Forum - View topicHaibane Renmei and Lucile Hadzihalilovic's "Innocence&a
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angel_lover
![]() Posts: 645 Location: UK |
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I just finished watching the movie "Innocence" (aka "L'École"), and was struck by the very strong similarities to Haibane Renmei. Haibane Renmei was made two years before Innocence, so you might think that Lucile Hadzihalilovic had seen it and copied it (especially as she appears to be interested in Japan and Japanese cinema). However, Innocence is apparently based quite closely on the story "Mine-Haha" by the German playwright Frank Wedekind that was written in 1903. So, are the similarities purely coincidental, or did Yoshitoshe ABe base his script at least in part on Wedekind's story? Can anyone else shed any light on possible connections? Here's a list of some of the similarities:
spoiler[ * Both stories are set in a place surrounded by a wall * In Innocence, girls arrive in coffins - in Haibane Renmei they arrive in cocoons. * In both stories, the girls stay only for a certain time and then leave as mysteriously as they arrive * In Innocence, all the girls wear colour-coded ribbons in their hair, in Haibane Renmei they wear halos. * In Innocence, disobedience can be punished by never being allowed to leave and having to serve the other girls for the rest of your life. In Haibane Renmei, if you don't achieve your "day of flight" you have to stay and serve the Haibane as a member of the Haibane Renmei. * In both stories, a girl tries to escape by climbing the creepers growing on the wall.] [Fixed spoiler tags ~Zalis] |
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Shiroi Hane
Encyclopedia Editor
![]() Posts: 7585 Location: Wales |
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I'm pretty sure I remember an interview with ABe where he referenced the book "Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World".
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dormcat
Encyclopedia Editor
![]() Posts: 9902 Location: New Taipei City, Taiwan, ROC |
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Em, looks like the spoiler tag is not supported by lists. Better use simpler line breaks instead.
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angel_lover
![]() Posts: 645 Location: UK |
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I was forgetting that. Maybe Murakami had read or heard about the Wedekind story then. |
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abunai
Old Regular
![]() Posts: 5463 Location: 露命 |
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That's not at all impossible, since it is an established fact that Murakami is familiar with Alban Berg, who used Wedekind for inspiration. And yes, ABe has been quite unequivocal about Murakami being an influence on Haibane Renmei. (See also: this thread) Having said that, I can see the parallels you're getting at... but I think they may be somewhat forced. Mine-Haha is (as I understand it; I have not read it) typical of the symbolist movement's use of heavy imagery of an archetypal nature. And that's the trouble with archetypes -- they crop up everywhere, and it's hard to infer actual influence from their occurrences. - abunai Addendum: Found the full text of Mine-Haha (in the original German) online. |
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angel_lover
![]() Posts: 645 Location: UK |
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The parallels rather jumped out at me when I watched the film, although your point about Symbolism is well made - as an admirer of Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande I understand the shortcomings of the movement only too well. I found the German text of Mine-Haha too, shame I don't speak German. |
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