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Floating Clouds

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Floating Clouds

A married Japanese forester during WWII is sent to Indochina to manage forests. He meets a young Japanese typist and promises to leave his wife. He doesn't and after the war, she turns up and the affair resumes.

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Release : 1955
Rating : 7.6
Studio : TOHO, 
Crew : Production Design,  Director of Photography, 
Cast : Hideko Takamine Masayuki Mori Mariko Okada Isao Yamagata Chieko Nakakita
Genre : Drama Romance

Cast List

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Reviews

Scanialara
2018/08/30

You won't be disappointed!

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Onlinewsma
2018/08/30

Absolutely Brilliant!

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Dynamixor
2018/08/30

The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.

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Fatma Suarez
2018/08/30

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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WILLIAM FLANIGAN
2017/05/29

FLOATING CLOUDS (UKIGUMO). Viewed on Streaming. Subtitles = seven (7) stars; continuity/editing = four (4) stars; restoration = three (3) stars; score = three (3) stars. Director Mikio Naruse's bitter love story (based on a still-in-print novel with the same name) of a woman's pathological romantic attraction to a cold-heart-ed, womanizing loser set before, during, and after the War in the Pacific. Naruse's favorite veteran actress Hideko Takamine (see below) holds this rather fragmented film (the tale is told mostly in flash backs and flash forwards) together by playing multiple variations on one basic role. It's quite a performance (or rather a nuanced set of performances!). The narrative wanders about quite a bit (as do the protagonists). Starting off in Tokyo (from which Takamine's character flees to escape being a De Facto household sex slave); to Malaysia (now modern Viet Nam) and a remote forestry service operation (where the lovers first meet before and remain during the war); to seemingly all over devastated Tokyo (where the repatriated protagonists engage in an endless on-off, love-hate affair); and to a remote forestry station this time on a small (and inhospitable) island south of Kyushu (where the lovers end up). Along the way, the Director does a fair amount of editorializing such as exhibiting his preference for mixed-bathing Onsen and demonstrating one reliable way to get rich quick (start your own religion). Naruse also raises a series of question marks on the viewer's forehead: not much examination/explanation of the psychology behind a stunning, smart, and independent woman's continued attraction to a not-particularly-bright, inferior wastrel; the uncanny ability of the protagonists to always find each other's latest room/apartment in the jumble and chaos of post-war Japan; and the unchanging beauty (even when playing dead) of Takamine's character over what seems to be decades of to and fro (perhaps Naruse couldn't bare messing with the beauty of his lead actress?). Leading actor Masayuki Mori creates a well-defined, self-centered character (the object of deep-seated affection for Takamine's character), but ends up playing at most a supporting role for the actress (Takamine easily steals every scene she is in). Actor Daisuke Katô appears in a humorous cameo role where he is seen buying Mori's high-end new watch ostensibly for cash, but with the real price being the loss of his new wife to Mori's character (with tragic results). Takamine's spectrum of portrayals is simply fascinating to watch. Line reading dynamics, facial expressions, and body language--she employs them all! Her repertoire includes: an innocent appearing but sophisticated and determined young seductress (working as a secretary/typist in Malaysia); playing prostitutes at various levels on the financial-success "food chain"; eye-blink switching from a subservient, passive role to one of complete dominance (in most/all scenes with Mori's character); undergoing an abortion in a performance that does not run afoul of the occupation censors; playing a sick and dying (due to tuberculosis) character who is all but dragged into a climate sure to kill her; on and on. Restoration remains a work in progress. (And this was streamed off the new FilmStruck/Criterion site no less!) The print looks old and gray. Artifacts often appear where reels would seem to have been spliced together originally. Visual wear lines can be seen here and there. Audio artifacts are particularly noticeable during the first third of the movie. Opening credits exhibit jitters. Cinematography (narrow screen, gray and off/on white) seems okay, but some interior scenes are a bit under-lit. Continuity suffers from excessive/poor editing (perhaps to just reduce running time?) with discordant jump cuts occurring particularly during the middle third of the film. Score wanders all over the place (from sort of Middle Eastern to vaguely Hawaiian to melodramatic lush violins) and usually distracts from (rather than adds to) scenes. Subtitles are close enough and often a necessity due to lines delivered in different dialects (sometimes used to make minor plot points). Recommended especially for soap-box opera enthusiasts (and especially if/when restoration is completed). WILLIAM FLANIGAN, PhD.

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tieman64
2013/11/25

A 1955 classic by Mikio Naruse, "Floating Clouds" stars Masayuki Mori as Yukiko Koda, a young woman who drifts, seemingly aimlessly, across post-war Japan. As the US occupation begins, Yukiko reminisces about her past, and her relationship with a man called Kengo, now happily married and unavailable to her.A journey into disappointment and disillusionment, "Floating Clouds" watches as Yukiko's life slowly disintegrates. So too does Kengo's; his wife and career are dying, as is the Japan he once knew.Recalling early-Resnais, Naruse's narrative bleeds from past to present. A mood of uncertainty hangs heavy in the air, fragmented time, lives and Japanese infrastructure commingling. 8/10 – See Kobayashi's "The Human Condition" and Antonioni's "Beyond The Clouds".

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Red-125
2006/04/19

Ukigumo (1955), directed by Mikio Naruse, was shown as "Floating Clouds" at the Dryden Theatre in Rochester as part of a Naruse retrospective. This is Naruse's best-known film, and it stars his muse, the outstanding actor Hideko Takamine. The film is adapted from a novel by Fumiko Hayashi. Seven or eight of Naruse's films were based on novels by this author. Finally, many of the Toho studio supporting players appear in this movie, as they do in all of Naruse's films. In summary, "Floating Clouds" is classic Naruse. As in many Naruse films, the theme is grim. Japan is still struggling in the aftermath of World War II. The economy is slow, and the pall of defeat still hangs over the country.Although we think of the war as totally tragic for everyone involved--especially everyone Japanese--this isn't accurate. Hideko Takamine's character (Yukiko) had a passionate and sincere wartime romance with an engineer when they were both stationed in an area away from the combat zone. It becomes clear--ten years later--that this love affair was the high point of both their lives. Masuki Mori plays Kengo, the engineer who loves Yukiko, but who will never marry her.The tragedy of the film is that both Yukiko and Kengo have known happiness, but realize they will never know it again. Such happiness as they can grasp is undone by the harsh realities of financial and physical problems.This movie is not exactly a masterpiece, but it is the perfect film if you can only see one work by Naruse. It defines his themes, demonstrates his unique skills and extraordinary expertise, and showcases the best actors in his company. It's a movie worth seeking out and watching.

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William J. Fickling
2003/03/15

This at first appears to be a riveting study of human relationships, and it is entertaining. But ultimately it never gets beyond the level of a high class soaper, and it goes on far too long. Calling it a soaper is by no means pejorative; I am a dedicated fan of Douglas Sirk. But Sirk never took himself as seriously as the makers of this film appear to, and that makes it all the more ponderous. Worth seeing, however.

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