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1 Sep 2010

Villon’s Wife

You know what they say about the shoemaker’s children. But what about the wife of an author?

Original title: ヴィヨンの妻

Rating: M18 (Some Sexual Scenes)

Director: Kichitaro Negishi

Screenplay: Tanaka Yozo, Osamu Dazai (short story)

Cast: Takako Matsu, Tadanobu Asano, Shigeru Muroi, Masato Ibu

Release: 2 September 2010 (SG)

Awards: Montreal World Film Festival 2009, Best Director

*Picturehouse Exclusive

Here are some rules about art. Nothing makes for a more dreary and hackneyed film than a biography of an eccentric or depressive artist. To put it frankly these biopics often come across as a circus act. What we really want to know – and what biopics fail to deliver – is why characters put up with each other despite the odd or disturbing situations they end up in, and not really why characters are the way they are.

Otani (a stand-in for both authors) is a brilliant author who lies, cheats and steals when he is not plotting his next suicide attempt or visiting the next hostess club. When the film opens, an innkeeper nearly breaks down his door for racking up unpaid bills over the years while living it up as a bachelor about town in post-war occupied Japan. Why does he engage in such self-destruction despite being talented and happily married? We turn to his apologetic wife – beautiful, devoted, unaware of his activities outside his home and job. How does she cope with it? Whatever possessed her to marry him? How did they meet in the first place? What will happen to them?

To say that Villon’s Wife is a character piece would be an understatement. There is something of a novelistic approach to the screenplay, where every major (and even minor) character is presented as an intriguing enigma, a problem to be solved. And while classic theory dictates that plot is character in motion, this film almost suggests cheekily that plot is a series of mysteries about a character, set into motion. Each character comes to be defined by a dramatic yet mystifying act that he or she will perform in the course of the film. Our understanding of that act, of that character in that mysterious tableau, is key to solving the puzzles that the screenplay presents.

Villon’s Wife takes a contemplative, even intellectual approach to telling a story, and it could not have succeeded without the direction of Kichitaro Negishi and the very empathetic performances by Takako Matsu and Tadanobu Asano.

Take the time on a slow afternoon or evening and consume this film as though it were an aged fine wine.

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