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Synopsis

In 1929 an impoverished nine-year-old named Chiyo from a fishing village is sold to a geisha house in Kyoto’s Gion district and subjected to cruel treatment from the owners and the head geisha Hatsumomo. Her stunning beauty attracts the vindictive jealousy of Hatsumomo, until she is rescued by and taken under the wing of Hatsumomo’s bitter rival, Mameha. Under Mameha’s mentorship, Chiyo becomes the geisha named Sayuri, trained in all the artistic and social skills a geisha must master in order to survive in her society. As a renowned geisha she enters a society of wealth, privilege, and political intrigue. As World War II looms Japan and the geisha’s world are forever changed by the onslaught of history. —IMDb

Director

Original

Rob Marshall

Taking his cue from such profusely talented dancer/choreographer-turned-directors as Bob Fosse, former Broadway hoofer Rob Marshall made a scintillating leap into film with his directorial debut Chicago (2002).
Born in Wisconsin and raised in Pittsburgh, Marshall began his professional career at age 12 when he joined a local musical theater company. Though he took time off from college to join a touring company of the 1970s Broadway smash A Chorus Line, Marshall returned to school and earned a degree from Carnegie Mellon University’s musical theater program. Leaving Pittsburgh after school, he moved to New York City in the early ‘80s to join the ranks of Broadway “gypsies” vying for a place in the chorus. Marshall sang and danced in several Broadway shows, and worked his way up behind the scenes from dance captain to assistant choreographer. Marshall, however, suffered an injury while dancing in Cats; he subsequently decided to quit performing to concentrate on choreography. He… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 12 wall posts.
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JolieG1

31Dec11

One word : Amazing . I can't count how many times this movie moved me to tears . It was marvelously told and the book is even better .

Eduardo Gomes de Almeida

2Oct11

I strongly recomend reading the book. Cinematic is great, but story-wise, the book is way better.

Janitra likes this

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0023am

15Sep11

On a cinematic note, this is a wonderful movie. But plainly on the story... the dance is not how Geisha dance, and the whole movie kind of revolves around sex... I don't think this has really done justice to the term Geisha.

  • Picture of JolieG1

    JolieG1

    31Dec11

    I strongly disagree , It was not based enough on sex in my opinion . It was a great depiction of a young girls journey into womanhood as a Geisha.

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Katman_C

7Sep11

I just like this :)

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Memoirs of a Geisha Review

By Twitchfilm.com on May 17, 2011
Borderline racist and ragingly misogynistic, MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA is guilty of the greatest cinematic sin of all: boredom. Let me explain the “borderline racist” comment. I’m not referring to the casting
read on Twitchfilm.com

Memoirs of a Geisha Review

By Twitchfilm.net on July 16, 2010
Borderline racist and ragingly misogynistic, MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA is guilty of the greatest cinematic sin of all: boredom. Let me explain the “borderline racist” comment. I’m not referring to the casting
read on Twitchfilm.net

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