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Like no other medium, movies not only transport audiences to worlds they have never seen or have only imagined but also allow viewers to experience other cultures and customs.
The Secret Life of Geisha takes an unprecedented look at one of Japan's most enduring, exotic, and misunderstood traditions. Narrated by Susan Sarandon and featuring Arthur Golden, author of the bestseller
Memoirs of a Geisha, this mesmerizing documentary enters a forbidden world "shrouded in mystery and steeped in ritual."
Contrary to western misconception, geishas--the word means "artist"--are not prostitutes. They are available for hire to keep men company for the evening. This rarely involves sex, Sarandon assures us, but so revered is a geisha as a symbol of Japan that one housewife interviewed in this program states that it would be an honor if her husband had an affair with one. This program peeks "behind the painted faces and delicate smiles" as geishas break their code of silence to reveal their "intricate way of life." It takes five years and can cost $500,000 to train a geisha. The finest silk kimonos that adorn a geisha alone cost $2,000. And while geishas have endured 400 years of turbulent history, their role in contemporary Japan seems to be diminishing. Little wonder that American businessmen are said to be taking the lead in preserving a tradition dedicated to the belief that, as one observer translates, "Man has done no wrong, man can do no wrong." --Donald Liebenson