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Arthur Golden's blockbuster bestseller, MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA, has been brilliantly brought to the big screen by Oscar-nominated director Rob Marshall (CHICAGO). The film opens ...Read more
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Memoirs of a Geisha
Chicago director Rob Marshall's pretty but empty (or pretty empty) film has all the elements of an Oscar® contender: solid adaptation (from Arthur Golden's bestseller), beauti...Read more
rating
Historical Romance in Japan
I had read the book and was fascinated by the history of this Geisha's life. A simple poor country girl sold to a Geisha house, we travel with her through her trials & vir...Read more

Memoirs of a Geisha (DVD, 2006, 2-Disc Set, Widescreen)

Rob Marshall, Ziyi Zhang, Ken Watanabe|Theatrical release: 2005 | Rating: PG-13 (MPAA)

Movie synopsis

Arthur Golden's blockbuster bestseller, MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA, has been brilliantly brought to the big screen by Oscar-nominated director Rob Marshall (CHICAGO). The film opens in a remote Japanese fishing village in 1929, where two sisters, Chiyo and Satsu, are sold by their troubled father to people who place Chiyo in a classy geisha house known as an okiya in Gion and Satsu in a much more vulgar and dangerous district. Chiyo becomes a maid to Hatsumomo, a cold, controlling, and calculating geisha who is instantly jealous of Chiyo's unusual, beautiful eyes and childish innocence. Chiyo is befriended by Pumpkin, another maid at the okiya, but the two are soon driven apart. Chiyo is shown compassion by the Chairman and another, more successful geisha, Mameha, who takes her under her wing as her "little sister," furthering the battle between Chiyo, now called Sayuri, and Hatsumomo. As Sayuri is trained in the art of being a geisha, learning how to walk, talk, dance, and serve (up to a point) in order to please and honor her distinguished male clients, World War II looms on the horizon, threatening to upend Japan and its old ways.MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA is a lush, sweeping historical and romantic epic, featuring gorgeous period costumes, primarily the exquisite kimono worn by the geisha. Ziyi Zhang (HOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERS) is outstanding as Sayuri, who stands up to the oppressive Hatsumomo (the effervescent Gong Li), while Michelle Yeoh, who starred with Zhang in CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON, is splendid as the wise and elegant Mameha. Ken Watanabe (THE LAST SAMURAI), Koji Yakusho (SHALL WE DANCE?), and Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa (ELEKTRA) are among the men who take an interest in Sayuri, who is continually faced with difficult choices that will shape her destiny, just as Japan's destiny is changing shape with the coming of the West. John Williams's soaring score is enhanced by solos from virtuosos Yo-Yo Ma and Itzhak Perlman.

Product Details
  • Edition: 2-Disc Set; Widescreen
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Rating: PG-13 (MPAA)
  • Film Country: USA
  • UPC: 043396111592

Additional Details
Genre:Dramas
Format:DVD
Display Format:2-Disc Set; Widescreen

Credits
Director:Rob Marshall
Leading Role:Ziyi Zhang, Ken Watanabe
eBay Product ID: EPID51827936
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Movie trailer and editorial reviews

3 stars out of 5 -- "Zhang is loveliness incarnate. And the great Michelle Yeoh, her co-star in CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON, possesses a touching gravity..."
Rolling Stone - Peter Travers (12/15/2005)

"The exquisite Ms. Gong looks like a gift that keeps on giving when trussed up in silk, but she and the film come most alive when her hair tumbles down and she sashays about the okiya, stirring the air with her tremulous rage."
New York Times - Manohla Dargis (12/09/2005)

"As beautiful-looking a film as you'll see....Often magical."
Uncut - Chris Roberts (02/01/2006)

"On the evidence of Marshall's film, the geishas are like highly trained birds kept in intricately woven bamboo cages; they are made temporarily fascinating by the skills of the film's true artists -- its troika of fine leading actresses..."
Sight and Sound - Leslie Felperin (02/01/2006)

"Dion Beebe's gorgeous cinematography is delivered with sharp images..."
Widescreen Review - Suzanne Hodges (04/01/2006)

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Memoirs of a Geisha

Created: 30/03/06
Chicago director Rob Marshall's pretty but empty (or pretty empty) film has all the elements of an Oscar® contender: solid adaptation (from Arthur Golden's bestseller), beautiful locale, good acting, lush cinematography. But there's something missing at the heart, which leaves the viewer sucked in, then left completely detached from what's going on.
It's hard to find fault with the fascinating story, which traces a young girl's determination to free herself from the imprisonment of scullery maid to geisha, then from the imprisonment of geisha to a woman allowed to love. Chiyo (Suzuka Ohgo), a young girl with curious blue eyes, is sold to a geisha house and doomed to pay off her debt as a cleaning girl until a stranger named The Chairman (Ken Watanabe) shows her kindness. She is inspired to work hard and become a geisha in order to be near the Chairman, with whom she has fallen in love. An experienced geisha (Michelle Yeoh) chooses to adopt her as an apprentice and to use as a pawn against her rival, the wicked, legendary Hatsumomo (Gong Li). Chiyo (played as an older woman by Ziyi Zhang), now renamed Sayuri, becomes the talk of the town, but as her path crosses again and again with the Chairman's, she finds the closer she gets to him the further away he seems. Her newfound "freedom" turns out to be trapping, as men are allowed to bid on everything from her time to her virginity.

