|
The serial killer movie has become such a staple in thrillers that
one might conclude that American culture had a special
reverence for the vocation. There have been many notable
true-life film tales of lone wolf killers before and after Shohei
Imamura's 1979 Vengeance Is Mine, but few are as fair
with their subject matter. Ken Ogata plays a Japanese
murderer who undertook a 78-day killing spree before the cops
finally tracked him down.
The movie is too clinical to be a commercial thriller and too
expressive to be an objective case history. Ken Ogata's Iwao
Enokizu's almost random murder spree begins with the brutal
stabbing of a truck driver, but the police investigation format
drops away when Imamura suddenly jumps to scenes from the
past. A wild, troublemaking son, Enokizu is pressured into one
marriage so he'll 'calm down,' but instead brings home and
marries a pregnant girlfriend, Kayo (Chocho Miyako).
Flashbacks show the Enokizu family, part of Japan's Christian
minority, being abused by a navy officer in WW2. Iwao's father
(Rentaro Mikuni) is forced to sell his fishing boats and opens an
inn. He rails against Iwao's irresponsibility, but eventually forms
a relationship with Kayo when Iwao is in prison.
Life on the run requires Iwao to adopt disguises and think on
his feet. He endears himself to the owners of another inn by
cultivating an ingratiating personality and posing as a benign
science professor. Haru Asano, the unhappy innkeeper's wife
(Mayumi Ogawa) falls hopelessly in love with Iwao and refuses
to turn him in, even when she finds out his true identity. Her
aged mother Hisano (Niijiko Kiyokawa) forms an odd bond with
Iwao as well, for she once served a long prison sentence for
murder.
But grandma is definitely not in Iwao's league when it comes to
killing. Enokizu stabs some victims and strangles others, all to
get a little more money to keep going. We see him mercilessly
swindle a woman trying to get a loved one out of jail, by posing
as a lawyer who bribes judges. Iwao has barely taken her
money when he links up with another lawyer on a train. He
murders the man, stuffs his body in a closet and squats in his
house while spending his money.
Vengeance Is Mine was adapted by Masaru Baba from
a novel by Ryuzo Saki. Director Imamura uses Iwao Enokizu's
murder spree to show a morally corrupted Japan, where twisted
sexual situations are the norm. Iwao's devout father gives into
Kayo's sexual needs but refuses to marry her, as he is such an
old man. When Haru's faithless husband has no girlfriend
available, he rapes his wife. Hisano enjoys a vicarious sex life
by peeping at other couples at the inn. The film's frequent sex
scenes indicate a close relationship between sex and killing:
Iwao seems content only when he's in control of other people.
The film gives no specific answer as to why Enokizu has
become a vicious killer, filled with hate for the world. The
childhood memories of his father's persecution by the navy
officer on their own don't provide a handy rationale. Iwao is
alienated and contemptuous of everything he sees, especially
his father's Christian teachings. Abusive and selfish young
men like Iwao are mostly tolerated, while women seem trapped
in confining roles. The inn where Iwao hides out regularly hires
prostitutes to entertain the guests. One of them recognizes
Enokizu when his pictures flash on the television, but balks at
turning him in because of her shady profession. Iwao takes
Haru to see a violent Russian war movie, and a public service
announcement in the theater shows his face to the entire
crowd. From then on it's only a matter of time before the cops
track him down.
Vengeance Is Mine avoids the grandiose
pseudo-psychology and mysticism that clog much of today's
serial killer subgenre. In the clinical wrap-around story, Iwao's
captors discover little about his motivation for killing. Iwao
behaves as if he never really needed a reason to kill. Director
Imamura aims at a wider social statement about Japan's
changing values. The many scenes set in cluttered modern
inns contrast with the calm, classical cinema of masters like
Yasujiro Ozu, and in themselves seem a comment on the
moral corruption of Japan.
Vengeance Is Mine was one of Criterion's most striking
laserdisc sets of the early 1990s, with its full-color cover of Ken
Ogata sitting calmly before a presumably dead naked woman.
This new DVD has a much-improved enhanced image (and no
disc-flipping required) and a bounty of extras. Michael
Atkinson's essay aligns director Imamura with 'sardonic
objectivists' like Fritz Lang and Claude Chabrol. Imamura
speaks, is interviewed and writes about his film in a number of
other text and filmed extras. The original trailer shows
Shochiku's unusual promotional approach for its 'shocking'
movie. Disc producers Kim Hendrickson and Alexandre Mabilon
put a crime map on the back cover of the fat insert booklet,
showing Iwao Enokizu's various movements and killings by date
and location.
For more information about Vengeance is Mine, visit
The Criterion
Collection. To order Vengeance is Mine, go to
TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
|