Tatsuo's Experience of Great Nature: What the Cinematic Images Reveal
With this brief resume of Shinto to build on, we can further explore Tatsuo’s experience of Great Nature by attending to what some of the cinematic images in Himatsuri show us. Following the illuminating theory of cinema developed by Gilles Deleuze, we can see that the natural scenes in Himatsuri rely heavily on what Deleuze calls Affection-Images.5 Affection-images are the result of the invention of the close-up of the face and can be highly expressive.6 There are two kinds of affection-image. Think first of the face of a person lost in rapt attention. Here the face is an “immobile receptive plate” which presents itself as a reflecting unity and thereby expresses such qualities as attentiveness, admiration, awe, wonder, or frozen terror. This is the impassive face, a whole delineated by its outline and central features.

In contrast, the second kind of affection-image is characterized by small movements of parts of the face, of the mouth, eyes or other facial muscles. Such “micro-movements” can express the power of desire or can betray fear or hatred. It is slight changes in the mouth that can make manifest a character’s hitherto unnoticed cruelty, for example.

In Himatsuri, affection-images play a crucial role. This is possible because faces are not the only vehicles for the affection-image. “Face substitutes” can do as well. In fact, Deleuze begins his account of the affection-image with the example of the famous clock “face” in High Noon. The clock acts as a face substitute, by turns a reflective, immobile face and also a moving hand exhibiting micro movements tending to the climactic moment of noon when the fateful duel will take place. Thus, other features can play the role of the face and be affection-images. In Himatsuri, the immobile surface is often a lake or inlet reflecting its environment. These surfaces are capable of the micro-movements essential to the second kind of the affection-image as well. These movements are ripples, sparkles of sunlight shimmering across the surface (video 1 below), or more disturbingly, bubbles of poisoning oil rising from underneath, followed by the appearance of many floating dead fish (video 2 below) and at a key moment, the micro-movements of leaves in the wind.

Click on images to view videos
video 1

Tatsuo chopping tree; ripples on water.

video 2

Bubbles rising from inlet; floating dead fish.

One more feature of affection-images must be mentioned before we can say something about Tatsuo’s experience of Great Nature as it is revealed by such images. Affection-images such as facial close-ups isolate the face from its environment; the face that fills the screen is not seen as a head cut off from its body. In fact, it can cease to be the expression of a character and become instead a pure expression abstracted from its actualization in space and time. As Deleuze notes, “the close-up does indeed suspend individuation, and …[we are]… right to say that it makes all faces look alike.”7 And what do such images express? Not the feelings of an individual, but pure, possible qualities and powers abstracted from particular instantiations. That is, faces and face substitutes can express underlying pure qualities, powers, and energies that find instantiation in particulars but are themselves pre-individual singularities that reveal a world before it is divided, individuated, actualized, or fixed in space and time.

This excursion into film theory shows us something about Tatsuo’s relation to Great Nature as it is instantiated in the forests and inlets of his environment. To put it all too briefly: he perceives nature in terms of underlying, permeating powers and qualities, continually fresh and renewing (musubi); it is a perception that is in the moment, immediate, and immanent—unencumbered by conceptual relationships and utilitarian concerns. We will return to this point later.

At the Midpoint:
So far, we have noted Tatsuo’s relationship with Great Nature as revealed by the affection-images of Himatsuri. This goes some way toward explaining and clarifying his deep opposition to the marine park. For the park is not going to reveal an original world of kami energy; rather it is a commercial simulation of such nature. If we shift now from imagery to narrative, we can trace Tatsuo’s path from his decision in the forest rainstorm to his participation in the Fire Festival and thence to his sacrificial act. This will take us to the theory of ritual sacrifice advanced by Georges Bataille.

It is important to note that Himatsuri is not straightforwardly a film about political protest, though it contains some elements of political struggle like the poisoning of the fish. Tatsuo’s actions lack the earmarks of political activity: he is not enlisting others in a cause, engaging in negotiation, nor speaking from an ideological perspective. Instead, his murderous act is tied to the ritual from which the film takes its name and itself has all the markings of a ritual sacrifice. This inclines us to approach the film by means of insights from Ritual Studies.


5 Gilles Delueze. 1986. Cinema 1: The Movement-Image. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press..
6 Affection-images contrast with action-images (e.g., medium shots of human actions), and perception-images (e.g., long shots of the environment). Subsequently, Deleuze contrasts movement-images generally with time-images.
7 Cinema 1, p. 103. He adds: “…all non-made-up faces look like Falconetti, and all made-up faces look like Garbo.”

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