-
Monday, Jun 11, 1990
In the Realm of the Senses
(Ai no corrida). A great shocker in 1976, Oshima's In the Realm of the Senses may now be considered the first successful attempt to make a serious film about sex and sexual passion. That is to say, far from being a film that, being sexually explicit, "leaves nothing to the imagination," typically of Oshima's films it "withholds more than it reveals...Oshima has always denied his audiences a fixed position in relation to the material of the film..." (Tony Rayns, Time Out). Also like many of Oshima's films it is based on a true story, this one concerning a woman who was found wandering the streets of Tokyo after having apparently killed and sexually mutilated her lover with his consent. The film reconstructs the relationship between Sada and Kichi on its own terms-which are entirely physical-but examines it in a tradition that looks back to the Japanese erotic woodcarving, and forward to pose questions of cinematic voyeurism. The performances by the two principles, Eiko Matsuda and Tatsuya Fuji, like the film itself are all the more audacious for their realism, for the almost casual acceptance of the crossing of boundaries. But even this has its forebears: Sada and Kichi are refugees from Edo's "floating world" (the pleasure quarter) whose very demise in modern times would have to equate sex with death. In locating his tale in 1936, the year in which Japanese militarism solidified, Oshima makes a pacifist statement far more provocative and comprehending than "make love, not war": kill me with love, he says, not with war.
This page may by only partially complete.