Karami-ai
- 1962
- 1h 47min
Un empresario moribundo pretende legar doscientos millones de yenes a sus tres hijos ilegítimos, pero sus socios traman aprovecharse de la situación.Un empresario moribundo pretende legar doscientos millones de yenes a sus tres hijos ilegítimos, pero sus socios traman aprovecharse de la situación.Un empresario moribundo pretende legar doscientos millones de yenes a sus tres hijos ilegítimos, pero sus socios traman aprovecharse de la situación.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Ganó 1 premio BAFTA
- 1 premio y 1 nominación en total
Reseñas destacadas
Working from Nanjo Norio's novel, screenwriter Inagaki Koichi penned an outstanding screenplay that's rich and downright intoxicating from top to bottom. However characters might first present they show themselves to be not just complex and vibrant as written but roundly, willfully scurrilous in their own ways, usually while adopting a thin facade of innocence or propriety. Each in and of themselves is so interesting that this rather becomes worth watching just for them, and that's to say nothing of the rest of the writing, equally flush with ingenious subtlety as events progress. The dialogue is stark and biting, driving to the core of the characterizations and the plot, and each scene in turn bears a wondrous vitality with deliciously thick, underhanded tension and cutting intelligence. The narrative itself is so brilliant and spellbinding that this became another relatively rare instance of a movie I could not tear my eyes away from - and though it's mostly just on account of how raptly compelling the saga is in its own right, the precise fashion in which information comes out and events unfold is a masterstroke that left me giddily smiling again and again.
All this is very much a credit as well to the cast. Splendid nuance in the acting belies the cold shrewdness and less sure-footed emotions at play, a tactfulness expressiveness that feeds directly into the deceit and trickery on hand in the plot. It hardly even seems fair to highlight some stars over others, though Kishi Keiko is terrific in the lead role of Yasuko (I couldn't help but cheer her at a small moment in the last minutes), and even as Yamamura So's part as Kawara is more restrictive he commands imposing presence and temperament. This is to say nothing of Watanabe Misako, Nakadai Tatsuya, Yoshimura Mari, Miyaguchia Seiji, Chiaki Minoru, or the many others on hand. As Kobayasha guides his actors and shapes the whole as director, he sustains a ferocious energy that builds alongside the story, a sort of intensity that draws us in all the more. His jidaigeki of the 60s in particular thoroughly accentuated the patient mindfulness that Kobayashi bore as a filmmaker, letting pressure grow until the ideal psychological moment for the feature to explode - and though 'The inheritance' isn't so grandiose, the outcome is pretty much just as invigorating.
Composer extraordinaire Takemitsu Toru lends a marvelously flavorful score that meshes neatly with the seedy goings-on of the story, and I can scarcely imagine this without that music. Everything else here is really just as fantastic, from the costume design, hair, and makeup, to the sets, to Kawamata Takashi's smart cinematography and Uraoka Keiichi's keen editing. It's Inagaki's script that really shines here, however, hand in hand with the acting and Kobayashi's direction, and one way or another the end result is a title that's as darkly entertaining as it is tremendously engrossing. As I go through Kobayashi's oeuvre it's safe to say that I have high expectations, and though not all his productions are equal, I'm firmly of the mind that this is altogether excellent and easily counts among his best. Whether one has a specific reason to watch or is just looking for something good to watch, I can hardly recommend 'The inheritance' any more highly. As an avid cinephile this was simply a joy, and this is one picture that's well worth seeking out!
Senzo (So Yamamura) has received word that he has cancer. Well, he hasn't actually received word because, much like as is shown in Ikiru, it was common practice for doctors to lie to their patients about terminal illnesses. Still, he figures it out. He goes from a captain of industry, working endlessly everyday for forty years, to a quiet, contemplative man. His young secretary Yasuko (Keiko Kishi) notices and puts the pieces together herself before he actually tells her. He has a young wife, his former secretary Satoe (Misako Watanabe), and three illegitimate children that he has no contact with. In accordance with Japanese law, he must give at least one-third to his wife, but he wants to determine what to do with the rest. He wants his people to track down his three children, bring them to him without revealing his relationship to them or his motives for seeing them, and letting him decide if he wants to share the other two-thirds of his fortune with them or not.
