Film Review
Set against Alain Resnais's
Hiroshima,
mon amour (1959), now considered one of the defining films of the
Nouvelle Vague era, Yves Ciampi's glitzier
Typhon sur Nagasaki (released
two years earlier) can't help looking like an overblown Hollywood blockbuster
- a mix of conventional melodrama and full-on disaster movie that is more
concerned with being a box office winner than making an intelligent statement
on East-West relations after WWII. Ciampi's film had the bigger budget,
attracted a much larger audience (of just under three million in France)
and featured two of the most iconic performers in French cinema history -
Jean Marais and Danielle Darrieux - but it is now vastly overshadowed by
Resnais's more subtle and intimate film, even if both have something meaningful
to say about how the Far East and Europe regarded each other after the global
conflict that came close to obliterating them both.
Typhon sur Nagasaki started out as an adaptation of Thomas Raucat's
1924 novel
L'Honorable partie de campagne, with Gérard Philipe
lined up to take the lead role. Philipe's unavailability at the time
led to Marais being cast in his place, resulting in the long-awaited reunion
with Darrieux - the two had previously struck box office gold as the romantic
leads in Pierre Billon's grand historical drama
Ruy Blas (1948). This was the
second time Marais had worked with director Yves Ciampi - their first collaboration,
Le Guérisseur (1954),
having been one of the director's biggest commercial successes. Marais's
sportman-like physique and willingness to take on highly risky stunts proved
to be advantageous for
Typhon sur Nagasaki, with the actor's penchant
for gutsy action scenes heightening the dramatic impact of the climactic
storm sequence at the end of the film. It is in this shockingly convincing
denouement that the film comes into its own, literally pummelling the audience
with its graphic depiction of nature's demonic savagery at its most extreme.
It is hard not to reflect on the even more appalling man-made disaster that
had been unleashed on Nagasaki a decade before as these stark brutal images
smash their way into your consciousness.
Yves Ciampi's most ambitious film,
Typhon sur Nagasaki was a Franco-Japanese
co-production that was one of the earliest cultural collaborations between
Europe and Japan after the end of the Second World War. In a similar
vein to Resnais's Hiroshima-based drama, this film provides some valuable
visual testimony of an important city in the process of being reborn after
being laid waste by an atom bomb blast of terrifying magnitude, effectively
showing the process of westernisation that would radically transform Japanese
society in the1950s. The casting of Keiko Kishi in the role of the
tragically fated heroine Noriko is the film's most inspired touch.
Not only was she stunningly beautiful, Kishi was also one of the most gifted
actresses in post-war Japanese cinema, her talents put to great use by two
of the country's most renowned cineastes - Yasujiro Ozu (
Early Spring, 1956) and Mikio Narusa
(
Untamed, 1957).
Keiko Kishi and her equally charismatic co-star Danielle Darrieux perfectly
encapsulate the difference between Oriental and Western cultures at this
time, the artificial glamour of the latter rendered tawdry and vapid in comparison
with the richer, more authentic charms of the former. Darrieux's character
intentionally epitomises Western vanity and self-interest and her malignant
impact on a nascent romance seems to be a crude but apt metaphor for the
West's far from benign influence on the East. Meanwhile, Kishi's more
virtuous and modestly reflective Noriko serves as an apt symbol for a conquered
nation struggling to reconcile age-old traditions with a sudden inrush of
crass but seductive modernisation.
As the drama unfolds, the apparent moral and cultural gulf between the two
female protagonists diminishes and we see them in a new light - as a pair
of headstrong women driven to assert themselves in a male-dominated society
that still regards them as the inferior sex. Darrieux's character clearly
has the advantage, through her success as a career writer but, for her, personal
happiness is just as hard to obtain as it is for Noriko, whose only real
assets are her youth and beauty. Both women are rendered as helpless
and pathetic as a contemporary audience would expect them to be when the
titular typhoon breaks and forces them into the role of Pearl White's pitifully
defenceless heroine from
The Perils of Pauline, dependent on the superior
prowess of the spunky Alpha Male - as if nothing had changed in the forty
year interrim. The sobering realities of the dawdling pace of female
emancipation in both East and West since the war provide an interesting sub-strand
that should perhaps have been developed more fully if it were to make a more
than superficial impact.
