Harakiri (1919) Poster

(1919)

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6/10
Mainly a curiosity
psteier16 November 2001
The Madam Butterfly story, with the character names changed, perhaps for copyright reasons. Fritz Lang fans will probably want to see it, but I do not think that it is worth going you of your way for.

Mainly interesting to me for the various items from Oriental curio stores used for set decoration and costumes. Few of the cast look Japanese or move in a Japanese manner (walking in a kimono takes practice and women would be embarrassed to show their arms).

I saw the Dutch/Italian restoration, which mostly looks very nice and clean and is nicely tinted. The titles were in Dutch. Running time was about 85 minutes.
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5/10
Early Lang Film
FerdinandVonGalitzien20 December 2006
At the beginning of the 20th century in Japan, O-Take-San, a Japanese young lady, falls in love with an American official. This relationship will be filled with social and religious impediments that will threaten the couple's happiness.

This is one of the minor films (with difference) of the German moviemaker, Fritz Lang. Inspired by John Luther Llong and David Belasco's "Madame Butterfly", "Harakiri" is above all, the triumph of the art direction that shines specially in this Nippon fable in a majestic and suggestive way. "Harakiri" it is not any big and lost Fritz Lang's masterpiece. Thanks to its discovery our idea about the evolution of the posterior career of the German filmmaker has been destroyed. However, this film confirms us Lang's control of story telling, his talent for the construction of narrative and, above all, to validate in a manner, the extraordinary themes consistent in his work.

We encounter in this movie a more naturalist visual conception of the cinema, rather than those works of his contemporaries. The scenery never tries to overlap reality, but in a certain way, tries to remake it. This film was particularly eulogized for the critics of that time for the detail of the nature and the recreation of the Japan of that time. Lang had the invaluable help of the Ethnographic Museum of Berlin, and thanks to this, and on the fact that the director knew by heart oriental civilizations, at the end the result was this film that has to be taken in account as an early Lang.

It is possible to find as well in "Harakiri" certain features very recognizable in his later works, like the theme of love fighting against the external circumstances that try to obstruct its success ("Der Müde Tod" as a perfect example). In this film, love is jeopardized by the social conventions which find their confirmation into the figure of Bonzo; adding another aspect, the religious one, to those dangers that hunt the main characters.

And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count must considerer putting into practice those strange and peculiar Japanese customs, that is to say, "Harakiri" due to the remaining days of Christmas preparations.

Herr Graf Ferdinand Von Galitzien http://ferdinandvongalitzien.blogspot.com/
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6/10
"Fear the unrelenting wrath of the Buddha!"
zetes28 October 2001
It's always cool to see rare, barely seen films from famous directors. This one is Fritz Lang's take on M. Butterfly (a story (a novel? a play?) with which I am unfamiliar), about a Japanese woman who marries a European man, only to be abandoned by him, poor and pregnant. The story of the film is very good and should have made a better film. Unfortunately, Lang's direction is very unimpressive and plodding. The actors, too are poor, except for Lil Dangover as the Japanese woman, who is merely adequate. It reeks of early directorial effort. It's definitely worth seeing if you get the chance, if only as a curio. 6/10.

PS: the quotation I cited in the summary above is actually spoken in the film by a Buddhist monk who wants to destroy the Japanese woman. Can you think of any god more intimidating than the Buddha? I know I can't.
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Wrathful Buddhas
chaos-rampant14 September 2011
I am always interested in images of Japan, cinematic or otherwise, native or not. Even with foreign filmmakers who fail to grasp the essence - Wenders, Coppola, Noe - the distance they foster is a subject to talk about. The extra intrigue here comes from how early this film is, so before there was even a Japanese cinema to take from.

We can be pretty sure that a film called Harakiri made by Germans in Hamburg, adapted from an American's short story, in turn based on the recollections of the writer's sister who had been to Japan with her missionary husband - layers upon layers of curious, we can bet fascinated but more or less secretly judgmental, European eyes - that all this was never going to unravel what is at the hear of a complex world.

There are tea-houses, geishas on getta sandals, an evil Buddhist priest, the powerful daimyo; the pageantry of barely familiar Japanese characters a caricature, and so the question at this point is just how gross?

I was surprised, because not so much after all. Painstaking effort must have gone into it at the time, and I assume it was a prestige production for Decla-Bioscop - they would be merged with UFA in '21 to write Weimar film history. Oh, Germans playing Japanese is something we'll have to make our peace with. The statue of the Buddha looks crudely unconvincing, and the flowery decorations on wooden panels owe more to the Japonism of art-nouveau then sweeping Europe than traditional Japanese culture.

But as a relic of the time when Japanese images, motifs, patterns had already been transferred - by people like Van Gogh or Monet - to the continental subconscious as new, exciting perspectives of a cherry-blossomed idyll and there replicated in what has since deeply influenced graphic arts as we've come to know them; that is to say, a translation of formal serenity as the suggestively intriguing veil which, once lifted, reveals familiar passions and cruelties that can outwardly reverberate with their proper tragedy.

