-
Guiseppe 2022-01-18 08:02:29
[Translation] Art Director Eiko Ishioka's self-report: About the movie "Mishima Yukio"
"I seem to be standing on the edge of a cliff, surrounded by a vortex of two emotions, horror and excitement. Paul, who knows that I am a movie layman, and who bet on me with risks, makes me very touched, and his courage has also moved me. I am addicted."
The art of this film has been worshipped...
-
Troy 2022-01-18 08:02:29
Mishima Yukio: Four Acts in the World
I really like the narrative structure of this film. The film starts from waking up at home in the early morning before Mishima commits suicide, and then it is divided into four parts in detail: 1. Beauty 2. Art 3. Action 4. Combination of brush and sword. 1-3 respectively present the stories in his...

Yasuaki Kurata
-
Susie 2022-01-18 08:02:29
B+ / At first I thought that the setting of the text level was too rigid and stylized, but later I felt that this kind of sluggishness was just in line with the solemn spiritual ritual. Although the adaptation of the work is limited to the four-stage style and is slightly scribbled, the symbiosis of the installation + the stage + the real scene is really very charming. I personally thought that the casting and performance were relatively failed, but the rhythm and the script were saved. Schrader, an American, can photograph this degree very well.
-
Jennyfer 2022-03-25 09:01:19
I think Schrader explores the infinite possibilities of images on film. This film is very pioneering and experimental, and the form is extremely ornate. The narrative is divided into chapters, black and white and color interspersed, two time-space cross-cutting, and stage-quality art. design. Schrader is worthy of being a screenwriter. While playing with the form, he also took into account the characterization, and presented us with a three islands that dare to love and hate. Unlike some movies, they only play the form and the content is thin.
Related articles
Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters quotes
-
Osamu: You have to promise not to kiss me... until after I'm dead.
-
Yukio Mishima (Narrator): Men wear masks to make themselves beautiful. But unlike a woman's, a man's determination to become beautiful is always a desire for death.