

Harakiri, made in 1962 by Masaki Kobayashi and starring Tatsuya Nakadai (he of numerous feudal Japan titles by Kurosawa and others), is a dark look at the samurai code of bushido and the scars it inflicted on the collective Japanese soul. It is neither a glorification of the warrior nor a swashbuckling adventure film. By targeting the ceremony of seppuku - popularly known as harakiri – Kobayashi delivers a gut-wrenching indictment of human corruption and self-deception.
The samurai enters the temple and bows to the witnesses and walks slowly to a raised platform in front of the altar. He then sits in seiza on the altar with the Kaishaku (the second) crouching on his left side. An official comes forward bearing a stand holding the shoto (a short sword, nine and a half inches in length). The samurai receives the shoto and reverently raises it to his head with both hands, placing it in front of him. Allowing his robe to slip down to his hips and remaining naked to the waist, carefully according to custom he tucks his sleeves under his knees to prevent himself from falling backward. (According to custom, a noble Japanese gentleman should die falling forward.) He then takes the shoto in his hand and stabs himself deeply below the waist on his left side. He draws the blade slowly to the right side and turning it in the wound cuts slightly upwards. The supplicant should never show any facial expression during his self-disembowelment. Drawing the shoto out, he leans forward and offers his neck. At that moment, the Kaishaku, still crouching, stands and severs the head with one swift stroke of his sword.
This is the basic ritual of seppuku. Under the bushido code, any samurai fallen from honor should end his life by this manner. Dishonor could come by various means: defeat in battle, cowardice under fire, loss of position, or loss of one’s topknot (the gathered hair at the top of the warrior’s head). It’s important to note the prohibition of any feeling by the supplicant: in this ultimate act of pain and self-denial, emotion must not stain the purity of the ritual. Humanity is being overcome here, after all. [ed. note: spoilers ahead]
Under the opening titles passes a series of stately tracking shots along the empty corridors and beautifully decorated shoji of a traditional Japanese palace. My first impression was of the soul’s journey to the underworld. The emptiness of those flat surfaces and cold greys and blacks is peaceful but chilling. Whoever lives here is encased in a museum, suffused in beautiful ghosts of a violent past. This is nostalgia for death. When we at last reach the Kamiza, the altar of the warrior gods, the sepulchral form of the samurai in armor sits silently, unmoving and unmoved by human tragedy.
We soon meet the living occupants, the Iyi clan counselor and various other samurai. This is a time of peace, however, and these samurai stay in their finely appointed compound, wear exquisite robes, and keep their swords sheathed. These men are wealthy, powerful, and settled (there are no women in the Iyi clan headquarters, it seems).
Into this austere bastion enters a scruffy, darkly quiet man, a ronin (masterless samurai) named Tsugomo who asks that he be granted the privilege of ending his pitiful life in the witness of fellow-samurai. He is given an interview with the Counselor Saito, who tells him a story as a warning. Samurai, it seems, are increasingly showing up at the gates of rich houses with the same request, knowing that in all likelihood they’ll be given a handout and sent on their way. But the Iyi are not like that, Saito tells Tsugomo, recalling the last samurai who asked to be given an audience for harakiri – a young, pathetic and evidently cowardly fellow named Chijiwa – was forced to go through the ritual, after pleading for two days’ respite. Not only that, the disgraced samurai had nothing but bamboo swords in his possession. In this flashback account by the Iyi warlord, Chijiwa is triply disgraced: he never meant to commit suicide, he just wanted charity; he had traded in his swords (a samurai’s soul) for meaningless bamboo blades; and, worst of all, he showed cowardice among his fellows and begged for mercy.
Tsugomo is resolute; “I fully intend to commit suicide,” he tells Saito, who is impressed by his commitment and grants his request. The ceremony is set, the warriors are assembled in the courtyard, Tsugomo is on the mat with the deadly accoutrements around him, and then comes the first surprise. Tsugomo asks for a second of his own choice, an Iyi sword master. As it turns out, the swordsman is not present. Saito tells Tsugomo to choose another. Oddly enough, the second choice swordsman is also found to be indisposed. Once the Iyi learn Tsugomo’s third choice is absent as well, they convene privately: “Clearly he’s up to something.” Their suspicions are confirmed soon enough.
