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Fighting
Elegy/Youth of the Beast
Dir. Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1966/1963
Criterion Collection, $29.95 each Given
the cult admiration afforded octogenarian director
Seijun Suzuki in some circles—he counts Tarantino
and Wong Kar-wai among his admirers—and the variety
of subjects and genres he’s tackled (as a novice,
I was caught off-guard by the trailer for Raccoon
Princess his surreal new musical with Zhang
Ziyi, but initiates were probably unsurprised),
someone more well-schooled than I would probably
be better equipped to comment on how successfully
new Criterion DVDs of Youth of the Beast
and Fighting Elegy function as points of
entry to his hefty, ever-expanding oeuvre. I’m
sure ardent admirers could argue for any number
of favorites, but having only previously run into
his bizarro postwar prostitute drama Gate of
Flesh, the best I can do to locate these two
films from the Sixties is to take them on their
own terms, a task in itself.
1963’s Youth of the Beast, one of the many
violent, kinetic yakuza thrillers that Suzuki
churned out for Nikkatsu, reveals the director
as something like the Douglas Sirk of the genre—so
conversant with its tropes that he’s able to bend
and break them, pushing us towards recognition
of the overall artifice of the enterprise. It’s
straightforward yet sticky, and throughout Suzuki
is as comfortable dabbling in surrealism as he
is in staging a fistfight. Detailing the quest
of mysterious hitman “Jo” (his tag recalls the
average Joes caught in the center of so many American
noirs; the role is played here by Joe Shishido)
to bring two notorious Tokyo gangs into war with
each other, thus precipitating their downfall,
Beast manages to best contemporaneous explorations
into the gangster flick by the likes of Godard
and the Nouvelle Vaguers in both the probing of
genre limits and in delivering perversity and
pleasure—simultaneously, in its best moments.
If you thought Sin City was pulpy, watch
this and see what you’ve been missing.
Although it was made three years later than Youth
of the Beast, Fighting Elegy (described
in an accompanying essay by Tony Rayns as a more
personal project for the director) feels much
older and is somewhat harder to classify. Kiroku
(Hideki Takahashi) is a student in immediately
prewar Japan who’s caught between dual loves:
one for the chaste, religious Michiko, the other
for (to quote the packaging) “savage, crazed violence.”
On the surface it seems his lack of success with
the former is the prime engine pushing him towards
the latter, but as the film moves along and Kiroku
morphs from wide-eyed bumbler into a steely street
fighter (a change that Takahashi miraculously
manages almost totally through degrees of squint),
the film gradually reveals the institutional psychoses
that shaped the generation of men who would lead
their nation into conflict with the rest of the
world. Though it may sound like grim stuff, Suzuki
makes room for piano-side masturbation, kung fu
parody, and just enough slapstick in his fight
sequences to keep the movie slightly off-balance
until its chilling conclusion: the onset of fascism.
Read the historical note on the last page of the
booklet to catch the full import of the film’s
final minutes.
As usual, Criterion’s transfers are spot-on—the
color in Beastlooks hand-painted while
the blacks and whites of Fighting Elegy
feel appropriately grungy and lo-fi while never
falling into murkiness. For special features,
Beastfeatures a brief interview with the
director, and both films have their original theatrical
trailers, but that’s about it. Take this more
as an informational note than a critique—where
a lovely multi-disc DVD set of Fanny and Alexander
is designed to teach us to watch a familiar work
in a different way, less adorned discs like these
betray the desire to ensure the contents are merely
available. For a director so well-known in Japan
that he’s referred to by first name only, the
effort couldn’t be more deserved.
—JEFF REICHERT |