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  • Warning: Spoilers
    Onna no naka ni iru tanin / The Stranger Within a Woman (Mikio NARUSE, 1966)

    Although Naruse demonstrated mastery of both color and cinemascope in his 60s films, he reverted to black-and-white Academy format for his antepenultimate film. Perhaps this use of a conservative format was intended to counterbalance the fact that this film involves the most shocking plot of any Naruse film to date.

    Again the film focuses on an ostensibly normal family father (plauyed by Keiju Kobayashi), mother (Michiyo Aratama) and two adorable young children. Tragedy strikes the family of their best friends (Tatsuya Mihashi and Mitsuko Kusabue) soon after the film begins, the wife of this childless couple is found murdered in her bed. Through flashbacks and confessions, it is gradually revealed that Kobayashi and Kusabue were carrying on an affair and that she enjoyed "rough sex" (which one day went too far, ending in her accidental death). Aratama's goal is too keep her husband from confessing, and ruining the family's honor and comfortable middle-class existence. He, however, is subject to ever-increasing throes of guilt and remorse. Aratama is left with the dilemma of what to do....

    This film is as visually striking as it is sensational in terms of plot. Despite the out-of-the-ordinary subject matter, Naruse typically tends to downplay any sense of hysteria treating the events almost as if they depict just another little slice of ordinary suburban life. A fascinating film albeit more reminiscent of Nomura's work than of the "typical" Naruse film.
  • The early career of Naruse Mikio included several forays to genres other than his usual quiet home dramas, but still, by the 1950's, he had developed a very recognizable style that was reliable and altered from film to film only slightly. But near the end of his career, he did offer a surprise. Both his third-to-last and second-to-last films are crime thrillers! I'll give this to him, neither Ozu nor Mizoguchi could have ever ventured so far from the expected tofu or women's weepies.

    I recently watched "Hikinige" (Hit and Run, 1966), which came out after "Onna no naka ni iru tanin" (The Stranger Within a Woman, 1966). Both are highly interesting experiments, that have some merit to them, both also clear failings. Unlike "Hikinige", this film is actually based on a French novel by Edouard Atiyah. However, by far the biggest French flavor of the film comes from the cinematography by Fukuzawa Yasumichi. The stark contrast of the black and white images, the abundant use of shadows and light, and the coldness of the film's visual reality bring to mind French filmmakers from Glouzot and Becker to Melville and Chabrol. In fact, Chabrol adapted the same novel just five years later. His "Juste avant la nuit" (1971) is less ambitious than Naruse's work, but out of the two, easily the more watchable movie.

    Tashiro (Kobayashi Keiju) and Sugimoto (Mihashi Tatsuya) are best friends. When Sugimoto's wife (Wakabayashi Akiko) gets murdered by an unknown killer whom the husband suspects to be her lover, Tashiro suddenly starts to feel very guilt-ridden. This leads to depression, that has an immediate effect to his own family life with his wife (Aratama Michiyo).

    The film is interesting, but doesn't feel cohesive. It goes from being one film to something else several times over. It starts as this French crime narrative, very modern for Naruse, but after a while, the director finds his usual peaceful tempo, and brings the film closer to a home drama about Tashiro's family. The final act - which I will not spoil - is most uneven, since it tries to piece together influences from both Dostoevsky and Hitchcock. The fact that all these predecessors are visible in the finished film makes Naruse look like a novice, when it comes to crime films.

    This is a bleak film, a study of guilt, that also broods about our meaningless existence. There are some plot choices, that are clearly in the film only because the original novel forced Naruse's hand. The sexuality in the flashback sequences is one such example, as well as the ending. My issue with the film is that after a good first act, the narrative stops, which would be fine, since Naruse is clearly going for "Crime and Punishment" here. But the characters aren't interesting enough. The two guys are both portrayed as living corpses. Nobody has much passion. The best performance is the one by Aratama, since she at least reacts to things. Also the grandmother, played by Nagaoka Teruko, was a pleasant addition.

    I got the sense that, between the lines, the filmmaker is also issuing a critique of rich, materialist way of life, since the main family lives a luxurious lifestyle. He would return to this theme more clearly in "Hikinige", and both films include interesting details about 60's homes and the artifacts there in.

    The best thing about the film is easily the cinematography, but as a narrative, this doesn't match to Chabrol's version, nor to Naruse's "Hikinige" which soon followed.