shinagawa
    • Sakomizu
    Vadim Badmatsyrenov
    • soldiers of the Emperor
    • (as Vadim Badmatsyreov)
    • Director
      • Aleksandr Sokurov
    • Writers
      • Yuriy Arabov
      • Jeremy Noble
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    7.33K
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    Featured reviews

    10Chris Knipp

    A great film

    Sokurov's haunting recreation of how Emperor Hirohito spent the last hours before the Japanese surrender, this is a miraculous work, and it provided the most powerful aesthetic and emotional experience of the 2005 New York Film Festival, whose official selections were not lacking in depth and fine film-making.

    "The Sun" depicts a man who knows very well what is going on but lives in a cocoon, in a state of detachment and ineffectuality that becomes strangely heartrending. Issey Ogata's performance as the Emperor easily competes for hypnotic intensity with Bruno Ganz's Hitler in the German film "Downfall" -- but with a very different sort of bunker and a very different kind of man: a silent, immaculate country house with a few faithful servants in attendance; a small, frail but upright and dignified personage who can easily explain the causes of the Japanese defeat to his general staff but has never learned to dress himself or open a door. Even on this day he is more comfortable browsing through photos of his family and American movie stars, dictating notes on marine biology, and writing poetry. Despite the disgrace, he is selflessly happy that peace has come. He inks a brush to write a statement to his absent son, but instead drafts a few verses about the weather.

    Later he is taken to see Eisenhower, and then brought back again to dine with the general. He enjoys the wine and the meat and has his first taste of a Havana cigar. The Americans conclude that the Emperor is like a child. "What's it like being a living god?" Ike asks. And speaking, to the dismay of the Japanese interpreter, in perfect English, Hirohito says, "What can I tell you? You know, it is not easy being Emperor." These are just a few details in a film rich in telling ones. Simply enumerating them can't explain this film's slow, cumulative emotional wallop -- or the lovely, fantastic, dreamlike landscape images toward the end. This film about one of modern history's most humiliating defeats is a stunning triumph.

    "The Sun" demonstrates unmistakably that Andrei Sokurov is one of the world's great filmmakers.
    8Asa_Nisi_Masa2

    A God with stomach ulcers

    Very powerful film-making, which leaves you feeling very unsettled. Through the minutae of his days and his every gesture, nervous tick and grimaces, it describes the last days of the living God, the Emperor of Japan. It's already perfectly clear to everyone that Japan is on its knees and the war has been won by mere mortals. It's perfectly clear, and yet the nation apparently still needs to know that its Emperor is a God. Superficially, the movie could be compared to Der Untergang, The Downfall, in that it shows a previous icon of absolute power cooped up in his bunker, days before his complete demise. The mood of these two movies is so very different, though - there was life stirring in among the ashes of Oliver Hirschbiegel's Berlin, still. There is seemingly no life left at all in the devastation surrounding the Japanese Emperor's palace and bunker. You see so little of the physical destruction, possibly because the movie had a small-ish budget and they couldn't afford complete reconstructions, but you feel it everywhere. Never before have sea creatures preserved in formaldehyde been more eerie. I was blown away by the sequences of the catfish (a recurrent subject of traditional Japanese ink drawings) swimming in the sky like bomber planes over a nuclear-war devastated nightmarish landscape. All the way through, I loved the use of classical music, seemingly distant and distorted - Bach and Wagner, and others. Every little gesture and detail in the movie matters, every camera angle and perspective is carefully planned. Some might call it slow, but to be honest I was never bored. Thankfully, the movie is also completely non-judgmental of anyone. Despite the odd wooden performance, I recommend this to anyone who is used to quality world cinema.
    8field-jessel

    An Emperor is All-too Human

    "The Sun" was a good way to introduce ourselves to the minimalist, detail-obsessed films of Alexander Sokurov -- so thanks to Minnesota Film Arts for showing it at St. Anthony Main, February 2010.

    Sokurov's Emperor Hirohito is not only humanized in this film, he finds redemption, if in a limited way that leaves him assailable for his true weakness: weakness of will, anxiety of spirit, and dreamy preference for leisurely study and cool contemplation. Hirohito is a true nobleman where his job called for either a savior or a butcher.

    The actor who plays Hirohito has an amazing technique. All of his facial features and especially his mouth and front teeth are applied very deliberately to create the sense of a careful, intelligent, and ultimately ordinary man.

    What to say of Sokurov's unique vision? It's something like a documentary of daily habits, a virtuosic sequencing of mundane and ritual behavior -- eating breakfast, reading a book, chatting with his servants, waiting for General McArthur to return, greeting his wife -- sequences that contain turning points. A surprisingly naive, yet resigned man faces up to his life, thus learning to really live in the end.
    7frankiehudson

    Hirohito the Simple Gardener

    The beginning of this film is exceptionally dull, half an hour of Hirohito - in an excellent, intriguing performance by Issey Sogata - pottering around, surrounded by his overbearing courtiers. His servants appear genuinely awed by the God-like emperor and can hardly bow low enough to show their total subservience. Everything - buttoning a jacket, placing a knife and fork in his hands - is undertaken for the emperor.

