My Space, My Books

Sunday, February 26, 2006


Must See: Memoirs of A Geisha

Okay forget about what I said earlier and the review. This is a beautiful and totally engrossing film. I am glad I watched it. All the lead actors give wonderful performances. I have no problem with the casting except maybe Michelle Yeoh as Mameha. Ken Watanabe as the Chairman is groovy. The whole film looks like a painting. Didn't know this: Its directed by Rob Marshall who made Chicago. And produced by Steven Spielberg. It has some lovely violin tracks by Yitzak Perlman (no wonder). Guys dont miss it!!

Here is an interesting tidbit: Arthur Golden was sued by Mineko Iwasaki a renowned geisha for breach of contract in associating her name with the novel. She came out with her autobiography Geisha of Gion soon after Memoirs..... which also went on to become an international bestseller.

Thursday, February 23, 2006


Two new "movies based on books"- Pride & Prejudice, Memoirs of a Geisha

I am looking forward to watching these movies which got released this week in India. P & P has got good review fro critics here. This latest version has been nominated for couple of Oscars also. Although one thing is for sure. Mathew Macfayden is no substitute for Colin Firth as Mr Darcy.

Memoirs of a Geisha the international bestseller written by Arthur Golden is an absolutely fabulous and riveting book. I strongly recommend it to those who have not read it so far. Its unlikely that the movie will match up to the brilliance of the book. Here is one of the reviews I read on the Net: "One thing is for sure, the film is gorgeous. There are scenes where the colour seems to bleed off the screen, and some just look like portraits. That being said, the film seems to have forgotten subtlety as a facet of art. Memoirs of a Geisha feels like a distinctly American period film, a fabrication marked by artificiality. Instead of using the actors as a vehicle for conveyance, our eyes are instead drawn to the set design, the framing, the cinematography. As a Chinese-American, it was strange for me to see three actors who don't look Japanese play the part of the geisha. Additionally, the fact that the film is in English also proved problematic because although Michelle Yeoh's English is quite polished, Li Gong and Zhang Ziyi's English is definitely not. Much of the time, I was struggling to understand what they were saying (a gripe that I've seen mentioned by many others). The inconsistency of the dialogue (e.g., different accents from different characters, sporadic Japanese words during English conversation between characters)detracted from the film for me, because I had to keep asking myself, "Why is this not in Japanese?"