The Love of Sumako the Actress (1947) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
THE LOVE OF SUMAKO THE ACTRESS (Kenji Mizoguchi, 1947) ***
Bunuel197622 May 2008
Being one of the very few Mizoguchi films set in relatively modern times that I’ve come across, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this one; incidentally, the domestic asides here are certainly the closest I’ve seen the director’s style approaching that of his contemporary Yasujiro Ozu (whose work I can’t seem to get into – having watched only a handful of titles despite owning at least a score of them recorded off Italian TV!).

The narrative revolves around a radical theatre group within a school who wish to break away from the Japanese tradition of Kabuki and start tackling the European classics; for their inaugural play, they settle on Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” – however, they’re stuck when it comes to filling the demanding leading role of a liberated woman i.e. until the director stumbles upon a quarreling couple on the street, where the woman has decided to leave her partner for good to pursue an acting career (she’s the real-life Sumako Matsui, considered the first modern Japanese stage actress)! Opening on the director giving a passionate lecture about Theatre and Art, one is immediately thrust into the subject matter – and, indeed, this emerges to be an unsung film on the profession; still, as the title suggests, the leading lady – who’s shot to stardom with the play – becomes involved in an affair with the director, which all but ruins their lives: the latter abandons his family, resigns from his position at the school and the company’s reduced to touring the Continent because they can’t afford a place of their own! However, this itinerant living eventually takes its toll on the director – who succumbs to pneumonia; the outfit decides to stick together…but the actress – who naturally suffers most from the loss of her loved one – can’t bear it for long and, after scoring a great success with a straight rendition of “Carmen”, commits suicide (the year is 1918)!

The latter marks yet another remarkable (and award-winning) performance from the versatile Kinuyo Tanaka in a role which, appropriately, allows her to virtually run the gamut of emotions: from determination in having a career to a willingness to learn the ropes to displaying confidence (and even pride) in her work, not to mention the personal conflicts brought on by the affair. By avoiding to play on the feelings inherent in the central romance, one’s tempted to accept it as being of an intellectual nature rather than physical; Mizoguchi, in fact, prefers to concentrate on the way this relationship affects the people around them – the director’s colleagues and, especially, his family (his wife’s domineering mother reminds him that he owes his career to her own social status, while his own daughter’s marriage prospects are quashed by his ‘immoral behavior’). There is, however, a moving subtext in the doom-laden performance being held on the night of the director’s death; similarly, the actress – as if imbued with her lover’s spirit – takes over the staging during the climax of “Carmen” herself.

The film, then, boasts a wonderful (and poetic) final image – the face of the actress in her coffin adorned by flowers from her admirers; incidentally, the beauty of the cinematography throughout is evident in spite of a damaged source print. On a personal note, I found it rather strange to watch the works of literary giants such as Ibsen and Tolstoy being enacted by Japanese actors but, I guess, that’s just the kind of stuff the Japanese would choose to produce in order to distance themselves from the traditional style of Kabuki! For the record, in spite of its relatively high reputation (being a work by a renowned master film-maker), Mizoguchi himself is said to have preferred the Teinosuke Kinugasa version of the same events – called THE ACTRESS, and made that very year!!
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Tanaka tour de force
kerpan19 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
The most impressive element of this film is a stunning performance by Kinuyo Tanaka as the title character Sumako -- the first real stage actress in Japan, whose short life was compounded of triumph and tragedy. We get to see Tanaka (as Sumako) in Ibsen's "Doll House", Tolstoy's "Resurrection" and a non-operatic version of "Carmen". So Yamamura did a decent job as the teacher/director who was Tanaka's mentor/lover. I found the script a bit too rigid (presumably this largely followed the facts of this actress's career). Nonetheless, one of the better scripts used by Mizoguchi around this time.

Filmed by Minoru Miki, who shot many of Mizoguchi's best early films, the visual beauty here was probably not fully shown off in the battered 16mm print I saw. I hope that a better print exists -- and that I see it some day.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Sumako the Actress
fa-oy1 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Not a very well-known film even among Mizoguchi fans, this film is yet another good work coming from one of the masters of Japanese cinema. Starring a great Japanese actress "Kinuyo Tanaka", who at the same time plays an actress role in the plot, this is definitely a film that has a lot to offer.

Shimamura is a restless dramatist that wants to introduce western theater from authors like Ibsen in Japan. One day he sees Sumako arguing with his husband and intending to leave him, he interferes in the arguing and manages to calm it down. From there on both would forge a great bond and relationship that would not be free of guilty feelings from both sides; also, he would find in Sumako an excellent actress. So as to be alongside Sumako, even though he knows he's doing wrong, Shimamura abandons his family and goes touring with her and his crew through many important theaters in Japan.

The acting is superb, Kinuyo Tanaka is really a delight on screen, and you can see her here playing many different roles according to the play being performed. Also, all the plays are mostly in a few sequences, so you have a great panorama of what is being played as though you actually were sitting on the theater itself.

Notwithstanding the fact that this film gets sort of predictable at times (I sure knew Shimamura was going to die when he first started feeling bad), and that it feels a little bit rushed (the love between him and Sumako happens so fast that it is hard to believe), this film is still worth watching. One scene to point out in the film would be the last one, that's really a beautiful shot.

So if you are looking for another film to watch from Mizoguchi, or if you were doubting about watching this one or not, do not hesitate, even though the film might not be as good as his other efforts, it is still a good one.

My score: 8.3/10
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Tanaka In A Whirlwind Of Performance
boblipton18 September 2019
Kinuyo Tanaka plays Sumako Matsui, considered the first great actress of the modern Japanese stage. Sô Yamamura plays Hôgetsu Shimamura, anxious to perform Ibsen's A DOLL'S HOUSE, who discovers her and drills her her in the part, and left his wife and family to be with her.

Despite the name, it's the history of the drama movement in Japan through her death, and it is, as usual with a film by Kenji Mizoguchi, impeccable, even as it falls into all the standard tropes of this sort of movie. Its best scenes are those of Yamamura directing Miss Tanaka in a few lines from Ibsen, getting exactly the performance he wants from her, and in the wings while playing CARMEN, when she mocks the actor who is supposed to kill her onstage about his weak performance. There's little to argue here when I state she gives a great and varying performance, switching modes like lightning, but it is those very strengths that call attention to the artificiality of the movie.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed