Major Lloyd Gruver (Marlon Brando) is a US flying ace in the Korean War who is reassigned to Kobe, Japan. He claims he's not racist but he tries hard to talk admiring soldier Joe Kelly (Red Buttons) out of marrying a Japanese girl which is against regulations. Nevertheless he's a witness to his wedding. While bringing his girlfriend Eileen Webster and her family General Webster to the club, Captain Bailey (James Garner) tries to bring a famous Japanese performer in but is rejected by the guard and General Webster. He and Eileen go to see Kabuki and meets performer Nakamura (Ricardo Montalban). They have a blow out when Eileen wants to advance their relationship. Being a witness to the inter-racial marriage causes more friction between Gruver and General Webster. He falls for Hana-Ogi who is the star performer and his previous prejudices go out the window. In addition to official regulation, they face social isolation from both sides.
This is a weak romance wrapped in a message movie. While I admire the message, the romance has a great deal of problem. First Brando has to dump the white movie pinup girl. I think it's a way to show that he's choosing a Japanese girl over a white girl to break the old mold. The first problem is that the audience isn't introduced to Hana-Ogi until after 45 minutes and she doesn't have much to do. It's very late for the romantic lead. The second problem is that she doesn't have chemistry with Brando or at least less chemistry than with Eileen. They don't really interact enough to create the chemistry. The third is that the message becomes larger than the romance and it is made to serve it. The movie may have maintained a better structure if Eileen was written out and General Webster was just Gruver's disapproving father.
Sayonara
1957
Action / Drama / Romance
Sayonara
1957
Action / Drama / Romance
Plot summary
Major Lloyd Gruver, a Korean War flying ace reassigned to Japan, staunchly supports the military's opposition to marriages between American troops and Japanese women. But that's before Gruver experiences a love that challenges his own deeply set prejudices... and plunges him into conflict with the U.S. Air Force and Japan's own cultural taboos.
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Romance lack chemistry, more of a message movie
Touching Marlon Brando movie
This movie is very interesting in which it concerns the relationships between Japanese and American servicemen after the Second World War in Japan. Especially Marlon Brando's character goes from reservations (especially considering the period the movie is set) to falling in love with a Japanese woman and hopes to marry her. Brando shines in this movie, and I put it among his best movies. The standout of the cast is Red Buttons, who at the time was still unkown as an actor, but in his debut revealed that he was destined for greatness. His performance of Joe Kelly, an American airman, is incredibly believable and touching, and Buttons won the Academy Award for best Supporting Actor for this film, and he truly deserved it.
An interesting movie for the subject and the actors' performances, well directed and also very entertaining. And I think it's deeply underrated today.
The mediocre Japanese-American exotica of 1957
Splendid production value and acute liberalism cannot save this dramatically impossible film, one in a series of Hollywood expeditions to oriental exotica in the '50s. (The other major one in the same year is about some bridge over troubled Japanese water and is incomparable in any sense - though as Oscars have it they were both contenders for Best Picture that year). Brando is great as usual in his own muted way, though peculiarly limp in order to depict his literally last minute transformation, making this one of his less attractive performances. Red Buttons, James Garner are solid (sort of) newcomers, Montalban is unrecognisable and almost steals it, while Miyoshi Umeki earned an Oscar, one of the four Logan's film ultimately gathered.