Pillow Book
Barbara Lott Actor , Vivian Wu Actor , Ewan McGregor Actor , Yoshi Oida Actor , Ken Ogata Actor , Hideko Yoshida Actor
MPAA Rating:
NR
Contains:Nudity,Adult Situations,Strong Sexual Content,Not For Children,Adult Language
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Pillow Book
Theatrical Release Date: 1997 06 06 (USA)
UPC: 043396287099
Studio: Columbia TriStar
MPAA Rating: NR Contains:[Nudity, Adult Situations, Strong Sexual Content, Not For Children, Adult Language]
Summary: Peter Greenaway directed this elliptical and visually intricate tale of the far side of erotic and intellectual attraction. As a girl, Nagiko would receive a special gift each year from her father: a calligrapher (Ken Ogata) who would carefully paint a poem on her face, as her aunt (Hideko Yoshida) read aloud from The Pillow Book, a classic Japanese text on the art of love. As Nagiko (Vivian Wu) reached adulthood, her father insisted on putting a stop to this ritual, and he persuaded her to marry the nephew of his publisher (Ken Mitsuishi). But Nagiko is not satisfied with her husband, and after finding success as a model, she seeks a lover who will indulge her fondness for literature by writing verse on her naked body. In time, she finds happiness with a British expatriate named Jerome (Ewan McGregor), who persuades her to use his body as paper for her poetry, but the interference of her father's publisher (Yoshi Oida) gives their relationship a tragic turn. Greenaway deliberately mistranslated some of the French and Japanese dialogue for The Pillow Book, hoping that the occasionally fractured language would give the film a "Tower of Babel" quality. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
Category: Drama
Features:
Theatrical trailer
Scene selections
Pillow Book
Format: Digital Video Disc (DVD)
Release Date: 12/15/1998
Runtime: 126 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Subtitles: English
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Scene Selections
0. Scene Selections
1. Start [2:17]
2. Birthday greeting [3:42]
3. The Pillow Book [15:03]
4. Arranged marriage [6:28]
5. The first fire [5:42]
6. Calligrapher lovers [5:24]
7. Jerome [10:58]
8. Rejection [3:28]
9. Seduction [11:20]
10. Jerome's Plan [1:32]
11. First Book [5:21]
12. Second & Third Book [1:25]
13. Fourth Book [:23]
14. Fifth Book [5:02]
15. Hoki's advice [2:53]
16. Like Romeo & Juliet [3:38]
17. Book of the Lover [3:03]
18. Funeral [2:24]
19. The second fire [1:21]
20. Sixth Book [5:23]
21. Seventh Book [1:55]
22. Eighth Book [3:47]
23. Ninth Book [2:03]
24. Tenth Book [:48]
25. Eleventh Book [:25]
26. Twelfth Book [1:24]
27. Thirteenth Book [5:53]
28. 28th Brithday [7:42]
Todd Kristel
Some films get the audience emotionally involved in the lives of thoroughly developed characters; other films use characters as props and place the main emphasis on ideas or visual style. The Pillow Book falls into the latter category. Greenaway doesn't exude much compassion for his characters, even the sympathetic ones; although this film is ostensibly about erotic attraction, it's too cold and detached to generate much passion or sexual arousal. In some respects, Greenaway resembles Stanley Kubrick, whose clinical approach to his characters suggested that he viewed himself as an entomologist examining the behavior of an inferior life form under a microscope. Of course, some people would consider it a great compliment to be compared to Kubrick, and The Pillow Book demonstrates that Greenaway, like Kubrick, has a strong visual sense. Indeed, the visual elements of The Pillow Book are crucial because the film isn't just about people who happen to be involved in calligraphy; it's about the beauty of calligraphy itself, as well as a showcase for