Some controversy swirled around casting Chinese actresses in the three main Japanese roles, but Zhang, Yeoh and Gong in particular ably prove they're the best for the part. It's admirable that all the actors attempted to speak Japanese-accented English, but some of the dialogue will still prove difficult to understand; perhaps it contributes to some of the emotion feeling stilted. Geisha has all the ingredients of a sweeping, heartbreaking epic and follows the recipe to a T, but in the end it's all dressed up with no place to go.--
5 of 11 people found this review helpful.
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Historical Romance in Japan

Created: 09/12/06
I had read the book and was fascinated by the history of this Geisha's life. A simple poor country girl sold to a Geisha house, we travel with her through her trials & virtual slavery to becoming #1 Geisha, always seeking to be near the one man who showed her kindness, through WWII and until she eventually is united with her love, and travels to the USA to live. Besides being an historical romance/drama--this movie makes a statement on the value placed on women, or should I say lack of proper value--the main women portrayed here are not free to pursue their desires, they are indentured servants to their Geisha House, playing pretty for drooling men to admire, giving up home, husband & child, for a bit of attention, a few bowls of rice, a mat to sleep on. Tragic in many ways, the life of the Geisha should not be over romanticized. Perhaps it was the only way for many women of this era to exist, but what a price.
Though I love this movie, and it is beautiful and well acted, with gorgeous attention to costumes, sets & settings, it does not have the depth and detail that the book has. Putting that aside, I highly recommend both the book & the movie--though Suyuri's town is a set--who would know until one watched the special features?
Very well done in every way, for a visual feast--great acting--compelling story--read & view:"Memoirs of a Geisha."
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Disappointing...

Created: 06/01/07
I loved the book and have huge portions committed to memory. This book inspired me to do additional research on Geisha and I have become very interested in the subject. So when I heard the movie was finally coming out after 4 years in Deveopment Hell, I was very excited. At least I was until I went to see it. What a disaster! Don't get me wrong. It's a very pretty movie. The costumes are lovely and mostly accurate and the music was fantastic.
However, the actually script was a mess. The movie was about 1/3 portions of the book, mixed with random stuff some writers thought up sandwiched by drivel. "Memoirs of a Geisha" as it was originally written was a Best Picture shoe-in and all the writers had to do was follow that template, but somebody got the bright idea to color outside the lines and the movie version is what we are left with. Hatsumomo, a brilliantly written, world-class self destructive manipulator and reduced to a 2 dimensional charicature of herself, as is Mameha. Sayuri is about 1/2 right. Overall, it was a very disappointing effort. In 10 years, I hope someone remakes this movie as it should have been made the first time.
If you want to know what life as a Geisha during the 1930's and 40's was actually like, read the books "Geisha" by Liza Dalby and "Autobiography Of a Geisha" by Sayo Masuda.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.
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The Special Features were great, but not the movie

Created: 05/10/06
This is Rob Marshall's entrance into the life of Japan's geishas, just as his movie "Chicago" investigated the life of that city in the early 1920s. He is an amazing director, being able to get into the thick and thin of what he is trying to cover. The movie is breathtakingly done; only big screen TV does it justice. However, the story is confusing to this American who never had any idea of Japanese customs or lingo. Also, the actual story almost put me to sleep until the end, when surprisingly everything worked out.

I bought the DVD with two disks from half.com. The special features disk is so good!! It demonstrates how such a production requires a HUGE amount of money and research and tests the abilities of costumers, make-up, and film producers. My purchase was worth the Special Features disk after watching a ho-hum movie.
1 of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Excellent movie. Great acting, great designs!

Created: 08/03/09
Memoirs of a Geisha is a well executed movie with gorgeous sets and costumes. The plot is mostly faithful to the book, with minor deviations for the sake of time. Set against a backdrop of WWII era Japan, this movie tells of one girl's struggle to find her place in the world, but that may come at the cost of her happiness and true desires. Don't expect this to paint a pretty picture of humanity. Do expect a well crafted historical drama and an enjoyable 145 minutes.
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Memoirs of a Geisha (DVD, 2006, 2-Disc Set, Widescreen)
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