Reviewer's Rating 4 out of 5
Warm Water Under a Red Bridge (2002)

Twice a Cannes Palme D'Or winner with "The Ballad of Narayama" and "The Eel", septuagenarian Japanese auteur Shohei Imamura returns with this charmingly bizarre slice of magic realism. Adapted from Henmi Yo's novel by Imamura and his co-screenwriters Motofumi Tomikawa and Daisuke Tengan, it's an engaging variation on the male mid-life crisis picture.

Tipped off by a dying tramp in Tokyo, unemployed Yosuke (Koji Yakusho) finds himself travelling down to a small town on the Noto Peninsula where a golden Buddha statue has supposedly been hidden in a house near the red bridge. There the middle-aged Yosuke, who expects nothing more than a "life of boring predictability", encounters both the senile fortune-teller Mitzu (Mitsuko Baisho) and her beautiful grand-daughter Saeko (Misa Shimizu). The latter is a young woman whose body secretes gallons of water when she makes love, a discharge which irrigates the garden and replenishes the local river. She and Yosuke begin a passionate affair, with the newcomer rushing back from his fisherman duties to satisfy her amorous desires. Rumours abound however as to the fate of her last boyfriend, who drowned in mysterious circumstances.

An endearing portrait of provincial eccentricity, and a generous tribute to female fecundity, "Warm Water Under a Red Bridge" smoothly incorporates various quirky sub-plots and supporting characters such as the African student training for a marathon and the determined down-and-out in competition with Yosuke for the treasure. Photographed and framed with consummate assurance, and appealingly acted by its cast, the film may lack refinement in terms of its aquatic metaphors. Still it's difficult to dislike a film in which the melancholic protagonist is heartily encouraged to embrace lasciviousness and lechery.

End Credits

Director: Shohei Imamura

Writer: Shohei Imamura, Motofumi Tomikawa, Daisuke Tengan

Stars: Koji Yakusho, Misa Shimizu, Mitsuko Baisho, Mansaka Fuwa

Genre: Romance, World Cinema

Length: 119 minutes

Cinema: 15 March 2002

Country: Japan

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