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19 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It's in my top ten films of all time..., 19 Oct 2002
This is the only version of Mishima I have seen, so am not able to contrast it with the cinema version (too young...). Mishima is one of the most interesting biopics I have seen (this is the field my theses concerns at Uni), Schrader contrasting scenes from Mishima's life with episodes from his fiction. Between the wonderful scenes from Mishima's descent towards his death, we get scenes from books such as The Temple of the Golden Pavillion, Kyoko's House, Runaway Horses and Sun & Steel. The script is brilliant, written by Paul Schrader and his brother Leonard (who also wrote/co-wrote Kiss of the Spider Woman, Blue Collar & The Yakuza). Paul, of course, had written the brilliant biopic of Jake La Motta, Raging Bull for Martin Scorsese (along with Mardik Martin, De Niro & Scorsese). He would work on an unproduced biopic of Hank Williams, which according to Schrader on Schrader would have been similar in structure to this . He would make a later biopic, the so-so Patty Hearst (this he did not write). Mishima is one of the great films Schrader has directed, along with American Gigolo, Light Sleeper & Affliction. The score by Philip Glass suits the sumptuous visuals that John Bailey provides, as well as in Koyaanisquatsi and a less repetitive than Glass's work in Kundun. The performances are excellent, particularly Ken Ogata as Mishima. It's also notable that the executive producers are Francis Coppola and George Lucas, attempting to be associated with art cinema for the first time since producing Kurosawa's Kagemusha (1980). As their own careers were hitting lows- Lucas about to embark on drivel like Willow & Howard the Duck (before moving back to the Star Wars franchise, the latest instalments of which make you wonder if Lucas can write or direct rather than just produce); while Coppola would abandon experiments like One from the Heart & Rumble Fish and move towards films that are in it for the money (like The Rainmaker and Jack). In a way, Mishima is the full stop on the artistic aspirations and freedom of New Hollywood/the Movie Brats; dollar bills are more fun it seems. Schrader made this bold movie which touches on the myth of the life of Yukio Mishima and makes an interesting dichotomy between his art and life. The colours and the scenes that appear to be theatrical are a wonder; there is a nice reference to the mirror/body shot from Performance (Roeg & Cammell) in the Kyoko's House section. Schrader is able to deal objectively with Mishima by virtue of being an outsider it seems, though themes of loneliness, repression and violence are common to his earlier works such as American Gigolo, Hard Core and Taxi Driver. Mishima is not only one of the finest films of the 1980's, it is one of the finest films ever. It would be nice, in this age of DVD, for it to be reissued in all its sumptuous glory and hopefully contribute to a rediscovery of Schrader's talent (though Biskind's Easy Riders, Raging Bulls should have kickstarted that). I say it all the time, but watch this and realise it's a masterpiece.
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