Woman
in the Dunes Movie Review:
The
recently warm temperatures probably inspire thoughts of
summer days walking on sandy Prince Edward Island beaches,
sand clinging to your heels. Sure, sometimes those dunes
may be hard to climb over, but you don't mind. You'd frolic
in the deep sand all day if you could. In fact, you might
never want to leave.
Then
again, you wouldn't be in the predicament facing the main
character of the 1966 Japanese film Woman In The Dunes.
He's an insect expert who takes a holiday from the noise
of the city to explore a remote desert area, hoping to find
a rare species of tiger beetle. Perhaps, he hopes, he'll
have an insect named after him if he discovers it. He is
awakened by a villager, and is told the last bus already
left, and offers him a place to stay. The visitor says he
would like that, for he enjoys experiencing local hospitality.
If I were in this movie and had accepted his offer, I'd
be kicking myself later for having said that.
It
turns out that the house he stays in is in a deep pit, inhabited
by a woman whose family was buried long ago by the sand.
She tells him the sand is constantly falling into the cracks
in the rickety house, and must be dug out every night. He
finds this all rather peculiar, but things become more stranger.
Next morning, the ladder he used to get down into the pit
is gone. And so he cannot get out. No matter how hard he
tries, he cannot do it, and is also forced into this unexplainable
life. And his close proximity to the woman of the house
develops into a couple of surprising passionate encounters.
There
is no logic to the story; you can only experience it. If
this were any other movie, it would probably make no sense
at all. But with this treatment, the message seems to be
that life is futile, and no matter how much you struggle,
you'll always be knocked down and forced to struggle again
and again. This explains itself in a perfect shot where
the man, attempting to escape for the first time, tries
again and again to run up the hill, while at the same time
the sand keeps falling and falling downwards keeping him
from moving any further. Even worse than that, however,
is the notion that even when something better does in fact
come along, a person may eventually feel so safe in their
useless existence that there is no desire to find a better
freedom. It may be too unusual, or even scary for them.
What the main character does at the end is just bewildering.
The
film itself is very well-done. The pacing and editing are
great. Many stand-out scenes include a surprising moment
when he actually does escape....for a while. There are also
many shots of sand upon skin, well-defined when appearing
on black-and-white film, and that composition works well
in a lovely sequence where the two brush the sand off each
other's skin and gradually enter into their first burst
of passion.
This
very mysterious film is definitely not for all tastes. But
its great filmmaking makes it a worthy, if difficult, film.
David
Macdonald
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