The Teahouse of the August Moon Review
By Paul Brenner
Sakini is the audience's guide and master of ceremonies (he beckons the audience into the film by way of a direct address to the camera) in this sharp and funny comedy about American imperialism after the end of World War II. Sakini is the interpreter for the pompous American commander Colonel Purdy (played by Paul Ford, recreating his Broadway performance, a role he would later hone to perfection as the iconic Colonel Hall in Sgt. Bilko), a windbag idiot who makes declarations like, "I'm going to teach these natives the meaning of democracy if I have to shoot every one of them" (Donald Rumsfeld couldn't have said it better). Purdy orders the bumbling Captain Fisby (Glenn Ford, in a fine comic turn, channeling Charlie Ruggles) to lord it over a small Okinawan village and give the villagers a taste of benevolent American democratic dictatorship by making the villagers build a school and organize a "Ladies League For Democratic Action." Sakini goes along with him.
Like Stepin Fetchit at his best, Sakini, while always bowing and scraping to American authority figures, is clearly the one calling the shots (along with his fellow villagers). Fisby doesn't stand a chance. As Sakini remarks, "August moon. August moon is good. But August moon is a little older and a little wiser." Soon the film demonstrates that the naive cultural group is the Americans and the Okinawans are the ones who are one step ahead, despite all of the Americans' believed racial superiority.
When geisha girl Lotus Blossom (the great Japanese actress Machiko Kyo) arrives on the scene, Fisby abandons the schoolhouse idea for the construction of a "teahouse" and organizes the local population into manufacturing home grown potato brandy.
Mann turns his Cinemascope frame into a stage set and the directorial style mostly involves the actors hitting their marks and delivering their lines. Luckily, Patrick's screenplay is witty and fun and the performers make the most of it all (the highlight is a slapstick routine with Lotus Blossom trying to remove Fisby's clothes while Fisby is gamely attempting with increasing failure to hold a calm and cool conversation with Purdy on the telephone). The legendary film noir cinematographer John Alton leaves his style at the sliding screens with the exception of a few atmospheric shots of the teahouse a sunset.
Time has actually been kind to The Teahouse of the August Moon. Here a native population that would normally be held up for ridicule is actually smarter than the powers that be. In current fish-out-of-water films -- let New in Town stand for them all -- the small town cultural group is mocked and demeaned and the self-serving elite comes in and saves the day. With that staring us in the face, give me a Brando stereotype anytime. That way when Sakini signs off with the benediction "May August moon bring gentle sleep," we can all fall off comfortably to dream land without guilt or fear.
The DVD also features a Marlon Brando film trailer gallery and a vintage making of short, "Operation Teahouse," featuring the stentorian narration of George Fenneman.
Facts and Figures
Year: 1956
Run time: 123 mins
In Theaters: Saturday 1st December 1956
Distributed by: MGM
Production compaines: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 86%
Fresh: 6 Rotten: 1
IMDB: 6.9 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Daniel Mann
Producer: Jack Cummings
Screenwriter: John Patrick
Starring: Marlon Brando as Sakini, Glenn Ford as Capt. Fisby, Eddie Albert as Capt. McLean, Paul Ford as Col. Wainwright Purdy III, Machiko Kyô as Lotus Blossom
Also starring: Machiko Kyo, Harry Morgan, Jack Cummings