Sopping Wet Married Teacher: Doing It in Uniform
Encyclopedia
aka is a 1999 Japanese pink film written and directed by Shinji Imaoka
Shinji Imaoka
aka is a Japanese film director, screenwriter, and actor. He is one of a group of pink film directors of the 2000s known collectively as the .-Life and career:...

. It was given Honorable Mention at the Pink Grand Prix
Pink Grand Prix
The or is an annual Japanese film award ceremony which recognizes excellence in the pink film. Known as the "Academy Awards of the Pink Film", the ceremony attracts a diverse audience of industry personnel, film scholars and the general public....

 ceremony.

Synopsis

Naoko, female art teacher suffering from bipolar disorder spends her time at home compulsively chopping cabbage. She occasionally then begins cutting herself, causing her husband, Yoshio, to intervene. Yoshio attempts to help Naoko by dressing as a woman, "Yoshiko", in whom Naoko can confide. Yoshio has a low sex drive, and hopes to stimulate his interest by having Naoko dress as a school girl. When so attired, shopping for appropriately adolescent socks, Naoko meets Kimiko, one of her female students. Kimiko's parents have abandoned her, and she stays with a strange man named Tokio. Naoko suggests that Kimiko come to live with her. At their home, Kimiko proceeds to seduce both Naoko and her husband. During a sex session with Yoshio, she binds him and paints obscenities onto his body.

Cast

  • Mitsuyo Suwa as Naoko
  • Atsuko Suzuki as Kimiko
  • Takeshi Itō as Yoshio
  • Mikio Satō as Tokio

Critical appraisal

In his Behind the Pink Curtain: The Complete History of Japanese Sex Cinema, Jasper Sharp writes that Imaoka's placing a mentally-unbalanced woman at the center of Sopping Wet Married Teacher: Doing It in Uniform is a brave thing for a pink film director to do. Imaoka's film, according to Sharp, plays like a softcore version of John Cassavetes
John Cassavetes
John Nicholas Cassavetes was an American actor, screenwriter and filmmaker. He acted in many Hollywood films, notably Rosemary's Baby and The Dirty Dozen...

' A Woman Under the Influence
A Woman Under the Influence
A Woman Under the Influence is a 1974 American drama film written and directed by John Cassavetes. It focuses on a woman whose psychotic behavior leads her husband to commit her for psychiatric treatment and the effect this has on their family. It received two Academy Award nominations for Best...

(1974) with a dark sense of humor.

The Asian Extreme Cinema website Snowblood Apple notes that the low budget of Sopping Wet Married Teacher: Doing It in Uniform shows through in the film, finding fault with technical aspects as well as the acting. The reviewer finds the characters unappealing and the actors unattractive, with the character of Kimiko is judged to be the most interesting. Judging the film, "On the surface... yet another skinflick, albeit a rather untitillating and downbeat one, the cast being profoundly unattractive and the sex scenes mostly shot in low candlelight. Yet Imaoka is saying something about power and, perhaps, it's a morality tale..." the review concludes, "While it won't be on the top of anyone's must-see list, if you've got an hour spare and a taste for a slightly thoughtful pink film, keep Despite All That in mind."

The French website Cinetrange also mentions Sopping Wet Married Teacher: Doing It in Uniforms obvious low budget, reflected in the minimalistic technical aspects such as camera movement. This review comments that Imaoka shows us how the Naoko's marriage is influenced by the introduction of the sexually-predatory female student. "[W]e see in the end that the deconstruction of the long-term relationship only leads to a stronger relationship between Naoko and hers husband. So, despite all that..." Of the erotic content, the review mentions, "let's remember a pinku eiga is not only about social issues. We also get some soft sex scenes. Don't expect many graphics things but there are at least one or two scenes that are pretty hot and suggestive."

At the UK website unrated.co, Carl T. Ford writes that Imaoka uses the low budget of the film to his advantage by creating a documentary-influenced film which intentionally works against creating any eroticism in the sex scenes. He writes that Imaoka "isn't interested in appealing to an audience seeking sexual thrills, but instead offers an intelligent and subversive look at sexual politics." According to Ford, Imaoka skillfully uses props, such as the cabbage and the knife, to reflect the inner states of mind of his characters, and he considers the acting to be above-average for a pink film. He concludes, "the film maintains audience interest for its innovative and reflective insights into relationships and their power balance patterns, and remains a thought-provoking and somewhat artistic entry in a genre too often given over to bondage, bums, and breasts with little brains at the helm."
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