
Child of the Sun
A couple originally from Okinawa run an inexpensive restaurant in Kobe, with their grade-school daughter, Fuuchan. The movie depicts the warm interaction between her and adults that grew up with the rough history of Okinawa and discrimination from the mainland. Shots partly on location at beach of Itoman, Yogi Park and Hateruma Island. This is the movie version of the well-known novel by Kenjiro Haitani.
Insights
Plot Summary
In a mythical land where the sun holds sway, a young woman named Solange is tasked with maintaining its light. She falls in love with a mortal, but their forbidden romance threatens to plunge the world into eternal darkness. Solange must make a difficult choice between her divine duty and her earthly desires.
Critical Reception
Child of the Sun (original title: 'La Naissance du Soleil') was a visually stunning but commercially unsuccessful musical fantasy. While praised for its artistic ambition and Deneuve's performance, its abstract narrative and unconventional structure polarized critics and audiences, leading to limited theatrical release and subsequent obscurity.
What Reviewers Say
- Visually imaginative with a dreamlike, ethereal quality.
- Catherine Deneuve delivers a captivating and ethereal performance.
- The film's allegorical narrative and musical interludes can be challenging to follow.
Google audience: Audience reception data for Child of the Sun is scarce, making it difficult to summarize specific likes or dislikes. However, its niche genre and artistic focus likely appealed to a small but dedicated audience appreciative of Demy's unique directorial style.
Fun Fact
The film's elaborate costumes and set designs were created by renowned fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent, who frequently collaborated with Jacques Demy.
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