Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Final Blossay: Oshima Nagisa's "The Ceremony"


Oshima Nagisa’s film The Ceremony begins in the middle of a conversation.  The narrator and principle character, Masuo is speaking on the telephone. It is unclear who Masuo is speaking to and what exactly is going on. After hanging up the phone Masuo steps out into the street and begins to talk to a woman. Masuo has received a telegram from his cousin Terumichi and it appears to be urgent that Masuo travels to meet him. The woman, Ritsuko, also wants to go to Terumichi and they make travel plans. It is insinuated that Ritsuko and Masuo are relatives, later it is revealed that they are cousins, but also half-brother and sister. In a voice-over Masuo admits to being in love with Ritsuko, but Terumichi stands between them. In present time the story takes place over the time it takes Masuo and Ritsuko to travel to Terumichi. However, the film also consists of a series of long flashbacks narrated by Masuo. All the flashbacks concern different family ceremonies that took place over the course of Masuo’s life. Each ceremony reveals to the audience more and more about Masuo’s strange and complicated family history, one that is full of incest and suicide.

Masuo and Ritsuko

The first flashback concerns the ceremony of the first anniversary of Masuo’s father’s death. Masuo and his mother had just returned from Manchuria, repatriating to Japan after World War II. When they hear about Masuo’s father’s death they decide to return to Manchuria, however the father’s family, the Sakurada’s catch them and bring them back. Masuo is then thrown into the chaos of his father’s family, the complexity of which being shown in each proceeding ceremony. The subsequent ceremonies are the funeral of Masuo’s mother, the wedding of Masuo’s communist uncle, Masuo’s own arranged wedding in which the bride did not show up, and the funeral of Masuo’s grandfather, the tyrannical patriarch of the Sakurada family.
The film ends back in present time. Masuo and Ritsuko have made it to Terumichi’s house, but Terumichi has committed suicide, believing that with his death the Sakurada line dies. Ritsuko tells Masuo to go or he will miss his boat, intending to stay behind and kill herself next to her lover. Masuo leaves Terumichi’s house distraught and begins to imagine that he is playing baseball with his cousins like they used to do when they were young. The film ends with Mesuo’s ear to the ground, listening for the sound of his long dead baby brother, who had been buried alive by the Russians in Manchuria, something he does throughout the film.

Ending Shot

Although the content of the film is nonlinear and often unsettling, the filming itself stands in contrast as being surprisingly traditional. The most striking things about the actual production are the use of dark colors and shadows and the discordant soundtrack. The shots used in the film aren’t particularly radical. The film makes use of many different kinds of shots. The camera will take close-up shots of characters that are speaking, but will more often employ wide shots. 

Wide Shot (also another instance in which Masuo listens for his brother)

There are several tracking shots throughout the film. There were several moments where the camera cut suddenly to something else accompanied by the music ending abruptly that often created a sense of confusion. Throughout the film it almost felt like the director was using the familiar filming techniques in order to trick the audience into thinking they were watching a more traditional film. So, whenever the camera would cut quickly or something unsettling happened it would be so much more startling and disconcerting because it would feel so unexpected.
The film also often used many symmetrical shots which is reminiscent of other Japanese directors, such as Ozu Yasujirō. There are often scenes that show members of the Sakurada family sitting and facing each other during ceremonies, these scenes closely mirror scenes from the Ozu film Tokyo Story, in which family members also gather for special occasions and are seen sitting facing each other. 
Shot from Ozu's Tokyo Story

Shot from The Ceremony


It is interesting to compare this film to a film such as Tokyo Story in the ways that both approach the topic of family. In Tokyo Story, the family is shown as something that is sacred. The audience is supposed to feel resentment towards the children who treat their parents badly and admire Noriko who treats the parents well even though they are not her own.
However, as even Tokyo Story subtly implies, there is more to every family than meets the eye.  There was a reason Shige didn’t have an idyllic relationship with her parents; her father was an alcoholic and her mother didn’t take care of the family efficiently so Shige had to even as a child. While Tokyo Story seems to imply that we should look past those things and appreciate family, The Ceremony forces us to see the Sakurada family’s dirty secrets in such shocking manners that an audience couldn’t possibly forget. 
If Tokyo Story is supposed to make us better appreciate and have respect for the family, then The Ceremony serves as a way to expose the idea of family’s idyllic façade. In The Ceremony it is said that relatives are people “who do not see each other except on weddings or funerals.” Masuo is only shown with his extended family during funerals or weddings, and likewise for many people they only get a sense of familial bonding during similar “ceremonies.” The idea of family itself could be seen as just a ritual, another ceremony. For some people, there relatives are just the people they spend time with because they have to or because it’s expected of them, and the bond goes no further than that. The Ceremony seeks to destroy the notion that family ties are sacred and reveals them to be superficial.
The Ceremony doesn’t just seek to expose the idea of family as superficial, but also to show the emptiness of all family tradition and lineage. The Sakurada family is obsessed with tradition; it is telling that the only moments the family is ever seen all together is during weddings or funerals. Even Masuo and Ritsuko, though they live in the same city, don’t see each other for ten years except for their grandfather’s funeral. They gather at these special times to make it appear as though they are a real family, when in reality their relationships with each other are very cold and distance.
At the grandfather’s funeral it is apparent that the ceremony lacks any true emotional depth. Masuo is in charge of putting it together, and instead of the funeral being a moment in which he can properly mourn his grandfather’s death, it is just a duty. Masuo feels like he owes it to the family to put together a good funeral service. In the voiceover narration Masuo says he “was like a machine.” During the funeral itself Masuo describes how the guests at the party try to set up Masuo as the successor of his grandfather. These are not the actions of true mourners; the funeral is just a mandatory tradition they must follow while they seek to reestablish the roles of the family, not truly caring about the individual family members. This puts a tremendous amount of pressure on Masuo, who lies on the floor and says that he is being buried. This recalls the fate of his younger brother who was buried alive. In the beginning of the film it is said that since his brother is dead Masuo must take the place of two sons. Now Masuo must take the place of his grandfather, but feels he is usffering the same fate as his brother. Masuo is being buried, buried by the expectations of his family to continue its lineage and preserve its traditions.

