The Petrified Forest
The Petrified Forest
| 01 September 1973 (USA)
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Follows a young med student's relationships with two women: a dangerous affair with a childhood friend and his mother's struggle to rebuild their estranged relationship.

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Reviews
WILLIAM FLANIGAN

THE PETRIFIED FOREST / THE FOREST OF FOSSILS (KASEKI NO MORI). Viewed on Streaming. Restoration/preservation = ten (10) stars; cinematography = seven (7) stars; score = seven (7) stars; sound recording = two (2) stars; subtitles = two (2) stars; title relevance = one (1) star. Director Masahiro Shinoda delivers a dramatic, well-crafted, and highly suspenseful tale channeling a typical Hitchcock theme: the killers are known (to the audience), but their fate remains to be determined (the movie's theme). Shinoda's anti-authoritarian, anti-hero plot involves a medial student (with access to exotic poisons undergoing lab tests) and three women: a schizophrenic lover newly emerged from his past; his mother with a reverse Oedipus complex; and a desirable (and sexually repressed) mother of a medically-deranged boy under more/less the med student's care. The protagonists apply poison to eliminate offending pests including each other (the boy's mom may have used another method for husband removal). None are caught (so far), but, like all excellent directors of suspense movies, Shinoda suggests pest control may continue after the film ends! The Director also tosses into the pot a few side bars such as: the reoccurring theme that it's probably not a really good idea to let young boys witness their mother's affairs; and an off-the-wall discussion of science verses religion. Distinguished character actress Haruko Sugimura turns in an excellent performance (as usual) playing the med student's mother. Her supporting cast is also good with the other two leading actresses leaving very little to the viewer's imagination (in simulated sex scenes). Restoration/preservation is outstanding. Cinematography is very good. The jazzy score is especially effective. On-set sound recordings are poor and "cry out" for looping to eliminate camera (and other equipment) background noise. Subtitles are amateurish and require adult-supervised editing. Their flash rate is absurd! Some signs are translated. Relevance of the Japanese (and translated) film title to the movie's theme is ridiculously irrelevant (picked out of a hat?) and easily confused with the same name used for an unrelated, but far better known release (USA 1936). Nonetheless, this import is highly recommended. WILLIAM FLANIGAN, PhD.

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david-rf

I don't know. Meh directing, barely decent acting, plenty of stupid dialogs, some hastily done scenes that immediately get to the point without any building up whatsoever, some situations that you can see coming from a mile away. So, many aspects of this movie disappointed me, but it still has some kind of strange charm and a nice atmosphere. Good cinematography, too. Too bad that's not enough to call this a memorable movie. In the end I'd say a 64% , I've kinda enjoyed watching it but I think there are hundreds of Japanese movies that deserve your precious time way more than this one.

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m-sendey

One day, a young medicine student Hauro Himoto (Ken'ichi Hagiwara) runs into his attractive ex-schoolmate Eiko Izawa (Sayoko Ninomiya) and they fall in love with each other in no time at all. The only obstacle which intrudes the couple is the owner of a barbershop who simultaneously is her lover and her employer and pesters Eiko out of his jealousy. Hauro and Eiko resolve to get rid of the insufferable male so that they can remain together without further complications… The Petrified Forest is one of the least known films by the great Japanese director Masahiro Shinoda whose interests encompass soullessness of post-war Japan as well as clashes of Western and Eastern cultures. Whilst he scrutinises the latter topic in his enchanting Silence from 1971, in case of The Petrified Forest, the former issue constitutes the main theme of the psychologically and visually stunning piece of psychological drama which enthralls with its brilliance. The movie is initiated with a large shot framing a snowy landscape filmed by a superb cinematographer Kôzô Okazaki who imbues the celluloid with Shinodesquely chilly tints and one is likely to sense the coldness of the panorama. Picturesquely promising as it may seem, it is only a prelude to this very austere and morally disquieting material which successively proceeds to a more urban milieu in which the action takes place. Shinoda exposes through this flick his storytelling flair which renders The Petrified Forest so insightful and succeeds in combining many subplots without becoming exorbitantly intricate or superficial. The main character – Hauro – is a young medicine student who leads an abstruse relationship with his mother who previously left his father for her beloved one. Hauro appears to be resentful and does not want to have anything in common with her anymore. Once Hauro infatuates with Eiko, he grows involved in a sinister labyrinth of emotions which he ultimately fails to harness. The climax of The Petrified Forest is uncannily bleak and it is genuinely captivating how aptly Shinoda unfolds the tale as well as the cruelty and lurid impulses dwelling the hearts of the protagonists who cannot cope with family nuisances. Likewise, Shinoda indicates that the true love can only be constructed on compassion and reconciliation, not on violence and hatred which entails solely annihilation and destruction. Last but not least, one of the motifs constrains a viewer to ponder on perchance consequences of depending just on science, purely a creation of humans, and totally discarding religion and ethics, thus, it is something which may be also disclosed in a cinematic discourse of Akira Kurosawa.The acting in The Petrified Forest is neat, but it is not one of the biggest benefits of the film which is generally elevated by its story. Ken'ichi Hagiwara is good as Hauro, but a word "competent" seems to be more adequate as far as his performing is concerned. The same case is with Sayoko Ninomiya who is pretty, never memorable though. It is propitious to behold Haruko Sugimura's dose of subtlety as Hauro's mother. Sugimura is known for her roles in Yasujirô Ozu's Tokyo Story and Late Spring.The cinematography of Kôzô Okazaki, who worked on Kobayashi's Inn of Evil and Shinoda's Buraikan, is compelling, but far from flamboyant, rather grey which is quite distinctive for Shinoda's opuses. Despite extreme actions transpiring on the screen, the camera remains impassive, nonchalant and remotely observes this sterile décor inhabited by inconsolable spirits. The further the movie creeps, the more portentous it becomes owing to progressively darker and darker palette of colours which endow the effort with perturbingly sinister appearance. The soundtrack by the phenomenal Tôru Takemitsu belongs to his very best compositions and consists of some delightful jazzy scores as well as those less conventional ones which reverberate with dripping water and traditional, ghoulishly sounding flutes which contextualise with the ensemble very agilely.It is eerie that such an engaging work of this genteel Japanese director remains so obscure and virtually forgotten. It cannot be denied that The Petrified Forest does not implicate any drawbacks, nevertheless, it is very close to cinematic magnificence of Shinoda's more distinguished motion pictures. One of the foibles stems from the fact that the characters are written in a better manner than they are acted. Apart from that, the second half is deprived of the force of the first hour and the material ultimately feels a little too languorous, yet I am certain that patient viewers shall not mind the slow pacing of this otherwise poignantly crafted pic which in spite of being little-known, prosperously conveys an astoundingly mature and ripe tale shrouded in a veil of human despair.

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