8 ans après avoir tué sa femme, Takuro se réinsère comme coiffeur, en banlieue. Un ressort est cassé, il ne communique plus qu'avec une anguille qu'il a apprivoisée en captivité. Mais voilà ... Tout lire8 ans après avoir tué sa femme, Takuro se réinsère comme coiffeur, en banlieue. Un ressort est cassé, il ne communique plus qu'avec une anguille qu'il a apprivoisée en captivité. Mais voilà qu'il sauve une jeune fille qui veut se suicider... Rédemption ? [255]8 ans après avoir tué sa femme, Takuro se réinsère comme coiffeur, en banlieue. Un ressort est cassé, il ne communique plus qu'avec une anguille qu'il a apprivoisée en captivité. Mais voilà qu'il sauve une jeune fille qui veut se suicider... Rédemption ? [255]
- Récompenses
- 16 victoires et 14 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWinner of the 1997 Palme D'Or at the Cannes Film Festival tied with another title, Abbas Kiarostami's Le goût de la cerise (1997) from Iran.
- Citations
Takuro Yamashita: An eel's all a man needs.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Especial Cannes: 50 Anos de Festival (1997)
As the film opens, Yamashita, a worker at a large flour company, is startled to read an anonymous letter on the train coming home from work informing him that his wife cheats on him when he goes away on overnight fishing trips. Cutting one of his trips short, he returns home in the middle of the night to find his wife Emiko (Chiho Terada) in bed with a lover. Grabbing a butcher knife, he brutally stabs both of them to death then calmly rides his bicycle to the local police station and turns himself in. After eight years in prison, he is released and paroled to an elderly Buddhist priest. Alienated and afraid, Yamashita's only companion is a pet eel whom he confides in ("he listens to what I say"). He opens a barbershop in a rural part of Japan but his life becomes complicated after he saves a young woman, Keiko (Misa Shimizu), from suicide and gives her a job at his shop. Reminded of his former wife, Yamashita avoids intimacy but she is drawn to him nonetheless and offers him box lunches when he goes fishing.
In spite of trying to keep his distance, Yamashita attracts some local characters that move the plot in a different direction. These include a young man who borrows his barber pole to attract UFOs, a fishing buddy who designs a device to catch eels without harming them, and his former prison mate, Tamotsu Takasaki (Akira Emoto), a foul-mouthed drunk who recites Buddhist Sutras and reminds him of his previous acts. The story, which until now has had a rich dramatic arc, soon descends into forced comedy when Keiko's mentally-challenged mother shows up doing flamenco dances and Keiko's former boyfriend returns demanding her mother's money. The townspeople and semi-gangster associates of the boyfriend join in a final free-for-all at the barbershop that might have been lifted from the Three Stooges.
The Eel is at times a brilliant and involving character study about a man seeking to turn his life around. At other times, however, it is a discordant conglomeration of plots and subplots, one-dimensional characters, and heavy symbolism relieved only by wooden farce. The UFO sequence is very lame and the comic behavior of a man just out of prison seems inappropriate as he marches like a soldier then runs after a jogging team that is passing by. Imamura has said, "If my films are messy, this is probably due to the fact that I don't like too perfect a cinema." I know that things are not always neat and our lives are often a blend of drama and farce, but The Eel's odd mixture of quirky characters and widely disparate elements keeps it from coming together as a satisfying whole.
- howard.schumann
- 14 nov. 2004
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Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 418 480 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 29 879 $US
- 23 août 1998
- Montant brut mondial
- 424 683 $US