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Ugetsu - Criterion Collection
 
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Ugetsu - Criterion Collection (1954)

Starring: Masayuki Mori, Machiko Kyô Director: Kenji Mizoguchi Rating: Unrated Format: DVD
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)

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Special Features

  • Disc One:
  • New, restored high-definition transfer
  • Audio commentary by renowned critic, filmmaker, and festival programmer Tony Rayns
  • Two Worlds Intertwined, a new, 14-minute appreciation of Ugetsu by director Masahiro Shinoda
  • Process and Production, a new, 20-minute video interview with Tozuko Tanaka, first assistant director on Ugetsu
  • Ten-minute video interview with cinematographer Kazuo Miyagawa, from 1992
  • Theatrical trailers
  • New and improved English subtitle translation
  • Disc Two
  • Kenji Mizoguchi: The Life of a Film Director (1972), a comprehensive, 150-minute documentary by filmmaker Kaneto Shindo, with new and improved subtitles
  • Plus
  • A 72-page book featuring film critic Phillip Lopate and three short stories that influenced Mizoguchi in making the film

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Hailed by critics as one of the greatest films ever made, Kenji Mizoguchi's Ugetsu is an undisputed masterpiece of Japanese cinema, revealing greater depths of meaning and emotion with each successive viewing. Mizoguchi's exquisite "gender tragedy" is set during Japan's violent 16th-century civil wars, a historical context well-suited to the director's compassionate perspective on the plight of women and the foibles of men. The story focuses on two brothers, Genjuro (Masayuki Mori) and Tobei (Sakae Ozawa), whose dreams of glory (one as a wealthy potter, the other a would-be samurai) cause them to leave their wives for the promise of success in Kyoto. Both are led astray by their blind ambitions, and their wives suffer tragic fates in their absence, as Ugetsu evolves into a masterful mixture of brutal wartime realism and haunting ghost story. The way Mizoguchi weaves these elements so seamlessly together is what makes Ugetsu (masterfully derived from short stories by Akinari Ueda and Guy de Maupassant) so challenging and yet deeply rewarding as a timeless work of art. Featuring flawless performances by some of Japan's greatest actors (including Machiko Kyo, from Kurosawa's Rashomon), Ugetsu is essential viewing for any serious lover of film. --Jeff Shannon

DVD features
The Criterion Collection's high standards of scholarly excellence are on full display in the two-disc set of Ugetsu, packaged in an elegant slipcase reflecting the tonal beauty of the film itself, which has been fully restored with a high-definition digital transfer. The well-prepared commentary by critic/filmmaker Tony Rayns combines the astute observations of a serious cineaste (emphasizing a keen appreciation for Mizoguchi's long-take style, compositional meaning, and literary inspirations) with informative biographical and historical detail. In the 14-minute featurette "Two Worlds Intertwined," director Masahiro Shinoda discusses how Mizoguchi's career and films have had a lasting impact on himself and Japanese culture in general. Interviews with Tokuzo Tanaka (first assistant director on Ugetsu) and cinematographer Kazuo Miyagawa focus more specifically on anecdotal production history Mizoguchi's working methods, including the director's legendary perfectionism regarding painstaking details of props, costumes, and production design.

Disc 2 consists entirely of Kenji Mizoguchi: The Life of a Film Director, a 150-minute documentary from 1975. Though it occasionally gets bogged down in biographical minutia, the film provides a thoroughly comprehensive survey of Mizoguchi's career, including interviews with nearly all of Mizoguchi's primary collaborators. Director/interviewer Kaneto Shindo ultimately arrives at an emotionally devastating coup de grace when he informs the great actress Kinuyo Tanaka (star of The Life of Oharu and other Mizoguchi classics) that Mizoguchi had considered her "the love of his life." Tanaka's graceful response provides a moving appreciation of their artistic bond, which never evolved into romance. As we learn, the tragic irony of Mizoguchi's life is that he died in sadness and suffering, in 1956, just as he was entering a more hopeful and artistically revitalized period of middle age. After showing us all the locations that were important in Mizoguchi's life, the film closes with a blunt discovery of life's ethereal nature: The great director's final home was torn down and replaced with a gas station. The 72-page booklet that accompanies Ugestu contains a well-written appreciation of the film by critic Phillip Lopate. Also included are the three short stories that inspired Ugetsu, allowing readers to see how Mizoguchi and screenwriter Yoshikata Yoda masterfully combined elements of these unrelated stories to create one of the enduring classics of Japanese cinema. --Jeff Shannon



Product Description

The great Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi's crowning achievement, set in sixteenth-century Japan, a period of bloody civil war, and focusing on an ambitious potter haunted by a beautiful ghost and a farmer who dreams of becoming a samurai. A classic com

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52 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (52 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
44 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What are the Important Things in Life?, April 11, 2004
By Randy Keehn (Williston, ND United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
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This review is from: Ugetsu [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Despite some disturbing scenes and issues, this is a beautiful movie. It tells the story of how the search for money and glory can destroy true happiness. What makes the story work is a lot of different things. First of all, the acting is very good. Watching in in subtitles (there wasn't any other option) helped with appreciating this facet of the movie. The scenery and costumes were pretty good as well. The directing was what was the most outstanding. I confess that I have a problem with most modern movies in that they show a heavy dependance on modern technology and declining moral standards. This enables modern films to utilize two avenues of showing more and more which leaves less and less to the imagination. The talent on display in "Ugetsu" shows how directing at its' best was a true art form; greater, often, than the acting itself. There are several scenes that come to mind. As soldiers rape and pillage, there comes a scene of a gang rape of a woman. Everything we see on film makes it clear in our minds as to what has taken place. Yet the only clothing we see removed is a pair of sandals. Another scene involves an erotic encounter in which, again we understand clearly yet are not invited to watch. There are other scenes worthy of mention but I don't want to give anything away. The way this movie moves along is another testament to its' director; Kenji Mizoguchi.