Greenaway and his colleagues to manipulate the visual (and audio) elements of the film. For example, Greenaway uses this movie to explore the differences between Eastern and Western forms of calligraphy and fine arts, including the direction of reading text and both the framing and fragmentation of picture space. You could say that he directs like a painter whose visual style depends more on the simultaneous placement of images on the picture frame than on editing or camera movement; you could say that he seems more excited by the ways he can densely pack his film with visual information than by the naked coupling of Vivian Wu and Ewan McGregor; and you could also say that his love of art compensates, at least partly, for his detached approach to his characters. So while Greenaway could have done more to get viewers involved in the relationship between Nagiko and Jerome, at least he offers us something interesting to look at. ~ Todd Kristel, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Ken Mitsuishi
Actor
Ham-Chau Luong
Actor
Barbara Lott
Actor
Hikari Abe
Actor
Anna Chu
Actor
Miwa Hayashi
Actor
Yuri Inoue
Actor
Satomi Kimura
Actor
Jimmy Wai Chung Lee
Actor
Michiko Matsuo
Actor
Hiroshi Nakajima
Actor
Yuko Nozawa
Actor
See Yan Leung
Actor
Munenari Takeshima
Actor
Martin Tukker
Actor
C.S. Wong
Actor
Chris Bearne
Actor
Chau Kwok Kwong
Actor
Kana Haraguchi
Actor
Hui Pai Kin
Actor
Yoshihiro Kawai
Actor
Stephen C. Lam
Actor
Masaru Matsuda
Actor
Wataru Murofushi
Actor
Kiymi Nomura
Actor
Sam
Actor
Shiho Takamatsu
Actor
Yorks Tong
Actor
Paul Wan
Actor
Yoshino Yoshioka
Actor
Adrian Kwan
Actor
Ville Khaapassalo
Actor
Augusto Aristotle
Actor
Fabienne De Marco
Actor
Hidashi Hidaka
Actor
Kazushi Ishimaru
Actor
Toshio Kimura
Actor
Sammuel Leung
Actor
Takashi Miyake
Actor
Miwako Namie
Actor
Ohko
Actor
Junko Shinohara
Actor
Eiichi Tanaka
Actor
Kaoru Ueda
Actor
Woo Leung
Actor
Chrissy Ann
Actor
Andrew Chan
Actor
Valerie Buchanon
Actor
Wichert Dromkert
Actor
Daishi Hori
Actor
Bobsy Jureidini
Actor
Kumi Komino
Actor
Lu Jinhua
Actor
Mrs. Lo
Actor
Michell Leigh Nicholson
Actor
Poon Wing Hong
Actor
Makiko Shoji
Actor
Hiromi Tani
Actor
François Van Den Bergen
Actor
Akiko Yokotani
Actor
Miwako Kawai
Actor
Tom Kane
Actor
Mariko Ajimoto
Actor
Tania De Jaeger
Actor
Yuki Hayashi
Actor
Aki Ishimaru
Actor
Tatsuya Kimura
Actor
Anita Pui Shan Leung
Actor
Atsushi Miura
Actor
Nguyen Duc Nhan
Actor
Chizuru Ohnishi
Actor
Kageyoshi Shirakata
Actor
Miho Tanaka
Actor
Hiroko Uno
Actor
Wu Wei
Actor
Ronald Guttman
Actor
Akihiro Nishida
Actor
Ryuko Azuma
Actor
Dehong Chen
Actor
Yutaka Honda
Actor
Jo Jo Hui
Actor
Fukue Kitaoka
Actor
Li Chun Man
Actor
Mr. Lo
Actor
Masami Nishio
Actor
Roger To Thanh Hien
Actor
Shuen Ngar Lei
Actor
Tien Sing Wang
Actor
Lynne Frances Wachendorfer
Actor
Atsuko Yoshikawa
Actor
Jim-Adhi Limas
Actor
Chau Lam
Actor
Cham Ben
Actor
Louis Yiu Shi Fu
Actor
Tokiko Horiike
Actor
Ai Kanafuji
Actor
Seitaro Koyama
Actor
Doris Lai Fong Lui
Actor
Kintaro Murayama
Actor
Yoshihiko Nagata
Actor
Yuki Nou
Actor
See Wah Leung
Actor
Masakazu Takemura
Actor
Kinya Tsuruyama
Actor
Rick Waney
Actor
Farini Chang
Actor
Arnita Swanson
Actor
Edelme Christanse
Actor
Midori Hatsuda
Actor
Seizo H. Inoue
Actor
Kheim Lam
Actor
Vanessa Lanza
Actor
Kentaro Matsuo
Actor
Atsuko Nakamura
Actor
Yasuko Ogawa
Actor
Yuko Shimomura
Actor
Maskai Taketani
Actor
Terence Tsin Chung Tung
Actor
Tony Man Kit Wong
Actor
Brian Eno
Composer (Music Score)
Terry Glinwood
Executive Producer
Peter Greenaway
Director
Peter Greenaway
Screenwriter
Kees Kasander
Producer
Jean-Louis Piel
Executive Producer
Denis Wigman
Executive Producer
Vivian Wu
Actor
Ewan McGregor
Actor
Yoshi Oida
Actor
Ken Ogata
Actor
Hideko Yoshida
Actor
Judy Ongg
Actor
Country: France,Netherlands,UK