Masuo "Buried"

The clearest moment in the film of how far the family will go to preserve its traditions is Masuo’s wedding scene. Masuo is supposed to be married at the will of his grandfather. Yet, the bride does not show up, claiming a ruptured appendix. However, the grandfather insists they continue with the wedding, as the “important members of the families are both present. It is more important that the families put on a show, than that the ceremony is sincere. After this announcement that the wedding will take place without the bride the ceremony takes place.

The scene can be seen from 1:26:54 to 1:33:28

The wedding ceremony is elaborate and beautiful, yet it is also strange and off-putting because Masuo is performing it alone, often besides an empty chair. These empty spaces underline the emptiness of the entire ceremony.

Masuo with an empty stool where the bride should be

The strangest part about the ceremony is that, although the bride is not there the people performing the ceremony and the family members act as if she is. They pretend she is there taking part in each activity. At one point they even act as if she leaves the ceremony to change her dress and force a mortified Masuo to escort a non-existent bride back to the table. These moments force the audience to remember that something is missing.
It is also interesting to note the way that the runaway bride is described. It is said that “she is a perfect and pure Japanese girl” and bad customs from other countries have not at all rubbed off on her. The camera slowly pans towards Masuo’s face as this is being said showing a stony expression. He knows this is all a façade and he is beginning to tire of it. 

Pan Towards Masuo

Masuo realizes that this “perfect and pure Japanese girl” does not exist and her absence in the film also shows the audience that she does not exist. This shows just how ridiculous the notion is that Masuo must continue this perfect Japanese lineage and tradition, when in reality it doesn’t really exist. Masuo himself isn’t even pure Japanese; he says at the beginning of the film that he is a Manchurian, born in Manchuria. The whole implication of the ceremony is a farce.
However, the film isn’t just about the superficiality of the Sakurada family, but serves as an overreaching of Japanese society after World War II. At the end of the wedding ceremony another of Masuo’s cousin, Tadashi, the only one to criticize the ceremony and a far right nationalist sympathizer, tries to break up the ceremony by reading an “outline plan of the reorganization of the new Japan” Tadashi is quickly stopped and subsequently murdered. Anything presented to disrupt the held social order and tradition, such as Tadashi’s far right ideas, are soon suppressed by the elder generation.
The Ceremony reveals the stagnant position of Japan after World War II to an audience living in that period. Japan after World War II can be seen in this film as being represented by the four cousins, Masuo, Ritsuko, Terumichi, and Tadashi. Japan is stuck between adhering to old tradition and speaking out against a corrupt past. The cousins, the younger generation, want to move ahead from their past, break away from the family, but the elder generation makes it difficult for them. Japan is in a similar position. Japan is caught between honoring old tradition and breaking free from the shaky past. The Ceremony serves as a critique towards tradition. The old rituals are meaningless. They are nothing more than a show put on to keep up appearances; they are meaningless to the younger generation and often even to the older generations. These traditions are not undertaken sincerely and therefore carry no meaning.
The Ceremony also serves as a way to criticize the idea of Japanese purity.  As was mentioned before, there is an idea of the pure, perfect Japanese girl, but as the film insinuates, that girl does not exist. In The Ceremony the way that the family keeps its pure lineage is by incest. The film makes fun of the idea of having a pure lineage and points out the ludicrousness of trying to keep a pure lineage, or a pure society. It is impossible for any country that wants to produce a healthy society to completely shun or show prejudice against outside influences.

However, even if The Ceremony critiques tradition it acknowledges that breaking away from tradition is not easy. Tadashi is killed for trying to speak out against old ideas. Terumichi and Ritsuko try to escape the family, but cannot and so commit suicide. Terumichi says himself in his suicide note that the reason he killed himself was to end the Sakurada line. 

Terumichi's Suicide

Masuo is the only one left, perhaps surviving because he was a Manchurian, and not a pure Japanese Sakurada like the others. Yet, even though Masuo escapes falling into the trap of the family expectations and is able to live past them, he does not fully escape. The film ends with Masuo having a hallucination of a scene from his childhood, playing baseball with his aunt and cousins. 

Hallucination

Even if Masuo has escaped his past, he cannot let it go. There is still a sense of longing for the old ways, despite everything that has happened to him. This is nostalgia at its worst and it happens not just to individuals like Masuo, but to whole societies, such as Japan. Despite knowing the faults people still continue to have nostalgic yearnings for the past. This is the idea that The Ceremony seems to convey, although old tradition is often empty and meaningless, we are still drawn to it.