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Synopsis

Based on Soseki Natsume’s 1908 novel of the same title, Poppies is an ornately complicated story of desire and ambition. Fujio is beautiful, talented, well-heeled, and engaged to Munechika, a rising young diplomat. She has promised him a gold watch, a family heirloom, as an emblem of their engagement. But she falls in love with Ono, a student employed to tutor her in English, who is attracted by her beauty and wealth. Ono is himself bound by an engagement to Sayoko, the daughter of his mentor, Professor Inoue. The self-centered Fujio is ready to forsake everything for Ono, but he is prevailed upon to go ahead with his marriage to Sayoko. Fujio then offers the watch to Munechika who, perceiving Fujio’s true feelings, hurls the watch into the sea. This melodrama was the anniversary production of Dai-ichi Eiga, a company in severe financial trouble which had not had a hit film in several years. Their choice of projects and directors did not exactly ensure success, but Mizoguchi enjoyed a lavish budget for this film that he had not been accustomed to on other pictures. And though the film’s heroine has been compared to other femme fatales such as Cleopatra and Yang Kwei Fei (a later subject of Mizoguchi’s), the milieu of Meiji intellectuals was not exactly Mizoguchi’s own. The film flopped and Dai-ichi was soon out of business. —David Owens

Director

Original

Kenji Mizoguchi

Kenji Mizoguchi entered the film world as a promoter of Western novelty in Japanese cinema and exited it as an acclaimed international director who exemplified Japan at its most traditional. After The Life of Oharu and Ugetsu won prizes in successive Venice Film Festivals in the early ‘50s, Mizoguchi became an icon for the nascent French New Wave. His mastery of mise-en-scène was lauded by Jacques Rivette, while Jean-Luc Godard praised his metaphysics and his stylistic elegance. Mizoguchi is still recognized as one of the 20th century’s greatest filmmakers. Born in Tokyo, in 1898, Mizoguchi was the middle child of a roofer/carpenter. His family’s financial situation went from modest to desperate when his erratic, dreamer father tried to make a killing by selling raincoats to the military during the Russo-Japanese war. Not having enough money for food, Mizoguchi’s older sister was put up for adoption at age 14. She was later sold to a geisha house. Mizoguchi himself… read more

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