Hollywood's Asian Romance: It took seven years and a lot
of crying, but Memoirs of a Geisha is now a
movie.
November 14, 2005
(Credits to
Richard Corliss Time
Asia Magazine)
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA –
Gong Li is a toughie.
The severe planes of her face, the military erectness of
her posture, the snarl she puts in her voice, all give
an irresistible insolence to China's first international
star actress. From the time of her early films like
Ju Dou and Raise the Red Lantern, which she
made for her directing mentor (and then-lover) Zhang
Yimou, she has incarnated the kind of woman you wouldn't
dare mess with, yet would love to try.
Now
she has found a role that fits her like the clingiest
cheongsam: the proud, vindictive Hatsumomo, rival to
the heroine Nitta Sayuri in Memoirs of a Geisha,
the first Hollywood megamovie to boast Asian actors in
all the main roles. Hatsumomo, queen of the 1930s
okiya (geisha house) where Sayuri is a budding
princess, taunts and sabotages the younger woman at
every small step. To add piquancy to the situation,
Sayuri is played by Ziyi Zhang, who followed Gong Li as
Zhang Yimou's leading lady in the rapturous rural love
story The Road Home and the martial-arts hit
House of Flying Daggers. No wonder Hatsumomo stares
daggers at that little geisha on the rise.
Any
actor must find a rapport with the character she plays,
however unsympathetic. Gong Li sees Hatsumomo as less
villain than victim—a woman to empathize with, to the
point of tears. "She is a rebel," she says, speaking
through a translator. "In those days, a geisha could not
have her own love, so she had a lover secretly. Then she
was deprived of her own love, her own feelings. She has
great love and great hate. I thought she might have had
the same kind of upbringing as Sayuri. She might have
been beaten. Then she turned into a great geisha. I
thought there must be someone like her in the world ..."
At this point the pang of Hatsumomo's interior life
gnaws at the actress, and she begins to cry. The
translator, swept into the mood of the moment, cries
too.
It's been ages since the movies have given audiences a
good cry. A good cry, not a cheap one; any film can do
that, by placing a child in peril, by loading the
narrative dice against the hero or heroine, by telling a
simple tale of outraged justice, by cutting to a
plaintive cocker spaniel. An honorable weepie uses none
of these wheedling devices. It earns its tears through
the artful depiction of plausible events and honest
feelings. One way a modern movie meets these standards
is by setting its tale in the past, before the gust of
equality blew holes in the age-old sexual hierarchy.
Japan in its less progressive days was such a place and
time, when a woman's heart, like her back, was made for
breaking.
Relishing this setting, director Rob Marshall triumphs
in bringing Arthur Golden's 1997 worldwide best seller
lusciously to life as a sumptuous love story. The plot
spans almost two decades, from 1927 to 1946; but the
script, by Robin Swicord (screenwriter of the 1994 film
Little Women) and playwright Doug Wright (last
year's Broadway hit I Am My Own Wife), never
hurries past the telling biographical detail of its four
main characters. Nor does the movie's visual splendor
ever obscure the furtive, assertive heart beating under
the kimono. Marshall, 45, whose first big film, the 2002
musical Chicago, won the Oscar for best picture,
here tops that effort, in dramatic breadth and emotional
depth.
The
novel enticed readers with its authoritative evocation
of an alien, exotic world in which women served men less
with sexual favors than by creating a simulacrum of the
feminine ideal. But the book's real pull was its
minutely researched take on a fairy tale familiar to
every culture: poor girl meets rich man of her dreams.
This golden girl is first named Chiyo. Her fisherman
father has sold her to an okiya, where she must
learn to be a lady. A special sort of lady: a geisha,
one of the "wives of nightfall" who for centuries have
entertained Japanese gentlemen with delicacy, wit and a
mastery of such arts as flower-arranging, calligraphy,
singing, dancing and playing the three-stringed
shamisen.