And so starts the rat race. Satoe is angry because she feels like she deserves the entirety of the fortune as his wife, though she seems to have no real feeling for him, and he doesn't seem to have much towards her either. She conspires with Senzo's assistant Fujii (Minoru Chiaki) to find the seven-year-old girl he's assigned to discover no matter what so that she can become the girl's guardian. Yoshida (Seiji Miyaguchi) is assigned the second-oldest child to find, and he sends his assistant Furukawa (Tatsuya Nakadai) to find her. The eldest child, Senzo sends Yasuko to find, a young man born in Manchuria but living in Tokyo at that time.
Satoe is conspiring with Fujii, but it turns out that the girl died. Fujii decides to find another girl of the same age without parents in an orphanage to pass off as Senzo's heiress. Furukawa meets with Muri, the seventeen-year-old girl, and acts as a gatekeeper so that she will keep him in the loop if and when she inherits. Yasuko is given her task and seems to have no ulterior motive. However, when Senzo becomes too sick to go into the office anymore, especially after a surgery that removes three-quarters of his stomach, he insists that Yoshida take an extra room at his house. After Yasuko refuses to sleep with him one night, he begins a sexual relationship with Yoshida that leads to her getting pregnant. I think you can see where this is going to go.
Everyone is out for the money, and the only question is who is going to stay in it to the end. Revelations are revealed, Senzo dies, and more revelations are revealed. None of these characters are really rootable. They're all out for themselves with no concern for the wishes of the old man who actually earned everything beyond how they can manipulate him, even, in the end, Yasuko.
And that's kind of Kobayashi's point. The insane wealth up for grabs is completely corrupting. Even the young, quiet, and innocent female secretary is open to selling her body for access to the money. She always could leave, go find another secretary job somewhere, but she remains because of the potential life of ease up for grabs that we see at the opening of the film (the story being told in flashback as she has tea with Yoshida).
The lack of emotional connection keeps me at a small distance from the action, but the action itself is still a tense exercise and look at the corrupt side of human nature. Where Kaji refused to accept that he has lost it all and kept his efforts to retain his humanity in The Human Condition, Yasuko simply gives in completely. It's an interesting contrast in that light as well.
Kobayashi is one of the finest directors, perhaps very underrated. A few months later he would shoot "Harakiri". He knew his craft. This is a solid film to enjoy.
This Kobayashi is of the ranks of Kubrick's "The Killing(1956)", Billy Wilder's "Double Idemnity(1944)", Hawks's "The Big Sleep(1946), Akira Kurosawa's"The Bad Sleep Well" and also his own other great works like "Human Condition Trilogy", "kwaidan", "Samurai Rebellion", "Harakiri", "Black River" and should reciever more recognition as these above mentioned great works ; which from the imdb's number of votes and reviews, does not look favourable to its caliber. Definitely a treat for a Noir, Kobayashi, or any avid Cinema Fan.
Masaki Kobayashi movie of greed and lies might be a very dry, black comedy, or it might be a story of greed and corruption impure and simple. The sum of money would have been worth $1.5 million in 1962, the equivalent of $13 today. That's a lot of incentive for greed. All of the characters except Miss Kishi are open and honest about their greed when not in Nakadai's presence. Miss Kishi gives a veautiful, guarded performance.
¿Sabías que...?
- PifiasIn the title credits, the names "Yukio Ninagawa" and "Shinya Mizushima" are listed two times.
- Citas
Kikuo Furukawa: I've got a favor to ask. It's embarrassing. But a coffin is waiting for me, so I can say this plainly. I don't have any legally recognized children. But I do have children. To top it off, I've got three of them. Some may be dead. But there's no way all three are dead. So I want you to find my children. I don't mean to legally acknowledge them and their heirship right away. Some may have grown up to be scoundrels. But if any of them are suitable, I'd like to add them as heirs.
Selecciones populares
- How long is The Inheritance?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Duración1 hora 47 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1