| Wriggling Free of Perfection | ||
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The EelDirected by Written by With Rating | |
| By Jonathan Rosenbaum | ||
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I've seen only five of Shohei Imamura's 19 features, most of them so many years apart that it's hard to see many stylistic or thematic connections. Yet there's no doubt in my mind that his 18th, The Eel (1997)--which shared last year's Palme d'Or with Taste of Cherry and opens this week at the Music Box--is the most interesting new movie around: funny, lyrical, provocative, imaginative, and consistently entertaining. That it happens to be Japanese is incidental to its interest, though I suppose a lot of people won't go to see it because it isn't in English. (I suspect the problem isn't so much xenophobia as habit; most Americans have never seen a subtitled movie and probably regard the prospect of seeing one as work.)
It's been a truism for quite some time that the Japanese cinema is in terrible shape, financially and aesthetically (particularly now that Akira Kurosawa has died)--though it's not clear to what extent one should believe the overseas commentators who sift through the available evidence. I've come to mistrust American critics who dismiss the output of a national cinema on the basis of the two or three examples they see per year, especially when I see other examples at European film festivals that undermine their conclusions. But 15 years ago Dave Kehr wrote the best English-language account of Imamura that I know, and he began by noting, "The Japanese cinema still exists Eight years later he's released from prison on a two-year parole under the supervision of a Buddhist priest, carrying in a plastic bag a pet eel the prison authorities have allowed him to keep; he addresses it like a friend, explaining, "He listens to me." Having learned to be a barber in prison, he sets up a riverside shop a few miles from the priest's temple and continues his solitary existence, keeping the eel in an aquarium and regarding it as his only companion. One day while fishing, Takuro happens upon an unconscious young woman who resembles his late wife; Keiki (Misa Shimizu) has attempted suicide by swallowing pills. With the help of some neighbors, he rushes her to the hospital. After she recovers and is released, she persuades him to hire her as his assistant; yet as a bond grows between them, he remains aloof. The plot thickens when two people turn up in this remote neck of the woods--a former prison mate who threatens to expose Takuro's past and a former lover who claims Keiki stole money from him. The problem with recounting even part of the plot is that it reveals practically nothing of the film's overall feel and quirky texture. If the movie's main subject is Takuro's gradual regeneration as a romantic and social being, its style is attentive mainly to internal and external factors that lie far beyond this synopsis. The internal factors are subjective flashbacks and dream sequences that periodically tell us things about Takuro's consciousness. Sometimes they're as brief as single shots or remembered (or imagined) lines of dialogue, and sometimes they're longer or more elaborate; but all of them are accorded the same status as the objective facts of Takuro's life--or at least Imamura treats them more as objective events than as bracketed interludes. The external factors are mainly environmental--the settings and people of Takuro's life and, later on, Keiki's life. This is where the juicy Fordian characterizations come in--as well as most of the comedy. One of Takuro's neighbors is an unemployed young man supported by his parents whose main activity is building an outdoor site designed to attract the attention of extraterrestrials; Takuro periodically lends him his barber's pole to serve as a prop in this surreal construction. Another neighbor is a fisherman who accompanies Takuro on nighttime fishing expeditions and who fashions a tube designed to catch eels without hurting them. The former prison mate is a loutish drunk, and Keiki's mother is a madwoman who sees herself as a flamenco dancer and as Carmen in Bizet's opera--though what she has to do with the remainder of the movie is anybody's guess.
"If my films are messy," Imamura
And what about the eel? Is it a symbol of something specific in Japanese culture? I don't know, but I can't see how it matters much. I'd rather view the creature as the film's ultimate embodiment of the linear, which most of the remainder is strategically designed to subvert. Imamura takes great pains to recount the mating and migrating habits of eels and then virtually repeats the speech, which is obviously relevant to Takuro's story. Eels turn up a lot in the dream sequences, and there's even one splendid, eerie moment when Takuro and his pet are superimposed in a visionary shot. There's also a climactic moment when the aquarium is smashed in the midst of a comic-horrific slugfest involving at least half of the characters in the movie--a hyperbolic free-for-all that implies that most of the major elements in Japanese society have magically yet logically converged on this barbershop in the sticks. | |||
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