    In a curious similarity to Hitler's last days in the chaotic bunker in the recent film Downfall (2005), Hirohito is confined to his own bunker beneath his imperial palace in Tokyo. Yet, there is little sign of the war down here, just a series of dull, ill-lit yet nicely-furnished rooms, all wooden panelling and seemingly very quiet, in the aftermath of the atomic bombs. The strange thing is the almost entirely Westernised clothes and total banality of the emperor's life. Hirohito wanders around like an Edwardian gentleman, attired in exquisite tailoring, all top hat and fine suits, like Bertie Wooster without the humour.

    Hirohito studies Darwin and makes a few minor reflections on his role in Japanese imperialism leading up to the war, and the nature of the beast, yet he is basically Chauncey Gardiner (Peter Selles) in the film Being There (1979), a sort of idiot-savant set free into a world of which he has little or no understanding. You just can't believe that Hirohito had any serious role in the whole affair.

    Continuing the Darwinist motif, there are little surrealist sequences, dream-like glimpses into Hirohito's mind, with strange flying fish bombers and so forth. In these sections, the film's like a sort of Salvador Dali/Luis Buenuel/Hirohito war and bombing comb. This reminds me of the brilliant Terence Mallick film, The Thin Red Line (1998), with several US troops under-going similar experiences in an island paradise during the terrible war in the Pacific.

    This is why I think the film works. The first meeting of Hirohito and MacArthur - in effect, the new emperor of Japan - is full of tension, a clash of two cultures, both incredibly nervous of each other. The two men start bonding and in one incredible moment of film, MacArthur and Hirohito have a sort of cigar kiss, the former lighting the emperor's cigar while puffing on his own, both engaged, head-to-head. It's like they're exchanging the fumes of victory and defeat. The embers. It is like an antidote to Bill Clinton's normal use of cigars.

    They get along just fine, like Laurel and Hardy Go to Tokyo, or something. Or Will Hay, for British readers.

    Did Hirohito really speak English? In one moment, Hirohito - in true Chauncey Gardiner fashion - goes into the garden for his first-ever photo-shoot. The photographers are squabbling amongst themselves over terms and conditions while, in the background, this peculiar, be-suited gentleman wanders around tending his roses. He proves to be quite a star, however, influences as he is by the American film stars he so idolises.
    7bitherwack

    choice of actors

    I like Ogata in most all he does. But I think his casting here is a mistake. He is excellent at pulling out the one or two things of a type to set up a humorous caricature. He is an excellent comedian. I think, though, that as an impressionist rather than an actor, he played his impersonation a little too broadly. (It may be because Ogata does a lot of stage work, and had trouble toning down for the camera.) Having personally met the Emperor Showa in 1985, I can say with some confidence that though the twitching lips are an attribute, it was not as pronounced as Ogata plays it, less conscious, and more a condition of advanced age. (Hence overdone for playing someone in his 40's.)

    Another point of contention I have is with the script. There are quite a few moments when Ogata orders his servants to do something; but with the subservient plea "--kudasai". In the first half of the 20th century, the Japanese language was still exceedingly rank conscious. Even a commoner would use a condescending verb form for a request to a subordinate, whether the subordinate was a wife, a servant or an employee. It is even more strange to imagine the fawning servants enduring a request spoken by the Emperor from a linguistic position of submission. Courtly language is quite different from colloquial Japanese, and one instance we have of this is from his first radio transmission in which the Emperor used the personal pronoun 'Chin'.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Aleksandr Sokurov kept the name of the actor playing the Emperor secret, since it is taboo in Japan to play an Emperor on film. Sokurov was afraid for the safety of the actor, after Nagisa Ôshima told him there had been two attempts on his life after he criticized Imperial Japan during WWII.
    • Quotes

      Shouwa-Tennou Hirohito: Our chances of victory in the war with the west were 50 out of 100. Germany's chances in this war were 100 out of 100.

      General Douglas MacArthur: What are you talking about?

      Shouwa-Tennou Hirohito: I'm talking about the alliance with Germany.

      General Douglas MacArthur: Well, that is all in the past. There is only one unresolved issue left. That is the issue of your fate.

    • Connections
      Featured in Sokurovin ääni (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      from DIE GÖTTERDÄMMERUNG
      Composed by Richard Wagner

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 1, 2006 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Russia
      • Italy
      • Switzerland
      • France
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Sun
    • Filming locations
      • Italy
    • Production companies
      • Nikola Film
      • Proline Film
      • Downtown Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $77,303
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,588
      • Nov 22, 2009
    • Gross worldwide
      • $218,325
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 50m(110 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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