“This 20-minute fragment is all that survives of a film that was originally about 80 minutes (10 reels) long. This print is shown courtesy of the Matsuda Eigasha. "Orie is a geisha pursued by two wealthy young suitors, Yukichi Sakuma and Yoshiki, long-time friends and co-workers. She plays them both along until they quarrel violently – and then chooses Yoshiki. But unbeknownst to any of them Orie is the illegitimate daughter of Yoshiki’s father. The elder Fujimoto, a man of great wealth, has long made a hobby of disporting himself with geisha and during an evening of dalliance with the attractive Orie – some time before his son has become interested in her – he had discovered that she is the daughter of the mistress he forsook years before, forsook because she was pregnant. He must now face his son with the embarrassing fact that he and Orie cannot marry because they are brother and sister. "Through all this, Fujimoto’s legitimate daughter has been jealously pursuing the love-lorn Yukichi. “There are, apparently, no surviving materials to tell us how all these matters are resolved in the end.” —David Owens
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
Mizoguchi shares with Dreyer a very similar source for motivations that later shaped his directorial vision: a troubled childhood. This early short film proves that point as it is quite straightforward in its biographical references.