Zen
- 2009
- 2h 7m
'Zen' Buddhist teacher Dogen Zenji is a very important religious person during the Kamakura period, 750 years ago. After his mother died, he decides to move to China and settle as a Buddhist... Read all'Zen' Buddhist teacher Dogen Zenji is a very important religious person during the Kamakura period, 750 years ago. After his mother died, he decides to move to China and settle as a Buddhist teacher. One bright morning, enlightened, Zenji returns to Japan as a devoted evangelist ... Read all'Zen' Buddhist teacher Dogen Zenji is a very important religious person during the Kamakura period, 750 years ago. After his mother died, he decides to move to China and settle as a Buddhist teacher. One bright morning, enlightened, Zenji returns to Japan as a devoted evangelist of the 'new' Buddhism. However, this new form of Buddhism is not accepted in all communiti... Read all
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Dôgen
- (as Kantarô Nakamura)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The whole story is about a chatty, bubbly monk who tries to get buddhism but constantly gets trolled by older monks who do anything but telling him what actual buddhism is supposed to look like.
Then a prostitute appears and is the new main character all of a sudden. She is nasty and petulant but also self-pitying and whiny and - more than anything - a woman, so she is the perfect victim and mc you'd emphasize with (for whatever reason).
The problem is not so much the conventional, boring cinematography or the below-average acting but the story and characterization in particular.
For some reason the female mc has to be a prostitute at all cost and her mistakes aren't reflected in the slightest. She's literally buying herself out of her "sin" with dirty money.
The films stance on prostitutes is genuinely patronizing and at the same time it falls into every possible cliche about the "holy prostitute" and generally seems to think of women as either holy or full of sin/dirty.
I strongly doubt that so called buddhists around the globe approve the films depiction of buddhism and I also doubt the directors/screenwriters credibility about depicting buddhism.
Dogen's origin is not well known, but what he's become in his later life is part of the Japanese history and culture. The movie is an attempt to portray his life. I'm not sure how much of this story is based on fact. Dogen is the founder of Japanese Soto zen sect which he brought back from China. None of these background information are elaborated in this movie which I think makes this movie miss its point.
It's based on a biographical novel of Dogen by Tetsuo Ootani who himself is a Soto zen monk. I don't know anything about the novel, but since it's supposed to be the life story of Dogen, I believe this movie should reflect that also. However, perhaps the producers have bit off more than they can chew because I find this movie very incomplete whether looking from Buddhistic point of view, or biographic point of view.
How did Dogen arrive at his view of zen Buddhism should at least be highlighted, but none of that is shown in this movie. I believe that the producers didn't know anything about the subject that they were putting on the big screen. It shows on the choppy way the story advances.
The producers, and also the actors were not the caliber that could describe a story of this magnitude.
Good attempt but fail of a production from the aforementioned reasons.
The atmosphere is exceptional. You can really immerse yourself in Dogen's meditative perspective thanks to long contemplative scenes of essentially nothing but his surroundings. A lot of scenes of "unrealistic beauty" just add to how he sees the world on this path to enlightenment. The score is fantastic as well. Especially the ending track.
The supporting characters exist solely to provide a layman's viewpoint and range from mildly interesting to bland. With some truly awful scenes of physical acting that significantly take away from immersion in the supposed drama the movie tries to showcase.
Did you know
- TriviaThe staff with jingling rings on the top that the monks carry is called a shakujo in Japanese. It was used as a walking stick, a weapon, an alarm to scare away animals and as a signal to people that a monk was nearby.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Дзен
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $2,877,113
- Runtime2 hours 7 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1