Sanshō the Steward and Sanshō the Bailiff
Introduction
A beautifully developed story, oddly titled after the overtaxed and merciless antagonist hero Sansho the steward or Bailiff is a powerful narrative of loss, revenge, morality and extreme social classes divergences nature. This is a simple tale grounded on tear jerking futility and atrocities and a basking of hope and love with an epic sensation that can be attributed by both the covered time and full triumphant circles journeyed by the protagonists and the endurance to the bloody path of attaining freedom (Mori, Dilworth, and Rimer 153). Sanshō the Bailiff is an established Japanese periodic movie that was produced in the year 1954 and directed by Mizoguchi. The movie’s is grounded on a short story written by Ogai Mari by the title ‘’Sansho the Steward’’ as a follow up of two different aristocratic kids sold into the life of slavery (Mori, Dilworth, and Rimer 153). The story features different subjects such as poverty portrayal, a critical perspective of the women’s position in the contemporary Japanese society and self sacrifice. ‘’Sanshō the Steward and Sanshō the Bailiff ‘’ are a historic story and film that is set in a feudal Heian Japan period (Mori 4). The story is so exceptional since it tells is complicated narrative with the utilization of simple images as well as creating order from the worst type of moral chaos. The narrative’s and movie’s story presents a depth understands of the human condition and can thus be described as a simplicity masterpiece in compelling its setting.
The story clarifies the human condition and offers enough time for the readers and those watching to think. The presence of affectation to Sansho is not there, more so the story is based on the simplicity of well identification and explanation of the overarching ideas of integrity and honesty as the most significant characteristics that should be possessed by humans (Mori, Dilworth, and Rimer 154). The story is an unflattering demonstration of a classic perseverance and slavery tale. The story is one of the highest accomplishments that have been made in the slavery stories and films history. The story concerns a family that has been separated after the governor who is the father has been exiled based on his morals principles (Mori 2). After the attempt of the remaining family which is made up of the helper, mother, son and daughter to look for the father they are sold into the world of prostitution and slavery. The story is a positive measure of the suffering of humans via the experience of slaves despite the fact that it can be considered as an old fable from the Japanese society that is based on compassion and mercy as the primary virtues. When the province governor declined the execution and crack down request of some protestors, he was exiled with his family (Karimberdi 5:37). The separation leads to slavery as the wife gets sold to brothel while the siblings are bought by Bailiff who is a mansion overseer that belongs to the right minister. The slaves conditions can be described as deplorable but the children are necessitate to time bide to get an opportunity to escape and meet their parents.
A thoughtful compassion meditation and mercy, ‘’Sanshō the Steward” and Sanshō the Bailiff’’ builds is authority via ethical wisdom of the story and the explicit beauty and authority of its general visual expression (Mori, Dilworth, and Rimer 153). Sanshō the Bailiff film outlines a heroic journey of the sea and land via time as well as space. Actually in the case of Sansho a number of quests are entwined and every rhyme off on the others so that a harmonic wholeness can be created. The underlying quest for a sister and his brother for their biological mother , the quest of freedom by the slaves, a quest by a boy for his father and the involved principles for which his fathered vowed for. The story is mainly based on morality, greed, poverty, women’s position in the Japanese society and redemption. It is a nature’s nature not to demonstrate mercy , however mercy is completely inherent in nurturing human beings, even when mercy seems to have been hindered by the loads of suffering (Mori 7). For Matsu he needed to survive so that he can accompany his sister to meet their parents (Karimberdi 33:32). He did not want to abandon his father’s virtues by becoming cruel to the slaves who wanted to escape and die free but he had no option. He showed no mercy nor compassion as his father had always urged. Brutality was his only way of surviving through slavery and get an opportunity to escape to meet his separated parents.
Sanshō the Bailiff presents a story for a time when mankind had not stimulated as full human beings which is a grief’s story. The film is the greatest on the grounds of all the films produced by Japanese since it is an emotional and tragic shattering movie (Mori, Dilworth, and Rimer 153). The movie is generally about the virtues for a young man which are altered and tortured , and in the end emerging to be triumphant partially. The film was produced in a period of brutality in the Heian period since the ethical governor stood ground on compassion and love virtues. The governor held that a man can be compared to a beast without the existence of mercy, all humans are created as equals and thus everyone is entitled to happiness (Mori 6). The story is no doubt a wrench tears its existing injustices being demonstrated at the end by the mercy and compassion virtues. Anjou and Zushio endures numerous years of slave’s hardship as they work for a ruthless Sansho Bailiff. However Taro who is Sansho’s son does not agree with the treatment and to hide their identity they are given other names and urged to bear the tormenting (Karimberdi 36:17). Mutsu forgets his father’s virtues of and in order to survive he adopts prayer and hope futility and abandons compassion as he is ordered to kill other slaves.
In conclusion, the notion that individuals hold little sympathy for matters that does not particularly apprehend them is well demonstrated both in the story and the film. This is accomplished with an adequate revelation of humanity depression as well as injustices in the slavery period. The story is grounded on performing the right things as well as performing against the majority that holds contrary views. The governor’s nobility in particular was destroyed which caused an assessment of righteousness over the continuous history driven by corruption and chaos. ‘’Sanshō the Steward” and Sanshō the Bailiff’’ are saddening relation that does not offer any comic relief but offers an affective and wrenching satisfaction and thus ranked amongst the highest resolutions among all the foreign films.
Work Cited
Karimberdi. Sansho the Bailiff (1954). Retrieved from http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x10ckxw_sansho-the-bailiff-1954-pt-1_creation
Mori, Ōgai, David A. Dilworth, and J T. Rimer. The Historical Fiction of Mori Ōgai. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1991. Print.
Ogai Mori. Sansho the Steward (1862- 1922). translated By Rinner J. Thomas. PDF