Daily Archives: June 11, 2018

Onibaba (1964)

Onibaba
Directed by Kaneto Shindo
Written by Kaneto Shindo
1964/Japan
Kindai Eiga Kyokai/Toho Eiga Co Ltd.
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Woman: I’m not a demon! I’m a human being!

Beauty and horror meet in this savage film.

In 14th Century Japan, the mother and wife of a missing conscriptee eke out a meager living by killing vulnerable samurai, selling their belongings, and then dumping the bodies into a deep pit.  The murders are assisted by the head-high grasses that surround their hut.

Into this milieu arrives Hachi, a neighbor who accompanied the missing man into battle. He assures the women that their loved one is dead.  Mom can’t forgive Hachi but he easily seduces the daughter into secret nightly lovemaking sessions.  When Mom finds out she does everything in her power to prevent the meetings.

She is unsuccessful until alone one night she comes across a samurai wearing a ghastly demon mask.  He informs her that the mask is to conceal his face, the most handsome in all Japan.  The meeting cuts the samurai’s life expectancy short and gives Mom another idea for splitting up the lovers.

This movie is gruesome in the extreme.  The killings, including one of a dog, are brutal.  Yet at the same time the supernatural elements have a stark grandeur and Shindo’s vision of the natural world is lyrical.  Highly recommended.

Smilin’ Through (1932)

Smilin’ Through
Directed by Sidney Franklin
Written by James B. Fagan and Donald Ogden Stewart from a play by Jane Cowl and Jane Murfin
1932/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
First viewing/Amazon Instant

[box] Kathleen: I don’t care what happens the day after tomorrow! Any more than I care what happened 50 years ago![/box]

This A-budget romantic melodrama didn’t quite do it for me.

Elderly Sir John Carteret (Leslie Howard) spends much of his time alone communing with the spirit of his lost love Moonyeen (Norma Shearer).  She was killed by frustrated suitor Jeremy Wayne (Fredric March) on their wedding day.  Shortly thereafter, Carteret becomes the guardian of his orphan niece Kathleen whose parents were lost at sea.

Kathleen grows up to be Norma Shearer.  She happens to meet American Kenneth Wayne (March again), the son of the man who killed her aunt.  He is in England having joined up early for World War I.  They quickly fall in love but John adamantly forbids the romance.  Kathleen is willing to defy her uncle but Kenneth is not.  Four long years pass before she sees Kenneth again.

This has the strong cast and production values one expects from an MGM picture of this era.  Unfortunately, I’ve been unable to warm up to Shearer, whom I never quite believe ,and it is she that carries the film.  The pathos is milked for every last tear.  Your mileage may vary.

Smilin’ Through was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture.

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