- Português (Brasil)
- English
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- dansk
- Título original: 何が彼女をそうさせたか
- Também conhecido como: Nani ga Kanojo wo sou Saseta ka
- Gêneros: Histórico, Melodrama
Elenco e Créditos
- Takatsu Keiko Papel Principal
- Fujima RintaroHasegawa AkimitsuPapel Secundário
- Kojima YoyoSakamoto SaheiPapel Secundário
- Shizuko OzakiUmeko YazawaPapel Secundário
- Hamada GakuOgawa Tetsuzo [Head of acrobatics]Papel Secundário
Resenhas
Esta resenha pode conter spoilers
Life is a path of suffering that leads to death
The old phrase, “If it weren’t for bad luck, I’d have no luck at all,” applied perfectly for poor abandoned and abused Sumiko. Sumiko was thrown from one bad situation to another and another throughout the length of the film.Described as a masterpiece of the proletarian film genre, What Made Her Do It could be a difficult watch. The film was thought completely lost after WWII. A large segment of it was found in The Russian National Film Library during the 1990’s. The first section and last section are lost to the ages, replaced by descriptive title cards.
Young Sumiko was sent to her no good uncle when her father could not find employment and committed suicide unbeknownst to her. Her uncle stole her money and sold her to a circus. She made friends with Shintaro at the circus and they later escaped only to be separated. She ended up in a string of bad situations: a work house, evil employer, work house, evil employer, and ultimately a church home for wayward women which was as bad or worse than any prison.
Every single situation she ended up in was dreadful except for a brief happy one and even it ended in disaster. Exploited, starved, and upbraided, slowly she began to lose her ability to hold in her anger and resentment. When family, the government, and even religion failed her miserably she snapped and the answer came in a blaze of glory when the audience finds out what she did in What Made Her Do It.
What made her do it? The utter failing of society and its brutal treatment of people considered less than. Some may have blamed capitalist society or religion but more often than not, the dark side of human nature for any economic or social level during times of financial collapse or upheaval preys on those considered weaker. In this film, without family or friends, Sumiko had no safety net, no safe shelter from the storm, but she still had enough dignity and fire left to finally take a stand.
Esta resenha foi útil para você?