A Fine Snowfall
16 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Kon Ichikawa's "The Makioka Sisters" (aka "A Fine Snowfall") centres on the lives of four upper middle class Japanese sisters during the lead up to the Pacific War. The sisters belong to the Makioka family, a once powerful house which is now witnessing its declining years.

The film opens with various misty landscape shots, before settling upon close ups of flower blossoms and petals. Throughout the film, like Ozu, Ichikawa uses ripening fruit and flower buds to suggest impermanence, transience and the passage of time. As Japan awaits change (and bloodshed), the sisters mourn the loss of their parents, fret over their family's finances and battle over tradition. One sister must be wedded to a man before she reaches a certain age, but her moxy and fiery independence (shades of Jane Austen) are at odds with both her biological clock and Japan's customs. Another sister wants to use the family's money to start a doll-making business, but the venture soon gives way to conventional, Western style sewing. All the while, time spirals away, inexorably towards...

Much of the film focuses on rituals and customs, most of which are drawn out to the point of parody, or shown to be archaic, laborious and ridiculously inflexible. Holding on to these customs, the eldest sisters believe, will preserve their house's greatness. But these customs, the film shows, are already dead, entombed buds desperately awaiting the new blooms promised by the two youngest, somewhat dissident sisters.

The film is stately, melodramatic, lush and colourful, but at times conjures up the spooky lavishness of Kobayashi's "Kwaidan". Ichikawa films the sisters in such a way that they are at times made grotesque and ghostly by ritual. Like John Huston, Ichikawa's filmography is comprised largely of adaptations of highly-regarded literary works. "The Makioka Sisters" was based on a novel by by Junichirô Tanizaki, a major Japanese novelist.

8/10 - Worth one viewing.
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