Makiko
Esumi, Tadanobu Asano, Akira Emoto, Minori Terada, Naomi Watanabe.
Japanese documentarian Hirokazu Kore-eda made his first dramatic
feature with this austere drama, which recalls the visual and narrative
style of Yasujiro Ozu. Yukimo (Makiko Esumi) is married to Ikuo
(Tadanobu Asano), a happy and humble man who loves her very much.
While Yukimo and Ikuo are content in their marriage and have a beautiful
infant son named Yuichi, Yukimo is haunted by visions of death.
She has a recurring nightmare in which her grandmother leaves her
home to go to the village of her birth to die, as Yukimo weeps uncontrollably.
Yukimo's sad obsession foreshadows a real tragedy in her life when
she wakes one morning to discover that police are at her door --
Ikuo has died after apparently committing suicide along the nearby
railroad tracks. Yukimo is shattered and spends several years in
solitude, until she meets Tamio (Taketoshi Naito), a widowed fisherman
who lives in a nearby village with his daughter. They fall in love,
and Yukimo marries him and moves into his home. She begins to find
happiness anew, until she returns to her old home for her brother's
wedding, which brings back a flood of troubling memories. Maboroshi
no Hikari (which translates as "Illusory Light") was a
multiple award winner at the 1995 Venice International Film Festival.
|