The Sun
Russia / Japan, 115 minutes
Director: Aleksandr Sokurov
Screenwriter: Yuri Arabov
Cast: Issei Ogata, Robert Dawson
Drama, In Japanese and English, with English subtitles
Synopsis:
Susan Sontag, the recently departed intellectual and devout cinephile,
proclaimed Alexander Sokurov to be the most ambitious and original director
of his generation. From the technically audacious costume drama Russian
Ark - shot in a single take in the Hermitage - to the emotionally
raw, viscerally stylized parent-and-child elegies The Second
Circle and Mother and Son, Sokurov has exerted
a rigorous ingenuity throughout his wildly diverse projects. Marked
by Sokurov's oblique narrative style and an appropriately stately pace,
The Sun follows Moloch (on Hitler) and Taurus
(on Lenin) as the third installment in his bold, ongoing series on those
few figures who have held "ultimate power." This formidable
work takes as its subject Emperor Hirohito (Issei Ogata), spanning the
period between August 1945 and New Year's Day, 1946, during the American
occupation of Japan. While many ordinary people in Sokurov's films have
been treated by his camera as if they were holy and ethereal, The
Sun details Hirohito's renunciation of his divinity and his
transformation from a deity into the humbled man who surrenders Japan
in World War II. His fate is to be determined by General Douglas MacArthur
(Robert Dawson) and the meetings between these two very different individuals
form the core of this mesmerizing, demanding epic. Sokurov chooses to
treat Hirohito sympathetically, emphasizing the number of lives he saves
by asking his people to lay down their arms as the Allies advance, and
the dignified manner in which he takes his mistreatment at the hands
of the invaders. This is an intensely challenging role and Ogata - best
known for his work in Edward Yang's revered Yi Yi -
plays the emperor with great sensitivity and even humour, keeping his
nuanced character perpetually balanced on the razor's edge of innocence
and experience, meekness and omnipotence. Sokurov has claimed that "the
character is an inexhaustible artistic object" and The
Sun does not merely succeed as the first attempt at examining
the life of Hirohito - as a man and not a god - in close-up; thanks
to Sokurov's preternatural vision, it is also a strikingly singular
aesthetic experience.
Showtimes:
Wednesday,
May 3, 7:45 PM - Thursday,
May 4, 2:45 PM