At
15, Chiyo (Ziyi Zhang) has these graces only in embryo;
but a famous geisha, Mameha (Michelle Yeoh), sees how
they might flower. She begins the girl's education
sternly. "That is a perfect bow. For a pig farmer."
"Rise. Not like a horse." And slowly the eager student
with the "watery" gray eyes grows into a captivating
woman known as Nitta Sayuri. "Now walk," says Mameha.
"You are a magnificent geisha"—beguiling enough, at
least, to attract the attention of the Chairman (Ken
Watanabe), a powerful man whom Sayuri has adored since
she was a little girl and he showed her kindness.
Sayuri's rise doesn't suit Hatsumomo's ego. The reigning
bitch-goddess of the okiya accurately sees
Sayuri's promise as a threat. With magnificent hatred,
she spits a warning at the girl: "I will destroy you."
Clear enough? Memoirs of a Geisha is the
Cinderella story, with Sayuri as the young heroine,
Mameha as the fairy godmother, Hatsumomo as the evil
stepmother and the Chairman as Sayuri's prince charming.
It could also be a backstage saga like the 1930s
Hollywood classic 42nd Street—the one where, just
before a big show is to open on Broadway, the
temperamental leading lady can't go on and is replaced
by a plucky ingenue, groomed to stardom by a showbiz
veteran. Just the sort of parable to attract a Broadway
choreographer like Marshall.
The
cast is a dream team of A-list Asian actors, beginning
with Gong Li and Zhang, who enjoyed her own star-is-born
career splash at 21 as the airborne vixen of
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, which became the
top-grossing foreign-language film released to that time
in North America. Yeoh, another Crouching Tiger
eminence, was Hong Kong's top female action star in the
1980s and '90s, and lent her high-kicking glamour to the
James Bond series in the 1997 movie Tomorrow Never
Dies. Watanabe earned an Oscar nomination as Tom
Cruise's regal ally in The Last Samurai.
These are some of the finest, most attractive actors on
the globe, and they will help sell Geisha to the
Asian audience. (The film opens in Hong Kong on Dec. 9,
for its regular run in Tokyo a day later, and in other
Asian cities in early January.) But their name value
means little at the U.S. box office—less, anyway, than
the lure of seeing a cherished novel illuminated on the
big screen. "I've gotta believe, in the job that I do,
that when you give the audience something that they
haven't seen before, they are going to like it," Amy
Pascal, Sony Pictures' movie chief, says of her studio's
$80 million investment, which is cheap for a film of
such grand range, but a lot for one without bankable
Western names. "I'm hoping the film appeals to people
who have ever been in love."
Or
in love with movies, for Geisha revives the
sweeping spirit of old-fashioned film romance. It also
recalls the bygone day when Hollywood believed it was
truly the world's storyteller, and thus could put on the
screen epics set in China or India, Java or Japan—so
long as the indigenous characters were played by whites.
One difference between Geisha and such venerable
films of the mystic East as The Good Earth and
Dragon Seed is that this one has Chinese and
Japanese actors in the leads rather than Katharine
Hepburn with Asian eye makeup.
Purists may complain that the three main geishas are
played by Chinese women speaking English, which they
were taught to intone in a lightly Japanese accent. It
is a shame that a film with so specific a setting could
not have leading ladies steeped in that culture. But
there's a bald fact that is evident to anyone familiar
with today's East Asian films: China is rich in top
actresses, and Japan isn't.
"My
philosophy in casting," says Marshall, "is that I cast
for the role, period." (He notes that in Chicago
he had Queen Latifah play a character that, in the
1920s, when the film is set, would not have been black.)
So Zhang, Gong Li and Yeoh were chosen to lead Geisha's
female cast. They are supported, and sometimes upstaged,
by two seasoned Japanese actresses—Kaori Momoi, as
Mother, the okiya proprietress, and Youki Kudoh,
as Sayuri's friend and sometime antagonist Pumpkin—and
one entrancing newcomer, Suzuka Ohgo, who plays
Chiyo-Sayuri as a young girl. The main male roles were
taken by Japanese actors: Watanabe, Koji Yakusho as his
proud, disfigured friend Nobu and Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
as the manipulative Baron.
