Hitomi
Kuroki, Tsurutaro Kataoka, Norihei Miki , Kippei Shena, Toshie Negishi
, Renji Ishibashi .
The oft-filmed life story
of Sada Abe -- a courtesan who killed her lover during lovemaking
and then cut off her favorite organ as a keepsake -- has been the
stuff of legend for over 60 years. In Nobuhiko Obayashi's 1998 adaptation
of the same story, he went for a less explicit, more postmodern
tact; this film tries to get to the roots of Sada's motives. Born
into a poor and lonely childhood during the beginning of the 20th
century, Sada (played by television star Hitomi Kuroki) is raped
at the age of 14 by a thuggish college student (Masaku Ikeuchi)
but saved from further degradation by Okada (Kippei Shina), a mysterious
medical student who sports sunglasses and a long black coat. She
falls for him, but unfortunately Okada has a dark secret; he has
leprosy. Just before he departs from society to go to an asylum,
he carves out an imaginary heart from his chest with a scalpel and
gives it to Sada. Unable to get over the heartbreak of losing her
true love, she becomes a prostitute. At age 29, she becomes the
lover of a wealthy civil servant named Tachibana (Bengal) who buys
her out of prostitution and apprentices her to a teahouse. There
she meets Tatsuzo (Tsurutaro Kataoka), with whom she discovers a
passion that she never found in the arms of her thousands of johns.
When his wife learns of their tryst, she kicks Sada out. Soon Tatsuzo
-- who abandoned his wife -- and Sada are holed up in a dinky apartment
as sexual fugitives. Feeling like he has lived all he needs to live,
he encourages her to pull the chord across his throat as part of
a kinky sex game.
This film won the International
Film Critics Prize at the 1998 Berlin Film Festival.
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