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8/10
A Thumbnail Portrait reveals a Masterpiece
18 September 2017
A young middle-class woman sets out to a remote mountain village in Nagano to bring her estranged father back to Tokyo where his presence is needed to fulfill some pressing social obligations - chief among them a meeting between her parents and the father of her intended bridegroom. Her own father, though, would rather stay with his common law wife - a former geisha - and their two children despite their relative poverty and "disgraceful" circumstances. Father is happy prospecting for non-existent gold in the rivers of his adopted rural home, while his selfless and devoted 'wife' ekes out a living as a hairdresser.

Back in Tokyo, Etsuko, the abandoned wife and Kimiko's self-absorbed and pretentious mother publishes mournful haiku for her long lost husband and patiently waits for his return. Will Father return to his "rightful" place with his "legitimate" family or will he forsake them for his mistress and their two children? Naruse Mikio's comic and heart stirring melodrama 'Wife! Be Like a Rose' offers a surprising and refreshing take on familiar Japanese themes on 'self-sacrifice' and filial devotion.
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Games (1967)
8/10
A Stylish Thriller from an Occult Master
18 September 2017
Paul (James Caan) and Jennifer (Katharine Ross) Montgomery are wealthy boho socialites who amuse themselves with elaborate parlor games in their Manhattan townhouse filled with pop art and vintage arcade games. Lisa Schindler (Simone Signoret) is a down on her luck German aristocrat who gains entrance to their house (and into their minds) after Lisa takes pity on her and allows the admittedly dishonest door-to-door saleswoman into their lives. The glamorous and amoral Lisa scoffs at their harmless pastimes and arranges more decadent and deadly amusements that will put Jennifer's sanity to the test.

Signoret, in a role that was written for Marlene Dietrich, chews the scenery and spits out the upholstery tacks, proving that no film ever suffered from her presence, however miscast. James Caan blends into the carpeting as the not so better half of a pair of dissolute dilettantes, while Katharine Ross's beauty gamely steps in to act. 'The Game' is a stylish, well-paced thriller that combines Harrington's 'queer' art house sensibilities with a master draftsman's assured and nimble hands.
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