On the negative side, this movie is currently only available on VHS. I confess to being frustrated with all of my Beta movies and now all of my VHS movies seeming to head towards obsolescence. However, I have come to appreciate the quality as well as the other features of DVD's. Thus I found myself immediately focussing on the occassional snap, crackle, and pop of the VHS quality. Still, once I was engrossed in the story (and that didn't take long to happen), it either ceased to bother me or the quality improved and the movie progressed.

There is a timeless message in this movie that will reach out to just about all viewers. It has to do with identifying our values and appreciating what we have rather than what we desire. Sounds like a message we've heard before but I'm not sure it's been presented quite so well before or since.

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27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the greatest movies in cinema history., October 17, 2005
The first time I saw this movie reminded me of my first time seeing The Passion of Joan of Arc, or Solyaris: like I had found something I had lost. Ugetsu is the story of two couples in 16th century Japan (a brother and sister and their respective spouses) and the misadventures that befall them when they set out from their village to sell pottery in the city. A hauntingly beautiful meditation on the private but universal struggle between love and greed, Ugetsu, which translates (it says here) as "Tales of a Pale and Mysterious Moon After the Rain," feels exactly like you'd expect film with that title to feel: it has the visual texture and depth of Dreyer's greatest films and the comfortable sadness of Ozu's masterpieces. Truly one of the most rewarding moviegoing experiences of my life.
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "I desire nothing but you with me.", July 14, 2005
This review is from: Ugetsu [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Profound in its sadness UGETSU is the heartbreaking story of two dirt poor villagers back in 16th century Japan. Both are married and have wives who love them just the way they are, but both men are blinded to their wives' love by envy. One to be rich the other to be a great warrior. They think that if they attain these goals they will find happiness and their wives will love them more - but that is already impossible.

Both men are granted their wishes but it doesn't bring them happiness. In fact it brings them and their wives more pain and grief then they ever knew existed. In the end they realize the happiness they had to begin with, but is it too late?

Perfect in every way, I consider this not only among the greatest films, but also one of the most important. There is a great lesson to learn here about appreciating the true happiness that might be right in front of you or already inside you.

Criterion: a Mizoguchi box set please.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars SIMPLY THE BEST
Calling this film a "movie" is like calling the Mona Lisa a "painting". Heartbreakingly gorgeous from start to finish, this masterwork has no equal in the film arts. Read more
Published 20 days ago by ROBERT BLANKEN

5.0 out of 5 stars ghost story
A fabulous tale of folly and redemption set against the massive disruptions that were the Japanese Civil Wars, with roving bands of marauding soldiers... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Ron Braithwaite

5.0 out of 5 stars a yin yang film
The concept of yin and yang describes the interconnectedness of opposites:
for example, light an dark, male and female, contraction ( yin) and expansion ( yang). Read more
Published 9 months ago by AKA

5.0 out of 5 stars A timeless classic
It was hard for me to decide which of Mizoguchi's 2 masterpieces UGETSU or SANSHO THE BAILIFF was the greater film. Let's just say they are 1 and 1A in that order. Read more
Published 9 months ago by JfromJersey

5.0 out of 5 stars Mysterious Story!
This is a great story of a man who dreams of being a great man of wealth and position in 15th century Japan. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Lynn Ellingwood

5.0 out of 5 stars Great
Ugetsu (Ugetsu monogatari), a 1953 film by Kenji Mizoguchi, which won the Venice Film Festival's top prize (the Silver Lion Award for Best Direction) that year, is one of the best... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Cosmoetica

5.0 out of 5 stars Ugetsu
Ugetsu - Criterion Collection Ugetsu is one of those films great directors have referred to over subsequent years. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Jonathan Trebilcock

5.0 out of 5 stars Mizoguchi--a true master of his craft
Director Kenji Mizoguchi was a perfectionist. On the set he would often demand hundreds of retakes. Read more
Published 20 months ago by C. Christopher Blackshere

5.0 out of 5 stars Ghosts and Shadows
Brilliant! Brilliant! Brilliant! I am now a Kenji Mizoguchi fan and plan to check out more of his work. Few ghost stories come near this movie in quality. Simply terrific fable.
Published on August 10, 2007 by Antonio J. Gray

5.0 out of 5 stars Ugetsu
One of the great masterworks of Japanese cinema, "Ugetsu" is part ghost story, part wartime drama, and the two mix beautifully under Mizoguchi's cogent direction. Read more
Published on June 27, 2007 by John Farr

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