It is all a bit camp then, with contemporary eyes. The Japanese world narrowed down to a stage where an occidental opera can soar.

As allegory of then recent Japanese history it's strangely friendly to the country, and cleverly succinct; just as we are about to imagine a patronizing conclusion where the Western naval officer - hues of Commodore Perry - redeems the young geisha from the clutches of an evil priest and a rigid political orthodoxy that orders its vassals to take their own lives, he is shown to be the false promise, irresponsible, and ultimately a coward.

See this as an emotionally-charged dream of Japan. Film-wise, it is less cinematic than Japanese woodblock prints from a 100 years before.
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5/10
Madame Butterfly, but German
davidmvining12 August 2022
In the end, I think I may be a bit more kind to the whole of Harakiri than I should be, but the ending refocuses a lot of what came before, giving it a power that the rest of the film didn't seem all that interested in pursuing. It's still not good, but I think its final moments right wayward ship. And yet, it demonstrates a lot of the problems with adaptation into cinema, especially taking a two-and-a-half-hour opera, Puccini's Madame Butterfly, and turning it into an 87-minute long silent film. Losing an hour while also losing the ability of characters to actually speak is a tough combination to overcome, and this attempt at a straight drama mostly ends up falling short.

A daimyo (Paul Biensfeldt) returns from a trip to Europe to a household in some trouble. The local Buddhist priest (Georg John) has set his illicit sights on the daimyo's daughter, O-Take-San (Lil Dagover), insisting that she join the temple as a priestess with obvious ulterior motives. To help break her from her domestic situation, the priest writes to the emperor a lie about how the daimyo has been overcome by Western influences, a single letter enough to convince the emperor to demand the daimyo commit seppuku. The daimyo, being a good servant of the emperor, follows through.

Now, let me take a moment to talk about medieval Japanese culture. I don't know a lot, but I have been watching a whole lot of Japanese movies over the past few months, and the details of so much of this story seem so wrong. It's a lot of little things that mostly just kind of bug me, not really negatively affecting the telling of the story, but just enough to get on my nerves. People walk around inside with sandals on. When we see the one person take off their sandals, they do it on the wrong elevation outside the house. Almost no one ever sits down, on the floor or anywhere else. The women wear their kimonos far too loosely around their legs. The weirdest part, though, is how the priest talks about the Buddha as some sort of vengeful god who will punish those who do not do as the Buddha wishes. I can allow for the priest being a terrible person, lying to get what he wants, but that's so not how the Buddha works in any form of Buddhism I've ever heard about that it sits there as a weird point that simply will not go away. Essentially, this feels like the work of Europeans who grew to love Japanese culture but never learned the details of it.

The details that do work are the production design. There are a fair number of sets, almost all located in Japan, and they have a slightly cluttered by convincing look of Japanese traditional housing. There's a lot of signage and detail that make them convincing places for the characters to inhabit, often feeling oppressed by the detail itself, like the culture itself is manifest in the detail.

O-Take-San gets saved by the brash action of a foreign sailor, Olaf (Niels Prien), who jumps a wall into a forbidden garden where O-Take-San is praying, preparing to become a full priestess of the temple. He marries her for 999 days, according to local law, and they conceive a child. He must sail away, though, and leaves her living in a tea house with a kindly proprietor and the law on her side against the priest's further actions for a time. Olaf, of course, never comes back, leaving her a loyal wife to a disloyal husband who take another wife back in his home country.

Coincidence drives the finale with the Prince Matahari (Meinhart Maur) discovering the priest's duplicitousness, becoming a kind of guardian to O-Take-San, and Olaf receiving an offer to return to Japan, bringing his wife along. It's all pretty standard melodramatic stuff, but O-Take-San's actions that end the film, after she discovers her husband's bigamy, gives a nice wraparound feel to the film that helps to underline the new title for the work.

The problem with the adaptation is that there's a lot of story, the silent approach (not exactly Lang's fault since it was the only way to do movies at the time) undermines the immediacy of the characters, and that lack of character prevents any real emotional connection. The plot's twists and turns feel almost arbitrary, but O-Take-San's final action provides a strong structural ending that I admire.

It's not enough to make the movie good, but it's enough to have convinced me that I hadn't completely wasted my time. That, plus the set design, are really what gives the film what little strength it has.
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4/10
Lang not yet at his peak
Horst_In_Translation4 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Harakiri" or "Madame Butterfly" is a German black-and-white silent film from almost 100 years ago directed by the famous Fritz Lang. The original version ran for 80 minutes, but the one I watched only had 60, so maybe some parts are lost or they just changed it to more frames per second. Anyway, it is okay that this was a fairly short film compared to "Metropolis" for example as "Harakiri" is not too memorable despite going for lots of drama, romance and emotion. Sometimes it succeeds in these areas, sometimes it doesn't. The cast are all German actors and most of them play Japanese characters, which is admittedly a bit awkward. The most known cast member is definitely Lil Dagover. Despite the good moments, this film has a problem that so many other silent films have: There just are not enough intertitles for audiences to understand the plot and action from start to finish. And that is a deal-breaker, in this case as well. I do not recommend "Harakiri". Thumbs down.
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9/10
The dream of Japan
Cristi_Ciopron2 August 2010
Warning: Spoilers
A beautiful exotic melodrama, a suave, elegiac and melodious fairy tale, distinguished by an appealing exoticism meant to satisfy and charm, Lang's HARAKIRI gives us the Japanese dream, the one we are all searching for—either in modern Japanese novels (name your favorite Japanese novelists …), or in lowbrow of the SHOGUN class, book and movie about which a kind word can always be said. The dream of a renewed life that would prove so exciting—that we would forget or ignore its difficulties—life on a spaceship, on distant planets or in Japan—the excitement of it all would surely make us ignore the harsher sides. Where existence would be as if lifted up by the hieratic style and the dignity.

