| Koji Yakusho, Misa Shimizu , Mitsuko
Baisho , Isao Natsuyagi, Yukiya Kitamura, Hijiri Kojima .
In 1998, Japanese auteur Shohei Imamura announced his retirement
with his wild and wooly war drama Kanzo Sensei. His announcement
clearly proved to be premature, as exhibited by this bizarre romantic
drama about the power of really good sex, based on a book by Henmi
Yo. Koji Yakusho -- who starred in Imamura's Unagi along with virtually
every Japanese indie film of note in the late '90s -- is Yosuke,
a once successful marketing exec for an architecture film who is
now out of work and separated from his wife. One of his few friends
is Taro (Kazuo Kitamura), an aging bum living under a blue tarp
with his collection of rare books. During one of his drunken rants,
Taro tells Yosuke of a golden Buddha he stole from a temple in Kyoto
and stashed in a ramshackle house adjacent to a red bridge on the
rugged Noto peninsula. After Taro dies, Yosuke ventures to the hinterland
to see if he can find the priceless statue, and he finds the house,
which is inhabited by a senile confectionery maker (Imamura regular
Mitsuko Baisho) and by her vivacious granddaughter Saeko (Misa Shimizu).
Yosuke's first indication that Saeko is quite unlike the other girls
is when he spies her stealing cheese from a local market. She later
tells him that her body is a spring of water that wells up within
her. The only means of relief is by doing something naughty -- like
shoplifting -- or by engaging in a vigorous round of sex. Soon the
two are enthusiastically exchanging fluids, so much so that water
blasts from Saeko's nether regions like a fire hose. As the water
flows to the nearby creek, fish cluster around to cavort in its
special properties. Yosuke decides to stick around, landing a job
as a fisherman, not only to service Saeko's special needs, but also
to look for the Buddha. This film was screened at the 2001 Cannes
Film Festival and at the 2001 Toronto Film Festival. |