Lucy Fisher, one of the film's producers, was aware of
grumbling about the casting of Chinese actresses as the
most prominent geishas. Some of these barbs made it to
the set. According to Fisher, Watanabe overheard one
such comment. He turned around and stated, "There is no
actress in the world who could play this part better
than Zhang Ziyi." As Fisher recalls: "That was a happy
day for everybody." Watanabe sees Geisha not as a
documentary but as fiction woven by its director.
"Although it is a period piece based in Japanese
culture, what was most important was how Rob envisioned
it. So I told myself not to be concerned about the
details of the Japanese or geisha culture but try to
help Rob create what he envisioned."
Whether the movie truly understands its milieu, or
offers only an artful simulation of it, Japanese
audiences will decide. But the film, like the novel, is
an outsider's view of the geisha culture—even as the
young Chiyo is ignorant of the okiya when she
lands there. And since the source novel was written by a
Harvard-educated fellow from Tennessee, why shouldn't
the film be directed by a song-and-dance man from
Pittsburgh?
The
movie's narration begins, "A story like mine should
never be told," and on screen it almost wasn't. Soon
after the big Golden book became a sensation, Steven
Spielberg signed on to direct, with Hong Kong's Maggie
Cheung named to play Mameha. Five years and many scripts
later, Spielberg bowed out, while staying on as a
producer. Fisher jokes that her next choice was the
great epic-maker David Lean, "but he wasn't available,"
having died in 1991. A few directors, including Spike
Jonze (Being John Malkovich) and Kimberley Peirce
(Boys Don't Cry), were mentioned, and still
nothing jelled. Some directors insisted on shooting
entirely in Japan, or in Japanese.
Then Fisher and her producing partner Douglas Wick saw
Chicago and figured they had their man. "Geishas
are trained much like dancers, and as a choreographer
and a former dancer who understands disciplined
training, Rob had a natural affinity for their life,"
says Wick. He and Fisher pursued the director as one
would a geisha—sending him bottles of sake, antique
prints. "I tried to put the gifts away," says Marshall,
"but I couldn't. They hooked me."
Having made the first movie musical smash since
Grease 24 years before, Marshall was ready to try
something radically new. "As a director, you should
choose a project that will educate you and enrich your
life, because you're going to be doing it for two years.
And I thought, 'This is that for me.' How exciting to
spend that time learning about another culture, and a
culture within a culture. The scariest part was being
able to be educated enough about Japan and the world of
geisha to be able to interpret it. But I didn't stop and
say, 'Wait a minute, you're an American, why are you
doing this?'"
He
did ask: where? Marshall and production designer John
Myhre went to Japan, visiting the key spots mentioned in
the book: the Sea of Japan, the actual tea houses, the
stream where Chiyo meets the Chairman. They filled out
the permission forms, but eventually discovered that the
authorities, too polite to say no, were also reluctant
to say yes. By this time Marshall and the producers
realized both that Kyoto would need a makeover—take down
the telephone poles, blot out the modern traffic—and
that to shoot there would cost a fortune they didn't
have. They settled for a few choice exteriors, most of
them in the early section of the film when the girl
Chiyo meets the kindly Chairman: Kyoto's orange torii
gates; a covered bridge on the grounds of a shrine
(whose head monk balked until he saw Watanabe speak
about the film on TV); and the temple where Chiyo makes
an offering (the head monk there granted access because
he was a fan of Chicago).
The
hanamachi—the geisha quarter of Kyoto—was built
on a ranch an hour north of Los Angeles in Ventura
county, where more than half the film was shot. The
cultural mélange was clear from the first day, when
Watanabe said a traditional Buddhist prayer to bless the
project. The translators and dialogue coaches worked
overtime, since only Yeoh spoke English fluently. "It
was amazing to hear them speaking English on set," she
says, "but not be able to speak the language to them off
set." Marshall had the same challenge directing his
stars. "I'd be speaking and I'd hear a Japanese and a
Chinese interpreter speaking at the same time," he
recalls. "It sounds insane but it became natural."
