Girl with the Fire Banner (唄祭りかんざし纏, Kinnosuke Fukada, 1958)

Hibari Misora puts out the fires of the Bakumatsu in another musical jidaigeki adventure, Girl with the Fire Banner (唄祭りかんざし纏, Utamatsuri Kanzashi Matoi). Once again co-starring with Chiyonosuke Azuma, Misora plays another feisty young woman taking over the family business from a sickly father only this time the business is the fire brigade and while she calmly points out to those of a differing opinion that firefighting is an equal opportunities, apolitical occupation, she also finds herself at the centre of a coming revolution caught between corrupt Shogunate loyalists and the imperialist advance. 

Set in Edo in the climactic year of 1868 in which the Shogunate ultimately falls, the action opens with a fire at a townhouse owned by a member of the Satsuma clan, the leaders of the imperialists aiming to topple the Tokugawa and restore power to the emperor. While Haru (Hibari Misora) and her top team of firefighters rush to the scene, others actively refuse to fight the fire even going so far as to try to stop her. While she reminds them that it doesn’t matter who the house belongs to they have a duty to fight fire if only to prevent it engulfing the rest of the town, a dashing young samurai turns up and fights off the loyalists before daringly retrieving their firefighter’s banner from a burning roof asking only five ryo in return. The mysterious man soon disappears only to turn up a few days later having attempted to charge them for a new kimono and a shave in order to ask for a job as a fireman. Haru tries to dissuade him, not least because of his samurai arrogance as he explains he’s not come to join at the bottom and serve out the three year probationary period but to lead, but eventually relents only to find him continuing to behave like an entitled twit flouting all of their rules. 

Nevertheless, as someone later puts it, Japan will shortly be a “classless society” or at least samurai privilege is about to dissolve. This appears to be the central preoccupation of the villainous lords who describe themselves as Shogunate loyalists but in reality care only for their own cause. Not content with running an obvious protection racket with local vendors, threatening to burn down their stores if they don’t agree to contribute to their fund for restoring the Shogunate, they’ve also been buying up rifles to sell at inflated prices to “young hotheads” eager to die for the Shogun, and stockpiling rice hoping to profit when the city burns as they assume it will when imperialist troops arrive. Realising that their gambles may not pay off as the Shogunate may be planning to cut a deal and surrender in order to protect the people of Edo, the lords, who are technically in charge of the fire brigades, consider burning the city to the ground themselves under the cover of avenging the Shogunate’s honour. 

Of course, Haru, a firefighter through and through, could never support such duplicity though it’s clear many of the others would have gone along with it if no one had resisted. In contrast to some of Misora’s other Bakumatsu-era movies, the Shogunate and more particularly the loyalists are definitely the bad guys though in a rather strange turn of events we also see real life sumo wrestlers Asashio Taro III and Wakamaeda Eiichiro arrive to stand up for justice by knocking some of the loyalists heads together, returning later armed with giant poles and dressed only in their mawashi loincloths while throwing hay bales followed by the actual cart (!) at the arsonist loyalists before physically holding them back with the firefighters’ ladders. 

Misora, meanwhile, remains largely on the sidelines uncharacteristically elbowed out of the fight by the guys while lowkey falling for Shintaro despite his samurai arrogance. Musical numbers are fewer than might be expected, the title Edo Firefighter song reprised at the end while Misora gets a second love song wistfully sewing a kimono for Shintaro in the company of a cat wearing a fancy ruff. Shintaro gets his own number before handing back to Misora for another reprise of the title song. Nevertheless, the pair manage to salvage Edo from the flames of the revolution purifying the corruption while furthering progress towards a more equal society even if the closing scenes leave us clearly still on the march. 


Tengu Priest (お坊主天狗, Yasushi Sasaki, 1962)

Disparate denizens of Edo are united in one thing in Yasushi Sasaki’s light hearted jidaigeki, Tengu Priest (お坊主天狗, Obozu tengu), revenge. Like many jidaigeki, what they really want is revenge against the evils of feudalism to which they have each fallen victim, but also acknowledge that they have found something better in being outside it in the solidarity that exists between them as outsiders free from the obligations of samurai society if also with loose ends waiting to be tied.

Once a hatamoto with a 1000 Koku stipend, Obo Kichiza (Chiezo Kataoka) is now a much feared figure keeping order in Edo. When some yakuza toughs are hassling the geisha Kozome (Hibari Misora) at the theatre, insisting that she serve them sake even as she reminds them she’s off the clock, one look from him stops them dead though Kichizo is also impressed with Kozome’s nerve. Like him, Kozome is also in Edo for revenge. Formerly a samurai’s daughter, she became a geisha to look for the man who killed her father in a stupid quarrel over a fencing duel. Kichiza, meanwhile, seeks revenge against the local lord, Honda Etsu (Masao Mishima), who killed his father in a fit of temper when he ordered him to commit seppuku for causing his son-in-law to fall off his horse but he refused. 

Loyal retainer Kinpei (Ryutaro Otomo) had begged for his forgiveness and insisted that he could get Etsu to reform but three years have passed and not only has he bribed his way to head office but his behaviour has declined still further. We see him cruelly cut down a maid seemingly for no reason, simply ordering his men to get rid of the body. Etsu has a reputation for random violence while drunk, but as he is the lord, there are no real consequences for him. His retainers cover up his crimes, and Kinpei’s sole attempt to talk some sense into him goes nowhere, meanwhile his chief adviser Shichinosuke (Sentaro Fushimi) is basically running the show telling others the lord is not in his right mind and cannot make decisions so he must make them for him.

They are all, including Etsu himself, victims of the feudal order in which the systems of power are necessarily corrupt. In his yakuza persona, Kichiza has struck up a friendship with another geisha, Kozuru (Naoko Kubo), who was actually a lady in waiting working as a maid at his estate. She has long been in love with him, but the class difference would have made any union impossible. Ironically, she remarks to Kozome that even in their present state they are still a Hatamoto and a lady in waiting so she dare not express her love for him. Only once his revenge is concluded and he’s fully abandoned his samurai status can Kichiza truly be free to embrace a relationship with Kozuru while conversely Kozome regains her life as a samurai’s daughter by avenging the death of her father.

Kozome asks for Kichiza’s help to track down the target of her revenge, but he also respects her wishes and understands that it’s something she must do herself as does eccentric sword sharpener Shinzaburo (Hashizo Okawa ) who actively stands back so she, another wronged woman, can stick the knife in. Hibari Misora’s role in the film is smaller than one might expect as her revenge subplot is secondary to Kichiza’s and she has relatively little screen time with only a brief musical sequence during a naginata dance though she does participate in the high octane final showdown in which all grievances are exorcised and a kind of order returned to the samurai realm even if it must be destroyed to so as Kinpei resolves to protect both the lives and livelihoods of their many retainers and the integrity of Kichiza, going so far as to congratulate Kozome on the successful completion of her revenge. 

Yet what made the whole thing possible was Kichiza’s own band of outlaw drifters whom he allowed to live in his home he later says just so that they would have a place to come and be together so that they might more easily reintegrate into mainstream society. He might have lost his domain and samurai status but has discovered something better in this accidental community. They may be in a sense almost like retainers to him, but if so they stay by choice rather than obligation and help out of a genuine sense of loyalty and affection. In essence, in taking his revenge, he frees himself from the oppressive nature of the samurai code and is able to live like an ordinary man lamenting that if only he and Kinpei had both been ronin they could have enjoyed their time together for longer. Lighthearted and cheerful despite its dark themes, the film is nevertheless a condemnation of the hypocrisies and abuses of a feudal society in which freedom is to be found only among those who live outside it.