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Muno no hito (1991)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
2 November 1991 (Japan) morePlot:
Sukezo, a farmer manga comic artist, takes up the art rock business by setting up a shop in a shed by the river... more | add synopsisPlot Keywords:
Awards:
12 wins & 7 nominations moreUser Comments:
Gray Figure on a Gray Background moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Naoto Takenaka | ... | Sukezo Sukegawa | |
| Jun Fubuki | ... | Momoko Sukegawa | |
| Kotaro Santo | ... | Sansuke, the son | |
| Miyako Yamaguchi | ... | Tatsuko Ishiyama | |
| Taro Maruse | ... | Sekiun Ishiyama | |
| Hiroshi Kanbe | ... | Karuishi Yamakawa | |
| Tomokazu Miura | ... | Man with sunglasses | |
| Yoshio Harada | ... | Homeless | |
| Ren Osugi | ... | Kurahara | |
| Yoshiko Kuga | ... | Lady who walks | |
| Tatsumi Kumashiro | ... | Birdman | |
| Fujio Suga | ... | Man who walks | |
| Seikô Itô | ... | Editor | |
| Akiko Nomura | ... | Woman at Inn | |
| Kojiro Kusanagi | ... | Police |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
107 minCountry:
JapanLanguage:
JapaneseColour:
Colour (Fujicolor)Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 moreSound Mix:
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*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Absurdly, well, apparently so, Sukezo sets up a stand in a rocky stream bed to sell rocks. The ground, the stream, the very floor of the stand all of it is water-polished rocks. As one too rational customer complains, "We can pick them anywhere here. Why buy them from you?" And why would anyone be "window shopping," anyway, in this old stream bed? The Japanese title's "muno," at least in my old Kenkyusha's, indicates incompetency, inefficiency, do-nothingness -- nothing to do with place. But Sukezo in his rock stand really does appear to be "nowhere, no place." It's not really absurd though. Far from the pretense embodied by our term, the rock-bound aspect of the film's plot illustrates and satirizes the concept of "found art." Art rocks, nothing really but knowingly or luckily found rocks, perhaps cleaned and mounted, are business. In town there's a professional dealer with far-reaching contacts. Auctions, fees, margins, and so on, entice and confuse novices. For all that, only Sukezo's small son has the innocence to recognize the film's most precious rock.
Director Takenaka draws, or tries to, an analogy between rock business and manga business. This isn't so hard. Any art is found art. Creators' search their experience, or seek new experience. When I write (I don't mean here), I "find" a line or a word. Sukezo put me in mind of an older friend with some of the same body language, a self-professed black sheep who forever dreampt up odd schemes yet acted on few of them. Sukezo's a survivor, but a perpetual child, simultaneously a procrastinator and an actor.
Watch his wife, Momoko. What keeps her going? How is it she dotes so on his manga? Does she actually "get" them, or is she just another fan? Is she dependent, or he on her?
In the monotony of its rock motif, Nowhere Man, or Momo no hito, echoes the prose of Kobo Abe and the portion of it filmed by Teshigahara. But Takenake, at least in this film, seems less talented than his title character. His images will stay with me quite a while, I think, but as I watched I longed to be reading Sukezo's manga instead.