"The stairs in question are those of a bar in the red-light district of
Tokyo and the woman who ascends them is Mama-San, the bar's chief
hostess, but the stairs may just as well be those of a brothel for the
girls who work these bars are basically prostitutes, (even in Japan in
1960 you could never be that explicit). Of all Japanese directors Mikio
Naruse was the one most concerned with the plight of women in contemporary
society and he brought to his tales of women fallen on hard times an
almost Sirkian sensibility though even Sirk's melodramas stayed clear of
the brothel. This may also be the most 'westernized' of all Naruse's
films. We could be in the New Orleans of "Walk on the wild side" and
even the credits of this film have a touch of the Saul Bass about them.
(If only Dmytryk's film could have been this good). There is a
naturalism to Naruse's film that American melodramas lack and it's this
naturalism that lifts it out of being mere melodrama and into the realms
of tragedy. Fundamentally, Mama-San is a woman who hates the life she
has chosen but feels powerless to move on and Hideko Takamine, (from
"Floating Clouds"), is superb in the role. Yet here is an actress and a
director whose work never really traveled beyond Japan and even today
Naruse trails in popular opinion well behind the likes of Ozu and
Mizoguchi. Hopefully the release of this film in a DVD box set together
with "Floating Clouds" and "Late Chrysanthemums" will rectify."
The films reviewed here represent those I have liked or loved over the years. It is not a list of my favourite films but all the films reviewed here are worth seeing and worth seeking out. I know many of you won't agree with me on a lot of these but hopefully you will grant me, and the films that appear here, our place in the sun. Thanks for reading.
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