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Women in the Mirror

Kagami no onnatachi

France, Japan

2002

129 Min
Color
1.85:1
English, Japanese
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Yoshishige Yoshida

PROD Philippe Jacquier, Takumi Ogawa, Yutaka Shimomura, Shinichi Takata

SCR Yoshishige Yoshida

DP Masao Nakabori

CAST Mariko Okada, Yoshiko Tanaka, Sae Isshiki, Hideo Murota, Tokuma Nishioka

ED Hiroaki Morishita, Yoshishige Yoshida

PROD DES Kyôko Heya

MUSIC Keiko Harada, Mayumi Miyata

Rotterdam (Signals - Regained), Cannes (Out of Competition), BAFICI (Foco Jacques Doillon)

Synopsis

Yoshida’s return to form after a fifteen-year interval takes on the atomic bomb, which keeps haunting many Japanese lives to this very day. Three generations of women question their identity but, with Hiroshima’s A-Bomb Dome in the background, have to admit that there can be no definitive answer to their query, due to the irrational character of the atomic bombing.

Although more conventional than his independent films of the late 1960s and early 1970s, all Yoshida’s style elements are conspicuously present in this strong late work by the almost 70-year-old director. The Women in the Mirror brought him to Cannes and sparked a reappraisal of his oeuvre in his homeland and in France. It also marked the renewal of his collaboration on screen with actress Okada Mariko after three decades. —Rotterdam Film Festival

Director

Original

Yoshishige Yoshida

A legendary figure of the postwar Japanese cinema, Yoshishige Yoshida (b. 1933) is one of Japan’s most artistically ambitious, politically astute and influential filmmakers. Yoshida is best known for his work with the spellbinding Mariko Okada (b. 1934), one of the most beloved and celebrated actresses of her generation, and one of the great stars of the Japanese New Wave. Working together with Okada, Yoshida created an incredible body of films unparalleled for their formal sophistication, philosophical depth and sheer beauty. Underappreciated in this country, Yoshida is rightly considered in Japan and Europe, and especially France, among the preeminent masters of the modern Japanese art film.

Yoshida’s first passion, and the focus of his studies at Tokyo University, was French existential philosophy and literature, a training which deeply informs the intellectual rigor of his subsequent film work and later writing on film and art. By chance, or destiny, Yoshida was drawn into… read more

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Edwin N

19Jun10

A portrait of tormented women haunted by the torturous phantoms of the past like no other. 'Women in the Mirror' is a beautiful evocation of memory and fragmentation.

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