Plot
Nitta Sayuri reveals how she transcended her fishing-village roots and became one of Japan's most celebrated geisha.
Release Year: 2005
Rating: 7.1/10 (55,343 voted)
Critic's Score: 54/100
Director:
Rob Marshall
Stars: Ziyi Zhang, Ken Watanabe, Michelle Yeoh
Storyline In 1929 an impoverished nine-year-old named Chiyo from a fishing village is sold to a geisha house in Kyoto's Gion district and subjected to cruel treatment from the owners and the head geisha Hatsumomo. Her stunning beauty attracts the vindictive jealousy of Hatsumomo, until she is rescued by and taken under the wing of Hatsumomo's bitter rival, Mameha. Under Mameha's mentorship, Chiyo becomes the geisha named Sayuri, trained in all the artistic and social skills a geisha must master in order to survive in her society. As a renowned geisha she enters a society of wealth, privilege, and political intrigue. As World War II looms Japan and the geisha's world are forever changed by the onslaught of history.
Writers: Robin Swicord, Arthur Golden
Cast: Suzuka Ohgo
-
Chiyo
Togo Igawa
-
Tanaka
Mako
-
Sakamoto
Samantha Futerman
-
Satsu
Elizabeth Sung
-
Sakamoto's Wife
Thomas Ikeda
-
Mr. Bekku
Li Gong
-
Hatsumomo
(as Gong Li)
Tsai Chin
-
Auntie
Kaori Momoi
-
Mother
Zoe Weizenbaum
-
Young Pumpkin
David Okihiro
-
Shamisen Teacher
Miyako Tachibana
-
Dance Teacher
Kotoko Kawamura
-
Granny
Karl Yune
-
Koichi
Eugenia Yuan
-
Korin
Filming Locations: American River, Sacramento, California, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $85,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $682,504
(USA)
(11 December 2005)
Gross: $157,749,686
(Worldwide)
(17 April 2006)
Technical Specs
Runtime:|
Philippines:
Did You Know?
Trivia: Maggie Cheung was once considered for the role of Mameha.
Goofs:
Anachronisms:
The dance performed by Sayuri during her debut is of a dance style that was invented as a reaction to the tragedy of World War II.
Quotes: Hatsumomo:
Stay out of my room. Your fingers smell. I can't have you touching my things.
User Review
Duel in the Rising Sun
Rating:
Looking over previous comments here, it is clear that this is a very
polarizing movie experience, one that seems to put "Syriana" to shame
in that realm. Director Rob Marshall has taken a best selling novel and
turned out a feature film that it appears some people love and some
absolutely hate. Count me in the first category, but allow me to
indulge the critics, too.
First, this isn't a typical Hollywood film. Despite popular western
misconceptions about Geishas, there's no sex, almost no violence and
beyond that, there's nearly two and a half hours of women's problems
that many men may find hard to relate to. This is not "Desperate
Housewives" or even "All my Children." This is about deceit, treachery
and rivalries as much as it is about a little girl who gets sold into
bondage by her impoverished Japanese family. Its also about a lifelong
search for love in a society in which people apparently can't just step
up and make frank declarations of devotion to one another. This movie
is in a word "complicated" and that is going to turn some American
movie goers off.
But not all Asian film fans are raving about this movie either, some
thinking it is a very superficial look at Japnese customs and others
incensed that a movie that's about an important Japanese tradition
should star three Chinese actresses. I cannot comment on either topic,
since I know little or nothing about Japanese tradition and I don't
know why Ziyi Zhang, Michelle Yoeh and Gong Li were cast. They have
been seen before by American audiences, but are hardly film stars in
this country, so it wasn't as if they were going to draw in tons of
fans on their names alone.
The only thing I can think of is, all three are fine actresses and they
more than proved that in this film. If Gong Li does not get a best
supporting actress nomination, there's no justice. And Zhang should
probably get a crack at best actress for her work, as well.
All three just light up the screen.
But, I can understand in this age of political correctness, how some
would be offended by the casting and how others might complain about
the handling of the Japanese subject matter.
All I can say is, movie makers face trade offs and one is either
targeting your film to a mass audience (and in America, that means a
generally poorly educated audience) or "narrow casting" your film to
people very well acquainted with the topic who will swoop down on any
flaw. But that, when dealing with a topic like Japanese geisha culture,
is a pretty small audience in America, too small to generate the kind
of box office a film like this needs to pull in to pay for itself. From
a purely Anglo, American, unschooled in Japanese culture standpoint, I
think Marshall made good decisions. I hope he has not slighted Japanese
culture too much, but I think he has made a suspenseful, captivating,
enchanting film that does something a lot of films haven't in recent
years.
He gave us a complex central character we can pull for throughout the
film and for that, I thank him.
"Memoirs of a Geisha" ranks among my five best films of the year thus
far, and deserves a best picture nomination.
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