Nonton Film: 40885 sayonara 1957 Sub Indo

Sayonara (1957)
Overview: Air Force Major Lloyd Gruver is reassigned to a Japanese air base and is confronted with US racial prejudice against the Japanese people. The issue is compounded because a number of the soldiers become romantically involved with Japanese women in defiance of US military policy. Ordinarily a by-the-book officer Gruver must take a position when a buddy of his an enlisted man Joe Kelly falls in love with a Japanese woman Katsumi and marries her. Gruver risks his position by serving as best man at the wedding ceremony.
Director: Joshua Logan
Cast: Marlon Brando, Patricia Owens, James Garner, Martha Scott, Miiko Taka
Original Language: EN
Original Title: Sayonara
Budget: N/A
Revenue: N/A
MPAA Rating: PG
Keywords: japan, based on novel or book, u.s. air force, air force, major, interracial relationship, interracial marriage, racial prejudice, post war japan, kabuki, kobe japan
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Wuchak (November 10, 2021)
_**Brandoās romantic culture clash in Japan after WW2**_ In 1951, an American Air Force pilot serving in Korea (Marlon Brando) is reassigned to Kobe, Japan, where he deals with his American fiancĆ© (Patricia Owens) and a Japanese performer who attracts his attention (Miiko Taka). The problem is thereās a military order against fraternizing with indigenous women. James Garner and Red Buttons have peripheral roles while Ricardo Montalban is on hand as a famous Kabuki entertainer. āSayonaraā (1957) is a romantic drama highlighted by Brandoās performance as a genial Southern officer, the Japanese culture & locations, plus the quaint conventions of the time period, not to mention Garner in one of his earliest roles. Itās similar to āThe Ugly Americanā (1963), but arguably better. āDĆ©sirĆ©eā (1954) is another apt comparison, despite taking placing during the Napoleonic era. The film is a little long at 2 hours, 27 minutes, but I didnāt mind. It was shot in Japan with some stuff done in Burbank & Hollywood. GRADE: B
CinemaSerf (February 13, 2025)
Though it does try to deal with some quite poignant issues, Iām afraid it struggles to engage as it plods along a bit too sedately for 2½ hours. Itās set in an immediately post-war Korea and sees āJoeā (Red Buttons) fall in love with a Japanese gal. Now thatās strictly against the rules of fraternisation and he risks an immediate court martial. Itās only going to get more precarious when he decides to marry āKatsumiā (Miyoshi Umeki) and he asks his all-American boss āMaj. Gruverā (Marlon Brando) if heāll be the best man. Things are further complicated because not only is āGruverā the son of a commanding general but he also doesnāt really comprehend why his friend would be willing to surrender his US citizenship just to marry this girl. As the story develops, we discover that āGruverā is slated to marry āEileenā (Patricia Owens) whoās also the child of a general - but there is soon a fly in that particular ointment as āHana-ogiā (Miiko Taka) comes onto the scene and fairly rapidly the major begins to understand his friend āJoeā an whole lot more. Perhaps a little surprisingly, āEileenā isnāt entirely unsympathetic and itās largely through her characterisation that a light is shone on the attitudes of the occupying administration to dalliances, even marriages, of their personnel with the indigenous population. In many ways itās quite an effective invitation to look at oneās own attitudes and clearly with wounds from WWII still fresh in the minds of many Americans, it uses the extremeness of these scenarios to offer some hope of reconciliation rising from the hatred, brutality and mistrust that has been successfully nurtured by a series of rules and regulations that seem designed not with any ethnicity in mind, but more to avoid an influx of ānewā citizens to the USA after the troops have returned home. James Garnerās āBaileyā adds to the conundrum as he, too, is enamoured of a young and popular dancer but his contribution is somewhat undercooked. There is one especially torrid scene with the young āKatsumiā so desperate to conform that she is considering paying a quack doctor for her eyes to be āresetā - an appalling proposition at any time, but also quite indicative of a situation where true love prevailed and not just convenient sex. Despite that compelling mix of topics and two strongly emotional efforts from both Buttons and Umeki, Brando and Garner just arenāt really at the races here and thereās simply too much dialogue as it takes an interminable time to make itās point. It does look good, the aesthetic is vivid and the dance routines evocative of a Korean culture that has, for many, just swapped one invader for another. Itās worth a watch, but could have been more focussed.