Counselor Saito angrily confronts Tsugomo, who remains quiet, immobile, and opaque. He has a story of his own to tell. Yes, as it happens, he knew the disgraced Chijiwa. Tsugomo’s tale reveals another side of samurai life, one that is not so celebrated. It’s the story of a fall into poverty, sickness and tragedy, yet there is humor and love too. But this story doesn’t move the assembled samurai, whose bloodlust is palpable. Wait, says Tsugomo, who has more to tell them – about those missing swordsmen. Thus is the stage set for the final act of revenge and redemption.
The fact that these decadent samurai are merely cold-hearted, duplicitous bureaucrats is revealed over the course of the film, a slow and stately unfolding which is one of the brilliant aspects of Kobayashi’s work. As a former student of Japanese martial arts, I’m ashamed to admit that I was taken in by the proud, exquisitely decorated façade of the Iyi clansmen and shared their contempt for the young, down-on-his-luck samurai Chijwa who comes to their gate. By the end of Tsugomo’s story, we know of the all-too-human drama behind Chijiwa’s disgrace and Tsugomo’s resolve. These sorts of sweat-and-dirt details are never admitted in the bushido code. To do so would be weakness. Opening to one’s humanity puts a chink in the armor, a blade in the gut. But, as we learn by the end, the proud, well-appointed Iyi clansmen are hiding behind façades of delicate cloth and sharpened steel, living on lies and the vanished honor of a bygone era. By the climax, they are utterly disgraced within their walls, before each other’s eyes. In a final act of bureaucratic deception, the counselor and his men take the necessary steps to keep their obscuring screens of nobility intact – at all costs.
Kobayashi’s treatment of violence is nuanced and masterful. The swordfights have neither the exhilaration nor lightning pacing of the battles in Kurosawa’s Yojimbo and Sanjuro, for instance. In Harakiri’s climactic fight, Kobayashi stages long, excruciating pauses where the viewer might reflect for a moment on the senselessness of it all, not to mention the suffering of those having to go through with it. Chijiwa’s disembowelment, using his own bamboo sword – “This wouldn’t cut tofu!” the Iyi swordsmen laugh – is nearly unbearable to watch. Kobayashi spares us none of the young man’s agony as he tries, again and again, to force the dull blade into his abdomen. The ugly brute assigned to finish him off (a dead ringer for Richard Boone) eggs Chijiwa on cruelly: “Cut sideways! Cut!” The manner in which our impressions of Chijiwa and Tsugomo swing from contempt to sympathy is reminiscent of the multiple points of view presented in Kurosawa’s Rashomon.
The pacing of Harakiri is reminiscent of a martial-arts ritual – slow and stately, punctuated by sudden violence. The tranquil opening is followed by the brutal forced suicide. There follows the long, rambling interlude of Tsugomo’s tale told from his suicide mat, while the suspense mounts. Stillness, ritualized violence, more quietude, and finally, more extreme violence. The fits of bloodletting give way, grudgingly, to the soft humanity at the heart of the story. Tsugomo’s decline is overflowing with tragedy, humor, love, compassion, and tenderness – all that is not present in the Iyi compound and its council of unbendable warlords. They’re clearly uncomfortable taking in Tsugomo’s revelations, especially as he reminds them: “This might be you, tomorrow.” Kobayashi’s message is plain: repression will inevitably give way to an uncontrollable spasm of chaos. Power cannot hold in perpetuity, as the powerful grow decadent and weak. A society built upon the codes of conflict will always return to war for its sustenance.
One doesn’t have to dig far to find the parables in Kobayashi’s film. Antiwar and anti-establishment, Harakiri can be seen as a comment on the Cold War – ’62 was the year of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Closer to the filmmaker’s heart is the lesson of how rigid, codified, and brutal social behaviors led Japan down the self-immolating path to WWII. The power of dehumanizing protocol reminds us of today’s news, too. The warrior cabal of the Bush administration depends on more than a few constructs based on lies, distortions, and dehumanization. He’s a “war president” who never saw a war, just like the samurai simulacra of Kobayashi’s masterwork.