Henri Alekan's lush colour photography lends
Typhon sur Nagasaki an
exotic splendour that was virtually unknown in French cinema at the time,
and along with Roger Vadim's equally sumptuous
Et Dieu... créa la femme
(1956) the film heralds a dramatic shift towards the kind of expansive visual
extravaganza that had served to redefine and re-energise Hollywood by the
mid-1950s. Not only is the film a treat for the eyes with its
stunning panoramic shots and glorious use of colour, it offers some revealing
insights into Japanese culture and in this respect bears a fair comparison
with many Japanese films of this era. A large measure of the credit
for this goes to an intelligent, carefully researched script provided by
two screenwriters of some renown, Annette Wademant and Jean-Charles Tacchella.
Wademant's distinctive feminist imprint is noticeable on most of the films
she scripted, including two of Max Ophüls's masterpieces -
Madame de (1953) and
Lola Montès (1955) and several
of Jacques Becker's later films (notably
Casque
d'or, 1951). Tacchella was just as mould-breaking with his
portrayal of male-female relationships. After working with Ciampi on
the brooding noir classic
Les
Héros sont fatigués (1955), he ruffled more than a
few feathers with his taboo-breaking screen offerings, most famously his
1975 film
Cousin, cousine,
which garnered international acclaim and three Oscar nominations, in spite
of its controversial subject matter.
Typhon sur Nagasaki and
Hiroshima, mon amour are two remarkable,
highly pertinent films that achieve similar ends in radically different ways
- the one an unashamed crowd-pleasing super-production shot in glorious Technicolor,
the other an understated auteur piece rendered in grainy black and white.
The cool intellectualism of Resnais's more contemplative film makes Ciampi's
offering appear brash and vulgar, but both have a tremendous impact, each
providing a worthy commentary on how the West and Far East viewed each other
in the early years of post-war détente. The French New Wave had yet to arrive
in force but already the contrast between these two similarly themed films
shows the dramatic schism that was about to open up in French cinema in the
late 1950s, early 1960s as a new, more politically conscious and culturally
heterodox generation fully embraced the age of the auteur filmmaker.
© James Travers 2022
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Next Yves Ciampi film:
Le Vent se lève (1959)
Film Synopsis
Pierre Marsac is a French engineer working for a large oil
company in Nagasaki, a Japanese city that was mostly devastated by an atomic
bomb at the end of WWII. Pierre is busily engaged overseeing engineering
work when he meets Noriko Sakurai, a young local woman who runs a small shop
selling silks and kimonos with her sister Saeko. It isn't long before
Pierre and Noriko become aware of a strong mutual attraction and a whirlwind
romance quickly ensues. Their marriage plans are suddenly thrown into
jeopardy by the unexpected arrival of an old flame of Pierre, Françoise
Fabre. A successful journalist, Françoise has come to the region
to compile a report on the effect of the atom bombs on Japan.
When Pierre renews his acquaintance with his former lover it soon becomes
clear that Françoise still has amorous designs on him, much to the
distress of Noriko, who begins to have cold feet about marrying the Frenchman.
At this crucial moment, an even greater disaster strikes, in the form of
a massive typhoon which threatens to wreak havoc across the region.
The opportunity of reporting on a real natural disaster is a temptation that
Françoise cannot resist, but in venturing out in the raging winds
she risks her own life. Pierre comes to her rescue, but Noriko is less
fortunate. Unable to escape as her shop collapses on her, the unfortunate
Japanese woman is crushed to death before Pierre can come to her aid.
Realising that her affair with her ex-lover is well and truly over, Françoise
heads back to France, leaving Pierre to rebuild his shattered life in the
storm-damaged city that is his new home.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.