The
question of possible tensions between Gong Li, 39, and
the 26-year-old Zhang (once known, cattily, as "the
little Gong Li") had concerned the film's producers
enough that they spoke with the actresses'
representatives about it beforehand. Not a problem: the
two were cordial. "People worry about it too much,"
laughs Gong Li. "Great actors can work nicely together.
If she is a great actor, there is no problem." Zhang
spoke more warmly of Gong Li: "She's so gorgeous, and
she's made so many good movies. I'm so happy Geisha
gave me the chance to work with her. And we really have
chemistry. I can feel that."
Indeed, the whole movie is a lesson in acting chemistry.
Ohgo brings an elfin gravity to the first 40 minutes of
the film. Momoi is a cunning, cynical presence as the
okiya's boss. Yeoh gets a chance to display her
grace and wisdom as well as her womanly strength. Zhang
blossoms persuasively from a girl of 15 to a woman in
her early 30s, and Watanabe lends his warmth and
aristocratic machismo to the Chairman. But it's Gong Li
who strides away with the picture. Her stiletto stare
can burn in passion or turn on a rival with Freon fury.
Facing that implacable gaze on the set, one child extra
started sobbing and had to be replaced.
Tears were plentiful during the shoot. For Hatsumomo's
final, incendiary face-off with Sayuri, Gong Li stayed
on the set for a whole day, crying, never getting out of
character. "I worked my heart out for it," she says. "I
really worked my heart out." Marshall recalls that "Hour
after hour, as people worked around her, lighting and
moving cable, she stood there weeping, because she
couldn't leave that feeling. I've never seen anything
like that in my life."
That was the actress' last scene, but she couldn't let
go. "When Rob Marshall announced that I had wrapped my
role and was leaving, all of a sudden I didn't know
where to go, I felt like it wasn't enough, like I hadn't
finished." After the wrap she asked Marshall to go to
the okiya set with her. They held hands, walking
from room to room, never speaking. Marshall says she
wanted to say goodbye to the character, with him.
Zhang says she too cried every day: "Playing her was my
most emotional role." And Yeoh, in mock exasperation,
says, "Everyone else got to cry. But Mameha couldn't.
She was always in control. The mask was maintained the
whole time. All my crying was off-camera. After Rob
would cut the scene, I'd have to go to the side to let
it out." She credits Marshall with guiding the actors
into a true ensemble. "He is very much like Mameha," she
says. "He is playing a chess game. He knows all the
moves and the countermoves. I used to say to him,
'You're like silk and steel.' He has a very tough
interior. But a director has to be that way."
Spielberg has a pretty good idea of how directors have
to be, and he has high praise for Marshall. "When I saw
Rob's version of Geisha," he says, "I realized
that he was a much better choice than me. The pauses,
the looks of the characters, were all little moments of
directorial authorship. The close-ups of the hands in
pouring the tea. The shots of the geishas' kimono trains
wriggling like the tail of a fish through a stream. Rob
took the liquid metaphor of the water in Sayuri's eyes
and created a river of images. It seemed to be planned
by the heart. But it was planned. He had a picture in
his mind, and he fought until the picture was on film."
The director of a film like this needs to fight like
Hatsumomo, have the teaching skills of Mameha and the
generosity of the Chairman. He must possess the grace
and showmanship of a great geisha. And Marshall has it
all. "The very word geisha means artist," Mameha tells
her star pupil. "And to be a geisha is to be judged as a
living work of art." That definition suits the film as
well. Geisha is a geisha: a living work of art
that elegantly entertains us for a few hours, then
vanishes into the night, taking our beguiled hearts with
it.
Karazen Movie Review: Memoirs of a Geisha
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