VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,9/10
14.605
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Segui in dettaglio la vita del celebre scrittore giapponese Yukio Mishima.Segui in dettaglio la vita del celebre scrittore giapponese Yukio Mishima.Segui in dettaglio la vita del celebre scrittore giapponese Yukio Mishima.
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale
Naoko Ôtani
- Mother (segment "November 25, 1970 - Flashbacks")
- (as Naoko Otani)
Kyûzô Kobayashi
- Literary Friend (segment "November 25, 1970 - Flashbacks")
- (as Kyuzo Kobayashi)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizYukio Mishima's family originally cooperated with the making of this film but when their request that the gay bar scene be removed was denied, they withdrew their help.
- BlooperMishima didn't exaggerate his illness. He was declared unfit for military service because of an inexperienced Army physician's misdiagnosis.
- Citazioni
Yukio Mishima (Narrator): The average age for a man in the Bronze Age was eighteen, in the Roman era, twenty-two. Heaven must have been beautiful then. Today it must look dreadful. When a man reaches forty, he has no chance to die beautifully. No matter how he tries, he will die of decay. He must compel himself to live.
- Curiosità sui creditiYukio Mishima is acknowledged to have been a real person, but his acts have been fictionalized by writers. Other persons and events in this film are fictitious. Any similarity to actual persons and events is unintentional.
- Versioni alternativeOn Japanese television, the gay bar scene is cut out.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Mardi cinéma: Episodio datato 14 maggio 1985 (1985)
Recensione in evidenza
This is my favourite film and I think it is perfect. Unlike virtually any other film I can name, I never watch this film and think it would have been better if they'd changed this or that or whatever. Is this the definition of a work of art? I think so. Every brushstroke in Mishima is perfect and it all flows from the Schrader's script. I've always sort of liked Paul Schrader's work (you can't argue with Taxi Driver and Light Sleeper is an amazing film), but while his writing often seems to border on the bombastic, his directing style is usually non-existent. This is deliberate, I think, because his films usually deal with a search for redemption and are set in the real world; ugly and harsh. His style suits his themes as he presents his characters in a simple and realistic way, and lets them show the audience the truth of the situation. Imagine if Schrader had directed Taxi Driver or Bringing Out The Dead, instead of Scorsese. But like the protagonists of those two films, while Mishima the man was ideal Schrader material, right-wing, vain and at odds with society, his works were subtle and beautiful. In fact he had a secondary writing career as a woman's writer, churning out what can reasonably be described as romantic potboilers. So you wouldn't necessarily imagine that Schrader was the ideal man to capture that subtlety and beauty on film. I think the film shows that he was. The script he helped fashion splits Mishima the man into three parts; his life, his death and his mind. His life is represented in black and white, still camera, formal compositions. His death, for which he will always be best remembered, is handheld documentary style. And his mind is represented by the dramatised extracts from his novels, each one revealing the thought processes of this complex man, who hardly ever wrote a character that wasn't a reflection of himself. These dramatisations are beautiful to look at, thanks to Eiko Ishioka's remarkable production design and Schrader's imaginative staging. In all parts, the acting is superb, especially from Ken Ogata as Mishima, who captures the essential charm, arrogance and narcissism of the man. The photography is excellent throughout and contains images that the viewer will retain forever. Finally, the music is simply superb, perfectly matching the images, although written and recorded before shooting, adjusted during the editorial process and then re-recorded. How much the music influenced the shoot I do not know, but it bonds perfectly to the image. I have seen many ideas of what various people think the theme of the film is, what Schrader is trying to say. You know, the big stuff about life, death etc. But I do not think the film is saying anything. Mishima has already said it, the film simply repeats.
- simonbasso
- 1 feb 2001
- Permalink
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 5.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 437.547 USD
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 569.996 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Mishima: Una vita in quattro capitoli (1985) officially released in India in Hindi?
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