~ Tom Djll
Posted by derek on February 10, 2006 10:09 AMNice to see a review of this great film! But I have to say that the Kobayashi film to really spring for is Kwaidan, available as a fine Criterion release. It is actually imperative to see this film with a good soundtrack, so seeing this one at home in digital sound might actually be preferable to the cinema. I saw it in a theater in Stockholm, and it didn´t do anything for me; bought in on DVD, and it blew my mind. As Philip Brophy points out in different places (check out his 100 Modern Soundtracks on BFI!), this is a film in which the distinctions between soundtrack and musical score are irrevocably blurred. Takemitsu is actually listed in the opening credits (I think - memory could be a bit blurred...) as responsible for sound effects, and worked in close collusion with Kobayashi on the sonic/visual design of the film. The result is a music about a million universes removed from any kind of stupid Hans Zimmer bombast: sinewy, abstract, beautiful. This also results in one of the most beautifully crafted films of all time. Hard to do justice to in writing, really.
And while on the subject of Takemitsu and japanese cinema, I encourage everyone to run swiftly in the direction of Masahiro Shinoda. Double Suicide first and foremost (available on Criterion): a filmed bunraku play, with actors doing the dolls´ parts, resulting in a complex - to complex to discuss fully here - amalgam of theatre and cinema, ancient and modern. Just beautiful. And the Takemitsu score... Also the visually stunning Samurai Spy (also on Criterion), and Assassination (in Eureka´s Masters of Cinema series) are well worth every penny. Go fetch!
Posted by: henrik at April 14, 2006 3:03 AMI disagree, I don't think Kwaidan is nearly as strong as Harakiri or even the much less acclaimed Samurai Rebellion. the music is beautiful, but the film itself suffers from the short story format, consisting of four shorter, unrelated stories, not all of which are top-notch (I don't remember the specifics, it's been a while, sorry).
I hope Criterion gets around to his three-part The Human Condition at some point, I'd really like to see that.
Posted by: Jon Abbey at April 14, 2006 7:23 AMJon, I think The Human Condition is actually available from somewhere, I´ve seen it in stores several times. Maybe it isn´t available in the US, I´m writing from Europe. Check out Play.com, or maybe amazon.co.uk. All depending whether you have a region free DVD, of course. Hope you can find it!
Posted by: henrik at April 14, 2006 1:59 PMJon, my local film rental brick & mortar has The Human Condition on a DVD manufactured by Image DVDs.
I love Kobayashi's films.
according to Amazon, all three are way OOP and selling for big bucks second-hand. I can wait for Criterion to get there, I have plenty of other things to see in the interim...
weren't there other comments on this thread after Tom's initial review? where did those go?
Posted by: Jon Abbey at April 14, 2006 3:35 PMI'd have to agree with Jon, I didn't find Kwaidan so compelling.
An interesting film I saw in my recent Japanese film marathon not mentioned in these parts is Onibaba, by Kaneto Shindo. Highly recommended. Very sensual, spiritual and spooky. Some of the same plot conceits as Woman In the Dunes, which I sorely wish was in print at a decent price.
*shakes head, double take* Hey, yeah, what happened to those older comments?
Posted by: djll at April 16, 2006 12:41 AMyeah, Onibaba is great, it is similar to Woman in the Dunes, but that's OK. I believe Woman is in the works on Criterion, it'd be great if they could do more of the Abe/Teshigahara collaborations, I think there are four altogether from the sixties (The Face of Another, The Ruined Map, The Pitfall), I've only seen Woman in the Dunes, but I've read all the Abe novels, so I'm very curious.
the one I like to recommend to go along with Harakiri is Sword of Doom, which also stars Nakadai but is the flip side in that it's almost purely action (but what action!). not as great of a movie, but a very nice complement, I think.
Posted by: Jon Abbey at April 16, 2006 8:16 AMnice review! I just saw this one a couple of days in my on-going private two-week Japanse film festival, and it was a definite highlight. it was powerful as a Greek tragedy. the bamboo-for-a-sword bit reminded me of 'Humanity And Paper Balloons' (Yamanaka), a 30s movie that also deals with impoverished samurai.
apart from some obvious things such as 'Drunken Angel' (Kurosawa), 'Tokyo Twilight' (Ozu), 'Sansho The Bailiff' (Mizoguchi), 'Eureka' (Aoyama) and 'The Ballad Of Narayama' (Imamura) - the latter definitely not in the same league as the other ones, but still worth watching for the last half hour or so - I had some great revelations and welcome re-encounters:
'Shura' by Matsumoto, whom people will perhaps primarily know for 'Funeral Parade Of Roses', but this is much different, a period piece that is utterly bleak and dark, almost unbearable, but very powerful and beautiful. see this whenever you get a chance to. it's sometimes known as 'Pandemonium' or 'Demons'.
