An Inlet of Muddy Water
An Inlet of Muddy Water (Japanese: にごりえ, romanized: Nigorie) is a 1953 Japanese drama film based on short stories by Ichiyō Higuchi and directed by Tadashi Imai.[1] It was entered into the 1954 Cannes Film Festival[2] and awarded numerous national film prizes.
An Inlet of Muddy Water | |
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Chikage Awashima and So Yamamura in the film An Inlet of Muddy Water (1953) | |
Directed by | Tadashi Imai |
Written by | Toshirō Ide Yoko Mizuki |
Based on | short stories by Ichiyō Higuchi |
Starring | Ken Mitsuda Yoshiko Kuga Chikage Awashima So Yamamura Haruko Sugimura |
Cinematography | Shunichiro Nakao |
Release date |
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Running time | 130 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Plot
In three episodes, the film portrays the fate of women during the Meiji era:
1. The Thirteenth Night: Young wife Seki turns up at her parents' house, announcing that she wants to divorce her abusive husband. Her father talks her into returning to her marital home, as her parents' welfare and the career of her brother depend on the marriage, also reminding her that she will have to leave her young son behind. On her way back home in a rickshaw, she discovers that the driver is Rokunosuke, a childhood friend who never got over their separation. They reminisce their once mutual affection, but part ways without an outlook to meeting again.
2. On The Last Day Of The Year: Mine works as a maid in the strict household of Mrs. Yamamura, wife of a wealthy businessman. To help her sick uncle who is in debt, Mine asks her employer to lend her money. Mrs. Yamamura first agrees, but later withdraws her offer. Out of desperation, Mine steals money from a household drawer and gives it to her aunt. Moments before her misdemeanour is revealed, Mrs. Yamamura's carefree son Ishinosuke takes the remaining money to waste it on gambling and drinking, thus obliterating all traces of Mine's theft.
3. Troubled Waters: Geisha O-Riki is the "star" of a brothel in a red light district. To her disapproval, she is still being followed by her impoverished former patron Genshichi who spent all his money on her. O-Riki gets involved with a new client, Asanosuke, but is reluctant to the possible prospect of marriage, citing her profession and her poor upbringing as reasons. Meanwhile, Genshichi forces his wife and little son to leave him due to her constant complaints that he is unable to support the family. Afterwards, he waylays O-Riki, murders her and commits suicide.
Cast
Episode 1 "The Thirteenth Night"
- Ken Mitsuda as Saito Kanae
- Akiko Tamura as Saito Moyo
- Hiro Kumon as Saito Inosuke
- Yatsuko Tanami as Harada Seki
- Hiroshi Akutagawa as Takasaka Rokunosuke
Episode 2 "On The Last Day Of The Year"
- Susumu Tatsuoka as Yamamura Kahee
- Teruko Nagaoka as Yamamura Aya
- Noboru Nakaya as Yamamura Ishinosuke
- Kyôko Kishida as Yamamura Shizuko
- Yoshiko Kuga as Mine
- Nobuo Nakamura as Yasubee
- Michiko Araki as Shin
- Shiro Inui as Minosuke
- Kazuo Kitamura as Rickshaw man
Episode 3 "Troubled Waters"
- Hisao Toake as Tobei
- Yoshie Minami as O-Yae
- Chikage Awashima as O-Riki
- So Yamamura as Asanosuke
- Seiji Miyaguchi as Genshichi
- Haruko Sugimura as O-Hatsu
- Maiko Hojo as O-Taka
Literary source
An Inlet of Muddy Water is based on Ichiyō Higuchi's short stories The Thirteenth Night (Japanese: 十三夜, romanized: Jusan'ya, 1895), On the Last Day of the Year (Japanese: 大つごもり, romanized: Ōtsugomori, 1894), and Troubled Waters (also: Muddy Bay, Japanese: にごり江, romanized: Nigorie, 1895). Other than the film, Higuchi's original story Troubled Waters ends with the discovery of the bodies of O-Riki and Genshichi and the passersby's speculations whether the two committed "Shinjū"/"Love Suicide" or O-Riki fell victim to a crime, leaving it to the reader to decide.
Awards and filmhistoric relevance
An Inlet of Muddy Water was awarded the Kinema Junpo Award, the Blue Ribbon Award and the Mainichi Film Award[3] for Best Film and is regarded by film historians as one of director Tadashi Imai's major works.[4][5] Two additional Mainichi Film Awards went to Imai for Best Direction and Haruko Sugimura as Best Supporting Actress (for An Inlet of Muddy Water and Tokyo Story).[3]
References
- "今井正とは". kotobank. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
- "Festival de Cannes: An Inlet of Muddy Water". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 29 January 2009.
- "8th Mainichi Film Awards 1953" (in Japanese). Retrieved 19 December 2020.
- Anderson, Joseph L.; Richie, Donald (1959). The Japanese Film – Art & Industry. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo: Charles E. Tuttle Company.
- Jacoby, Alexander (2008). Critical Handbook of Japanese Film Directors: From the Silent Era to the Present Day. Berkeley: Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 978-1-933330-53-2.