Teahouses, geisha's, sailors, Buddhist monks, crowded Asian cityscapes, Lang's story is reduced to an exotic panorama, a kaleidoscope, with an astounding mastery of style and taste, the sentimental subject is very lightly touched upon, barely sketched, like understated, with a very nice gentleness, and not really the genuine content of the movie (which content are, in fact, the Japanese world, and glimpses of the Japanese virtue and customs)—though, of course, when needed, dramatic accents are found, and the woman's drama is ably told, Lang does justice to the very dramatic phases of the storyline—Loti's subject appealed to Lang, as it had appealed to Puccini. I also believe that this directorial lightness, this sketchy approach serves well the movie. See for yourself.

The poetry in HARAKIRI is brought by Lang himself, by his visual storytelling, that gentleness of his style, the casualness also, not by the melodrama underneath. A storytelling so strictly disciplined, that it may afford to look casual. It also seemed to me like a story told by a kind man.

The cinema is a school of dreams; a school of dreams and poetry.

All good cinema is born in poetry and dream.

Acknowledged master of the cinema, Lang is an intriguing character nonetheless—he tried his hand at a varied palette of movies—he was unafraid to delve, both in the silent and in the sound period, in the labyrinths of the genre movies. Remember his '40s and '50s outings.

So do you like silent cinema? Do you like Lang? Do you like silent movies' directors? I was born 50 yrs after the silent cinema was abolished; it's my favorite cinema, nonetheless.

The expatriated director is one of my two favorite Langs (the other being the Scottish literary critic and folklorist).
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8/10
Germans Doing Japanese and Doing All Right.
silentmoviefan28 February 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I'd heard of "Madame Butterfly" years before seeing this picture, so I must admit ignorance of the original story behind a Japanese woman having relations with a man, having his baby, and then killing herself. Overall, the acting in this movie is really superb, as I would expect from a German silent film. True, there are no Japenese playing the Japaense parts, but the people who do play those parts do it very well, as do those playing the Caucasian parts. Lil Dagover, the main character in this movie, really has it rough. Her father gives her a teddy bear and, not too long after that, kills himself. It gets worse. An evil Buddhist priest, who helped bring about her father's execution, wants Lil to become a Buddhist priestess. Her father told the evil priest that her daughter should be able to make up her own mind in this. That certainly didn't help his cause. One day, she's in a holy garden, a place non-natives aren't allowed into. Olaf, a European Navy man, pays that no mind and hops the fence after spotting Lil. They hit it off fairly close to immediately. Olaf is told her can't have relations with her until her marries her first. He does, more interested in relations than anything else, and she has a child. Before she gives birth, Olaf leaves, but not before telling Lil he'll be back. Not exactly being a great guy, Olaf soon forgets all about her. Lil waits and waits and waits and no Olaf appears. A prince champions her cause in the meantime and wishes to marry her, but she won't do it. She's married to Olaf... One day Olaf, with wife in tow, re-appears. He doesn't show up at Lil's house, though. The evil Buddhist priest tries to take Lil's child away, but the prince saves the moment and Lil gets to keep her child, but she turns him down yet again because sh'es married to Olaf. Lil's lady in waiting gets Olaf's wife to appear, but Lil will not turn over her child. Olaf's wife then goes back and gets Olaf to finally come. Before he does, though, Lil figures he won't show back up and kills herself. Yes, it's a sad story, but well-acted all the way around. What prevented it from getting a higher rating from me is the fact it's a downer.
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8/10
Early Lang work
tnrcooper31 October 2013
This movie gave us a hint at Lang's breadth of interests. It's a re-telling of Madame Butterfly. Lang has a sure hand as a director, that much is clear. It is a well-composed story, crisply told. Some of the acting is a bit hammy. The use of real props and authentic sets is impressive, particularly considering how much less integrated the world was in 1919.

The story is a moving one and Lang directs it well. Girl meets foreign boy, they have a child and he promises to be back. Things don't end well. All that said, it's worth checking out for fans of Lang, fans of Madame Butterfly, or perhaps those interested in Japanese cultural artifacts. Lang's attention to detail and willingness to sweat the small stuff is beneficial as regards his movie making.
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