The
Makioka Sisters (細雪, Sasame-yuki, "light snowfall") is a 1983 drama film directed by Kon Ichikawa based on the 1957 serial novel of the same name by Jun'ichirō Tanizaki. It depicts the pre-war lifestyle of the wealthy
Makioka family from Osaka with parallels to the seasons in Japan.
Plot
The story takes place in Japan primarily during the late 1930s (Shōwa period). The
Sisters live in the Kansai area (Kobe/Osaka) and travel to Tokyo and other prefectures throughout the novel.
In the spring of 1938, the four
Sisters, along with Teinosuke, Sachiko's husband, came to Kyoto to admire the cherry blossoms. Sachiko is unhappy that the elder sister Tsuruko, who is the heiress of the
Makioka clan and therefore represents the main house of the clan, upset the matter with Yukiko's marriage for the reason that a fatal flaw was discovered in the groom's clan.
Five years ago, the youngest of the Taeko
Sisters ran away from home with Keizaburo Okuhata, the third son of the owner of the Okuhata jewelry store located in Semba, Osaka's mall. One newspaper found out about this, but it mistakenly wrote the name of Yukiko instead of Taeko. Tatsuo, Tsuruko's husband, who together with her represents the main house of the
Makioka clan, demanded a refutation, but the newspaper only corrected its mistake, instead of Yukiko's name, writing the name Taeko, which only aggravated the seriousness of the situation. Dissatisfied with this turn of affairs, Yukiko and Taeko refuse to live in the main house and move to the Sachiko house, which is a lateral branch of the
Makioka clan.
Taeko starts making dolls. Her interest in Okuhata gradually fades and she grows closer to Itakura, who was previously an apprentice at Okuhata's jewelry store, but now became a photographer. At this time, Yukiko's bridegrooms are arranged with a bank broker, an employee of the prefectural council and the vice president of a pharmaceutical company, but they do not end in marriage, since Yukiko does not like the suitors. Itakura contracts an ear infection that leads to his sudden demise. And then Tatsuo comes home with the news that he is being transferred to Tokyo for work. Tsuruko is lost.
Yukiko is again offered a husband. This time the groom is a representative of the former aristocracy, the grandson of Viscount Higashidani. After Itakura's death, Taeko began going to bars, trying to drown her grief. In one bar, she meets the bartender Miyoshi, leaves the house and moves in with him. Miyoshi turns out to be an honest and serious young man, and Taeko starts a new life with him, which reassures the
Sisters worried about her fate. Tsuruko, after much hesitation, finally decides to leave for Tokyo with her husband. Yukiko is also doing well with Mr. Higashidani, they decide to get married.
On a winter's day at Osaka Station, Yukiko, Teinosuke and the others say goodbye to Tsuruko and her family who are leaving for Tokyo. Sachiko, however, decides not to see her off, thinking the pair would cry and embarrass themselves. Instead, she visits Taeko at her new home, and the two share tea and watch the falling snow.
Cast
Keiko Kishi - Tsuruko
Makioka: The eldest
Makioka sister is described as being phlegmatic, and most of her voice throughout the novel is heard through letters she sends to her
Sisters. Tsuruko lives in the "main"
Makioka house in Osaka, and is not only removed physically from her
Sisters, who live in a branch house in Ashiya, but also seems to be removed emotionally.
Yoshiko Sakuma - Sachiko
Makioka: The second eldest
Makioka sister who is the mistress of the branch house in Ashiya. Sachiko is good-tempered and indulgent of her younger
Sisters, who live with her instead of, as tradition would have it, with Tsuruko.
Sayuri Yoshinaga - Yukiko
Makioka: Melancholy Yukiko is still unmarried at 30, because, when the
Makioka family was in its heyday, all of her marriage proposals were turned down as not being good enough. Now, with the family in decline, marriage opportunities are much more scarce, and Yukiko's stoicity and shyness do nothing to incite her suitors' attentions. So shy that she cannot even speak on the telephone, Yukiko is sometimes frustrating, but ultimately loved by her
Sisters.
Yuko Kotegawa - Taeko
Makioka: The youngest
Makioka sister embraces both Western clothing style and Western attitudes toward the world more than any of her
Sisters. Taeko smokes, has affairs and willfully defies the orders of the main Osaka house. This is mostly because she is impatient waiting for Yukiko to marry, which she must do before Taeko is allowed. Taeko is called "Koi san" endearingly, by her two older
Sisters in Ashiya. Calling the youngest sister "Koi san" is something commonly practiced in Osaka.
Juzo Itami - Tatsuo
Makioka: Tsuruko's husband, who took the
Makioka name when he married her, and is now the master of the Makiokas. The three Ashiya
Sisters find Tatsuo abrasive, and somewhat dull. Tatsuo is employed at a bank.
Koji Ishizaka - Teinosuke
Makioka: Sachiko's husband who also took on the
Makioka name. Teinosuke is kind, respectful of the
Sisters and brilliantly smart, especially when it comes to literary arts, such as poetry and letter-writing. Teinosuke is an accountant.
Kobeicho Katsura - Okubata: Also called "Kei-boy" by the Ashiya
Sisters, is one of Taeko's suitors with whom she tried, and failed, to elope ten years before the story's beginning.
Itokku Kishibe - Itakura: A photographer friend of Taeko's, a stranger to the
Makioka family, to whom Taeko is attracted.
Mika Wakabayashi - Etsuko: Sachiko's school-aged daughter, who is especially fond of Yukiko.
Yukari Uehara - Oharu: A maid at the Ashiya house. Sachiko took Oharu under her wing and tries to teach the gossipy maid manners and decorum.
Michiyo Yokoyama - Mrs. Itani: The owner of a beauty salon that the three younger
Sisters frequent. Mrs. Itani's gossip and love of matchmaking often help the
Sisters find prospects for a husband for Yukiko.
Release
= Home media
=
The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray by the Criterion Collection on June 14, 2011 for the first time in the United States. The disc only contains a theatrical trailer as a special feature, along with the standard Criterion booklet.
Reception
In February 1985, Vincent Canby called it a "a lovely though not always easy to follow adaptation" of the novel and said "I can't be sure that the English subtitles catch what I assume to be the satiric edge to the dialogue in what is a rather sad comedy of manners. What is clear, though, is Mr. Ichikawa's cinematic equivalent of a literary style, in which characters are sometimes isolated in extended close-ups that have the effect—if not the substance—of internal monologues or of author's comments. The
Makioka Sisters, though always beautiful to look at, is more stately than emotionally or intellectually involving."
The film has received overwhelmingly positive reviews, in so far as it has been reviewed at all, earning a rare 100% percent on Rotten Tomatoes, from a pool of reviews with but three "top" reviewers.
References
Further reading
Atkinson, Michael (2011). "The
Makioka Sisters". Sight and Sound. 21 (9): 85.
External links
The
Makioka Sisters at IMDb
The
Makioka Sisters at AllMovie
The
Makioka Sisters at the Japanese Movie Database (in Japanese)
The
Makioka Sisters: Of Love and Money an essay by Audie Bock at the Criterion Collection