Fruits of Passion

1981 film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fruits of Passion (French: Les fruits de la passion; Japanese: 上海異人娼館/チャイナ・ドール, romanized: Shanhai ijin shōkan - Chaina Dōru, lit.'Shanghai Foreigner Brothel - China Doll') is a 1981 French-Japanese co-production directed by Shūji Terayama and starring Klaus Kinski. The film is loosely based on the novel Retour à Roissy by Anne Desclos, written as a sequel to the Story of O.[1][2]

Directed byShūji Terayama
Based on
Retour à Roissy
by Anne Desclos
Produced byAnatole Dauman
Hiroko Govars
Eiko Kujo
Quick facts Directed by, Screenplay by ...
Fruits of Passion
Film poster
Directed byShūji Terayama
Screenplay byShūji Terayama
Rio Kishida
Based on
Retour à Roissy
by Anne Desclos
Produced byAnatole Dauman
Hiroko Govars
Eiko Kujo
StarringKlaus Kinski
Isabelle Illiers
Arielle Dombasle
Renji Ishibashi
Miyuki Ono
Peter
CinematographyTatsuo Suzuki
Edited byHenri Colpi
Release date
  • 3 June 1981 (1981-06-03)
Running time
83 minutes
CountriesFrance
Japan
LanguagesFrench
Japanese
English
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While the film continues the story of O, a subplot depicts an anti-European rebellion in southern China.

Plot

The lead characters of the Story of O and Retour à Roissy novels, Sir Stephen and O, are placed in southern China where Sir Stephen owns a casino. Sir Stephen places O in a Chinese brothel for "training" and O is then subjected to a variety of humiliating experiences to prove her unconditional obedience. A sub-plot concerns a local rebellion due to the resentment towards Europeans by the local population and a young man desperate to afford O's favors at the brothel.[2][3][4]

Cast

Production

In a 2017 interview with the French magazine VSD, Arielle Dombasle looked back on the film with regret: "It's something that hurt me terribly, I was too young to do that, and then Kinski ... he was crazy." She added about Kinski: "He's a guy who crushes the weak, the ugliest thing in the world, someone who loved power, who absolutely wanted to be loved, and who did everything to make sure we did not love him."[5]

In his autobiography, Klaus Kinski claimed the sex scenes in which he participated in this movie were unsimulated.[6]

Release

The film was released in France on 3 June 1981 as Les fruits de la passion and as Shanhai ijin shōkan - Chaina Dōru in Japan with censoring of the pubic areas in November 1981.[4] The USA release as Fruits of Passion with English dubbing occurred in November 1982. A version in Japanese with English subtitles on VHS tape and DVD was published as Fruits of Passion - The Story of "O" Continued on 20 June 2000.[7] A digitally remastered version of the film was released in Japan in Japanese, English and French with Japanese subtitles in December 2005.[8]

Reception

Reaction to the film has been mixed, Roberta Novielli described it as "shallow and decadent" and Jasper Sharp calls it "minor Terayama" whose "charms are mainly cosmetic", the costuming, sets and cinematography.[4] Thomas and Yuko Mihara Weisser give the movie three stars out of four but say it is based on the "look" of the film and not on its narrative or coherence.[3]

References

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