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Warm Water Under a Red Bridge (2001)
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Reviews Counted:43
Fresh:34
Rotten:9
Average Rating:6.9/10
Consensus: A whimsically engaging sex comedy.
Synopsis:
Yosuke has been laid off. His wife has given up on him and he's living on the streets of Tokyo, constantly looking for work. He stumbles upon an interesting story told by Taro, a homeless wanderer....
Yosuke has been laid off. His wife has given up on him and he's living on the streets of Tokyo, constantly looking for work. He stumbles upon an interesting story told by Taro, a homeless wanderer. Taro tells Yosuke that he stole a valuable gold Buddhist statue from a temple in Kyoto, and hid it in a house by a red bridge in a town on the Noto Peninsula near the Sea of Japan.
When Taro's suddenly dies, Yosuke recalls the story of the Buddhist statue and sets off to find it. Upon reaching the town he goes to a supermarket where he spies a woman shoplifting. After the woman leaves the scene, Yosuke notices an earring in a pool of water where she was standing. The woman turns out to be Saeko, granddaughter of Mitsu, who both live in the house by the red bridge.
Yosuke tracks down Saeko and returns the earring to her. This is the moment he first encounters the mystery of Saeko's water. This strange, kleptomaniac woman has the power to make flowers bloom out of season, and to draw fish from the sea into the river with the water she secretes when she experiences physical pleasure.
Yosuke gets a job with some fishermen and decides to stay in town. He gradually becomes obsessed with Saeko and her mysterious water, and as time goes on, Saeko's long suffering due to her water condition begins to heal with Yosuke's attention to it.
Meanwhile, another acquaintance from the streets of Tokyo, Gen, has also heard Taro's story. He arrives in town and asks Mitsu what she knows about the long-missing golden treasure. She reveals a story that puts both herself and Yosuke in danger, as Gen and his gang also seek the statue. -- © Cowboy Pictures
Starring: Koji Yakusho, Misa Shimizu, Mitsuko Baisho, Kazuo Kitamura
Starring: Koji Yakusho, Misa Shimizu, Mitsuko Baisho, Kazuo Kitamura, Manasaku Fuwa, Yukiya Kitamura, Toshie Negishi, Sumiko Sakamoto
Director: Shohei Imamura
Director: Shohei Imamura
Screenwriter: Motofumi Tomikawa, Daisuke Tengan, Shohei Imamura
Producer: Hisa Iino
Composer: Shinichiro Ikebe
Studio: Cowboy Pictures
Reviews for Warm Water Under a Red Bridge
This romantic fable, starring again the Eel's central couple, with strong meythical and sexual overtones, represents one of the Japanese master's lightest films.
A sweet and enthusiastic embrace of our biology and chemistry, and a delicious and salacious celebration of sexuality and individuality.
Imamura's embrace of the cental characters’ peculiar habits, predilections and appetites is his delicious and salacious way of celebrating their sexuality and individuality.
Warm Water Under a Red Bridge is a quirky and poignant Japanese film that explores the fascinating connections between women, water, nature, and sexuality.
Imamura's ability to tell a story is something to behold, even in this impossible one.
We never feel anything for these characters, and as a result the film is basically just a curiosity.
The characters are interesting and the relationship between Yosuke and Saeko is worth watching as it develops, but there's not enough to the story to fill two hours.
There's much tongue in cheek in the film and there's no doubt the filmmaker is having fun with it all.
Seeing it as a Westerner is an enlightening, even liberating, experience.
A charming, quirky and leisurely paced Scottish comedy -- except with an outrageous central gimmick that could have been a reject from Monty Python's Meaning of Life.
From blushing to gushing---Imamura squirts the screen in ‘Warm Water Under a Red Bridge’
Yes, Warm Water is a shaggy-dog story, but one with a real heart beating beneath the sniggering.
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