A grade-A studio star vehicle for a prime Marlon Brando, Joshua Logan’s SAYONARA, complying with USA’s post-war rapprochement with Japan and Hollywood’s far-flung endeavor to marry oriental exotica with its tried-and-tested production formula, charts a defiant inter-racial romance with appeal, earnest and poignancy, but not without its ingrained stereotype of a disparate culture, also compounded by a pernicious double standard.
During the ongoing Korean War, ace fighter pilot Major Lloyd Gruver (Brando), the son of an army general and the pin-up boy of the USA air force, is seconded to the peaceful Japanese town Kobe to reunite with his fiancée Eileen (Owens), strings are pulled by her father Lt. Gen. Mark Webster (Smith). One of Lloyd’s airmen, Joe Kelly (Buttons) is hellbent on marrying an indigenous woman Katsumi (Umeki) at any cost, and Lloyd, although does not approve of his rash decision, acquiesces to be his best friend. Little does him know, himself will be enamored of Hana-ogi (Taka), the top-line trouper of Shochiku Kagekidan Girls Revue (an all female music theater troupe), and must overcome both USA military’s racist policy and suppression, and Hano-ogi’s lofty commitment to the Revue, which excludes matrimony for its performers, to get the girl, all coincides with the fortuitous passing of the law for inter-racial marriage, but for the low-ranking Kelly, his state of affairs will not be that rosy.
Earning 10 Oscar nominations and winning 4, including two for its supporting players Red Button and Miyoshi Umeki (a very first and still one-and-the-only win for any acting performer of Far Asian extraction), SAYONARA is conduced to introduce Japanese culture to any foreign eyes, Kabuki, Shochiku Revue, puppet theater (foreshadowing the tragic coda for Kelly and Katsumi), by turns, is presented to offer an absorbing but superficial overview, but ultimately, what is irresistible for Lloyd is the propaganda of a courteous, biddable wife who treats her husband like the master of her universe, risibly if slightly offensively embodied by an unfeigned, impish Umeki, her performance doesn’t live up to the hype of Oscar caliber, as the characterization of Katsumi never surpasses kin-deep tentativeness. Red Buttons has a bit more to enact as the pertinacious Kelly, sets an intrepid precedent for Lloyd to emulate his own fight for love.
Lloyd’s two girls are opposite forces, Patricia Owens’ Eileen, cannot be sated as a traditional army wife if Lloyd is not the right one for her, and her own rapport with a Kabuki star Nakamura (Montalban) is only briefly depicted, and it is not helped by the problematic double standard of casting the Mexican Montalban with artificial slanted eyes in the role, as if implying a racist undertone, which feels excruciatingly and conspicuously grating along with the Brando-Taka pair. An unsung Miiko Taka has a daunting job to achieve as the one who is designed to encompass all the virtues of a nubile Japanese woman from a westerner’s eyes, she must possess poise, elegance, passion and fidelity, vulnerable on the outside, but steely-minded when she makes up her mind, not to mention, in her first line, Hana-ogi has to divulge all her concealed feelings to a stunned Lloyd, her openness is one thing doesn’t conform to the preconception of a Japanese woman, but here Taka takes the plunge in delivering it with elucidation and self-regard, showing that Hana-ogi is a real match, not an inferior to her man, even he is the almighty Marlon Brando!
Brando, of course, is well-versed in playing up his disarming western vulgarity to contrast the superfine politesse of his oriental counterparts, sporting a drawling southern accent, he roundly kicks up his heels in the process of acculturation, occasionally pettish and frivolous (watching his scenes with a young James Garner), but dead committed in his dogged pursuit of happiness, whether inter-racial or not, Brando’s oozing star magnetism is the hard sell few audience can become immune to.
referential entry: Alain Resnais’ HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR (1959, 8.1/10); Walter Lang’s THE KING & I (1956, 5.3/10).
3.5 I don't hate it. The cinematography was exquisite with Japan's vibrant images, and the script had a historical and political context. International audiences were likely to empathize with the main characters' struggles of having interracial romance between a Japanese woman and a White American man. However, the small pieces of racial stereotypes were in every spot. Such as Wonton Font for the credits (they were SO BAD they burn me in the eyes). Side roles frequently showed their White Supremacy. Japanese women, along with other Asian women, are not a "type." They are who they are; each individual has an independent mind.
