Rating: ![]()
"Visually striking, historically detailed adaptation of the classic novel."
US Release:
Central Park Media
Genre: Drama
(Historical Drama)
Suggested Age/Content Guide:
13-up / V1 N2 M2 L1
Series Type: Theatrical Movie
Length:
107 minutes
Production Date:
1987-12-19
Categories:
Look for:
Classic Literature
Court Life
Reserved Romance
Sequels/Spin-offs:
None
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Original Title: 紫式部 源氏物語
Romanized: Murasaki Shikibu - Genji Monogatari
Literal:
Based on the classic Heian Period novel by Murasaki Shikibu, the story follows Genji as he seeks out love and beauty in a string of relationships.
Rating: 4 / 5
Reviewer: Marc
Review Date: 2006-08-18
Based on the first novel ever written, Murasaki Shikibu's history of Genji, famous lover of the Edo period, The Tale of Genji is a beautiful and fascinating film. The book is very long, so the movie obviously only touches on it, but it richly captures the feel and faithfully retells interesting bits of Genji's long and lurid history.
That said, while Genji has many lovers and even an encounter with the supernatural, the film is notably quiet and evenly-paced--less exciting than the material might otherwise be, but the reserved style is perfect for the authentic feel. On that note, remember that this Tale is an Heian-era court drama, not a samurai story--there isn't a sword fight to be found. Despite the lack of action, the visual style is both the finishing touch on the authentic feel and the thing that makes the film a unique piece of anime. It is essentially a moving version of classic Japanese art of that period; the character designs have the refined but exaggerated proportions of classic art, and the settings (though a bit more filled out than most paintings) are appropriately sparse, elegant, and period accurate.
Unique among anime, The Tale of Genji is far to slow for fans of bloody, sword-swinging historical dramas, but the story is interesting, unusual, and somewhat educational, and the visual style is striking and beautiful.
Formerly available in the US from Central Park Media on subtitled VHS, now long out of print.
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