'The Naked Island' (Shindo), very different from 'Onibaba'. a dialogue-free film about one family on their own little island watering their plants, rowing to the mainland for fresh water, generally toiling away until the death of their child momentarily snaps the mother out of her routine of drudgery. the only thing that annoyed me a bit was the fact that some scenes seemed unnatural without even the tiniest bit of dialogue, I don't know why this rule had to be applied so rigorously. but definitely one to watch, and some nice music.
'Pitfall' (Teshigahara) was in some ways similar to 'Woman In The Dunes' with some of its close-ups, the Kobo Abe-based script, Takemitsu's music.. a strange mixture of social commentary, detective movie and ghost story, I enjoyed this one a lot as well.
'An Actor's Revenge' (Ichikawa) about a kabuki-actor taking revenge on the people who were responsible for the death of his parents a couple of decades earlier; haven't seen anything else by this director, but I really liked the cinematography.
and finally, more recent, 'Maborosi' (Kore-eda) reminded me of Ozu, the next moment of Kim Ki-Duk, and was generally an understated but very moving and beautifully shot movie about a woman who can't come to grips with the suicide of her first husband. this one was another highlight for me.
hope you people get a chance to see all this..
the last 2 in this Japan-extravanganza will be 'Taboo' (aka 'Gohatto') by Oshima and Kitano's 'Dolls' again, tomorrow.. it's been a fantastic 2 weeks over here, hope you all get to see these as well!
Jon, both Teshigahara´s Pitfall and The Face of Another is available from Eureka in their Masters of Cinema series (great series, btw, easily rivalling Criterion for the european market). So, once again, time for the region free dvd-player. The one of these two to go for imo is The Face of Another, absolutely stunning! And while on the subject of japanese film, once again, one of my favorites here is Shohei Imamura´s Vengeance Is Mine, a complex and disturbing fictionalization of a serial killer´s exploits. Go and see!
Posted by: henrik at April 16, 2006 7:09 PMWow, David and Henrik, you guys go the distance. I'm a novice compared to you-all. David, are you in Japan?
Catching up right now on some John Ford westerns and Robert Altman's Buffalo Bill and the Indians.
Posted by: djll at April 16, 2006 7:45 PMthanks, Henrik. I have an all-region player, but I still mostly stick to region 1, because other regions tend to be even more pricy. but those two were not pricy at all (27 pounds combined including shipping to the US), so I just ordered them both.
Posted by: Jon Abbey at April 16, 2006 11:20 PMI picked up Face of Another from Amoeba records in Hollywood a couple of months ago. I don't know how it is elsewhere, but if you live in Los Angeles, you need a region free player. It's incredibly easy to buy import dvds here. There are at least four stores I go to regularly. In fact, I might have more imports than region 1 dvds now. As a result, however, I have become quite addicted to DVDBeaver.com...
re: Masters of Cinema rivalling Criterion. I'd also add Artificial Eye, and the wonderful BFI dvd releases.
Posted by: William Hutson at April 17, 2006 4:47 PMBut really, has noone seen Shinoda´s films? Stunningly marvellous, I´m telling you!
Posted by: henrik at April 18, 2006 2:45 PMyeah, I've seen Double Suicide. if Nirav Soni ever checks in here anymore, I know he wrote a paper on that at one point a couple of years ago...
Posted by: Jon abbey at April 18, 2006 3:07 PMhey djll, no, I'm in fact in Belgium, a friend and I just pulled together our resources. I must say some of those films were also downloaded - hard to avoid with so much unavailable or only at ludicrous import prices. I snatch up all the domestic releases I can find though.
Posted by: David Bauwens at April 18, 2006 10:04 PM.................................................. © 2003 - 2006 bagatellen ..................................................