RATING: | 80% |
FORMAT: | DVD |
[Love & Honour]
A simple premise that allows us to explore love, devotion and personal pride in a complex and engaging manner. Behind the formally composed shots, typical of Japanese cinema, there lies a profoundly moving story of the emotional life as well as the life of the mind.
In a rigidly-hierarchical, caste-based culture, there are limited social opportunities for advancement, as such, especially for a samurai who has accidentally lost his sight. His stubborn pride leads his wife to break her chastity with a local bigwig to help her husband find alternative employment. Her devotion to her husband is such that she cuckolds him; leading us to consider if it is possible to be unfaithful for a good reason. The conclusion here is Yes; as is the answer to the corollary question: Does this infidelity prove her love. This paradox lies at the heart of this emotionally-distant yet affecting drama - as love is both rekindled and reaffirmed through it.
Despite the repeated claim that Be resolved you will both die. In that lies victory. Life lies in resolve for death
, the resolve of this film is to display the strength of love and its attendant honor - and of how these are both tested in the real world. Here the ideas are more important than the characters in an honest tearjerker with an honestly-happy conclusion. A clever cross between Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and Zatoichi that is a little too long for its own good.
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