白蘭度帥得我哪管啥劇情啊
有人喜歡馬龍白蘭度是因?yàn)?#34;教父",我是因?yàn)?#34;櫻花戀"
馬龍·白蘭度版“蝴蝶夫人”。。。 很喜歡他在這部電影中的形象。。。超帥超可愛(ài)
7分,這是超級(jí)大年第30屆奧斯卡里面最弱的一部bp提名電影了。感覺(jué)這部電影只屬于那個(gè)時(shí)代,現(xiàn)在來(lái)看就是一部平平的電影,不過(guò)這仍然還是一部比較美的電影,而且劇作方面也沒(méi)什么大的問(wèn)題。本片體現(xiàn)的一些日本文化感覺(jué)還挺地道的。本片的表演還不錯(cuò),馬龍白蘭度的表現(xiàn)算不上特別亮眼,完成度挺高的但這個(gè)角色演起來(lái)除了口音以外并沒(méi)有什么難度。女主角長(zhǎng)的真的像章子怡。萊德的表演在我看來(lái)還挺出彩的,就是最后殉職那點(diǎn)其實(shí)可以發(fā)揮的更多一些。梅木三吉的表演比想象中出彩一些,雖然戲份不多但完成的還是很到位的,也不乏亮點(diǎn),感覺(jué)這個(gè)女配也不是很水
女演員一點(diǎn)也沒(méi)有藝妓的氣質(zhì)嘛。馬龍當(dāng)年還真是年輕啊??úㄌ禺?dāng)記者的時(shí)候還專門到日本去采訪過(guò)正在拍這部戲的馬龍,寫了一篇很長(zhǎng)的報(bào)道。http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1957/11/09/the-duke-in-his-domain
三星半!馬龍飾演美國(guó)軍官,深情正直的形象真是難能一見(jiàn),但過(guò)多篇幅在介紹日本劇團(tuán)及景色,要不是有馬龍兩個(gè)半小時(shí)也是實(shí)屬難熬。雖然他的角色依舊魅力無(wú)敵,馬龍一出手沒(méi)有誰(shuí)他撈不到,但跟日本女孩兒的愛(ài)情實(shí)在不怎麼讓人信服,而且和馬龍自然演技比起來(lái),女主角實(shí)在演得好用力!
卡波特說(shuō),全方面顯示了導(dǎo)演的無(wú)能;導(dǎo)演說(shuō),女主沒(méi)演過(guò)戲不要緊,我們有白龍度;白蘭度說(shuō),我已經(jīng)放棄了,享受日本。然后他演得漫不經(jīng)心的,竟然意外的好。
本片獲得第30屆奧斯卡最佳男配角、女配角、藝術(shù)指導(dǎo)和錄音獎(jiǎng)。真難以想象,片頭還是個(gè)種族主義擁護(hù)者,對(duì)異族文化,乃至跨種族婚姻都蔑視,桀驁不馴的男主角,片尾居然愛(ài)上一個(gè)有色人種,還愛(ài)得死去活來(lái)……
這個(gè)男人啊,尤物真是尤物。能讓女人欲罷不能
白蘭度穩(wěn)定發(fā)揮,藝術(shù)指導(dǎo)一流水平。故事放在那個(gè)年代有一定社會(huì)意義,可惜感情線的打造膩而不細(xì),而且這片拿到手的奧斯卡男女配實(shí)在水出天際。
白蘭度這叫一個(gè)散漫……不過(guò)散漫的別有味道。個(gè)人魅力太凸顯了,不過(guò)男女配角太有光芒了!情緒鋪墊適宜,不過(guò)爛尾啊爛尾!
日美安保條約的先聲
劇作上相當(dāng)成功,將一個(gè)美國(guó)軍官由排斥跨國(guó)通婚并對(duì)日本文化感到不屑,到他真正愛(ài)上一個(gè)日本女人的心跡歷程刻畫得細(xì)膩完整。其間男主角朋友與日籍妻子驚世駭俗的經(jīng)歷對(duì)于堅(jiān)定男主角的決心來(lái)講功不可沒(méi)。同時(shí),整部電影也是50年代日美關(guān)系的完美寫照。
三星半,情節(jié)偏弱,美、日勾搭的那些事兒……馬龍·白蘭度的慵懶、不羈、性感足以迷倒一大片女人,一個(gè)頂一萬(wàn)個(gè)!
內(nèi)核仍是“蝴蝶夫人”式的,繞不出這個(gè)圈子了。
白蘭度真是帥得漫不經(jīng)心。到底在日本拍過(guò)幾部片啊hhhhhh
有美國(guó)人當(dāng)時(shí)就能打破種族成見(jiàn),能體會(huì)與贊美東方人自己的審美,愿意融入異文化,反對(duì)對(duì)傳統(tǒng)文化產(chǎn)生自卑心理,這在當(dāng)時(shí)很了不起了
我滴媽,Brando這里面口音也太好笑...雖然不少奇怪的文化獵奇angle, 但總體還算好看,人也帥得慘絕人寰。不過(guò)提BP還是沒(méi)必要哈。
充滿了對(duì)東方女人的刻板印象和幻想意淫,開(kāi)頭還對(duì)下屬的美日婚姻頗有微詞的男主就因?yàn)楹团笥殉臣茉诼愤呉谎劬蛺?ài)上首席藝伎,女方明明對(duì)美國(guó)人有殺親之恨,就因?yàn)槟兄魈焯熳匪蛺?ài)上了并且專門和男主道歉……?男女配的愛(ài)情可信度完爆男女主,而且我完全沒(méi)感覺(jué)出馬龍白蘭度在本片里有什么帥的,一直都是流里流氣用美國(guó)那套大男子主義在泡妞。