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An average movie

Posted : 1 year, 3 months ago on 3 January 2023 11:33

I wasnā€™t really sure what to expect from this flick but since it was starring Marlon Brando, I was quite eager to check it out. Well, to be honest, Iā€™m rather surprised that this movie was at the time nominated for the Best Picture Academy Award. Itā€™s not that the story didnā€™t have some potential. Back in those days, more than 10.000 US soldiers did indeed married a Japanese woman but it was something more or less prohibited or at least discouraged by the US army which was quite intriguing. Unfortunately, they actually messed up the tone. Indeed, even if it should have been a tragic romantic drama, it was fairly often rather frivolous. Even more problematic was how they portrayed the Japanese people though. First, you had the fact that the only Japanese male character was played by Ricardo Montalban, the famous Mexican actor. At least, the Japanese female characters were played by some actual Japanese actresses but what the makers did with these women was rather appalling. Indeed, it turned the whole thing into some kind of male fantasy in which the Japanese women were reduced to some obedient submissive servant with no personality whatsoever. At least, Lloyd Ā Gruver could have seduced Hana-Ogi but, instead, he kept stalking her and after a single conversation, she was just head over heels in love with him for no real reason. At least, I did like the (probably unintentional) parallel between this movie and Brandoā€™s own career. Indeed, from the 60ā€™s onwards, he constantly defied expectations, making some rather bewildering choices, instead of doing what was expected of him, even if he basically torpedoed his career in the process. Anyway, to conclude, I think this movie didnā€™t grow old well at all and you should probably avoid it, except maybe if you are a die-hard fan of Marlon Brando.



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Sayonara

Posted : 6 years, 10 months ago on 26 June 2017 04:46

Sayonara feels like the type of movie that was built for awards consideration. Just full of enough liberal politics to make people feel good about themselves watching it when itā€™s really just a mildly ridiculous, soapy melodrama. Half of the romantic equation here is more authentic and fraught then the other half, which just feels like movie stars posing and staring at each other glamorously.

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Granted, Sayonara does have some balls to offer up even the mildest of critiques about our involvement in Korea during the Cold War, and more especially during the 50s when complacency was all but expected. Thereā€™s also some capitulations towards racial tolerance, miscegenation, and heaps of travelogue narrations and images. Yet the ending remains a problemantic cop out as Marlon Brando gets to thumb his nose at conventionality and Miiko Taka sacrifices everything to run off with him. Thereā€™s no logical reason to think that they will work it out, and the ending probably left many a viewer with crocodile tears but left me with the vague sense of unease one gets from the ending of The Graduate.

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What really sticks out is how for all of the good Sayonara tries to do, and it really does seem to try have its heart in the right place, is how grossly it leans into cultural stereotypes of the submissive geisha doll wife. It may have helped turn the tide on the popular culture view of mixed marriages, but it grossly overplays into stereotypes. Even worse is the vision of Ricardo Montalban in yellow-face makeup. Montalban, like many actors of color during this era, was frequently treated as a ā€œhouse ethnic,ā€ a phrase Rita Moreno used to describe her own tenure at MGM.

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No surprise that Sayonara is overwrought as its source material comes from James Michener, he of the doorstop trashy epic. This was something different, smaller scale and filled with bits of truth that manage to poke out of the Hollywood gloss. Frankly, thereā€™s just not enough story to justify the bloated running time, and the thing creaks along at various points. Itā€™s not helped in this matter by director Joshua Logan, a man fond of sticking the camera in one spot and pointing it at his actors and not doing much else. By all accounts Logan was a great stage director, but he treated film the same way and theyā€™re vastly different mediums requiring different techniques and touches.

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Then thereā€™s the curious case of Marlon Brandoā€™s central performance, one of the first warning signs that Brando was going to become overindulgent in his quirks and flagrantly disregard acting as a serious craft in years to come. He adopts an indiscriminate southern accent, something of an all-purpose droll, that calls attention not only to itself, but to the performance heā€™s giving with it throughout. This remove in his performance keeps the romance guarded, canā€™t smother the more unbelievable plot machinations, and canā€™t elevate the material beyond its sudsy tone.

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Heā€™s bettered in the acting department by a duo of supporting players that walked off with the Oscars. Red Buttons and Miyoshi Umeki create a believable romance, and they play their parts with deep-rooted commitment. Umeki is a bit of a background player in a lot of her screen time, but thereā€™s one moment where she argues with Buttons about potentially getting plastic surgery to pass for white that probably won her the statue. These two, along with some lovely scenery, are a good enough reason to seek out Sayonara, just be prepared for a dip in interest once their characters meet a tragic end.



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