| In the Realm of Oshima: The
Films of A Japanese Master
This is an Egyptian Theatre Exclusive
In collaboration with LACMA
Co-sponsored by the Japan Foundation
April 23 26 at the Egyptian Theatre
"Plainly the greatest living Japanese filmmaker."
Jonathan Rosenbaum
"Japans greatest living filmmaker." J.
Hoberman
"By far the most important Japanese filmmaker of his
generation." Noël Burch
"No other director of Oshimas generation has made more
vital, inventive and challenging films, or taken more risks. He is a giant in contemporary
cinema." Tony Rayns
"I am not interested in making films that can be understood in
15 minutes." Nagisa Oshima
Trailblazing Nagisa Oshima was one of the fathers of the
Japanese Nouvelle Vague in the early 1960s, and his work still has the capacity to shock,
provoke thoughtful reflection and entertain. Oshimas works exhibit such wit, beauty
and furious invention, never mind profound feeling, that their conceptual gambits take on
sensual and emotional force. They are less the product of a postmodernist sensibility, as
some critics have characterized Oshimas strategies, than of a desperate
intelligence. Oshima made films as if they were a matter of life and death. Though born
into privilege, the son of a government worker in Kyoto (reportedly of samurai ancestry),
Oshima was a nascent socialist whose ideals were formed in his youth by the general strike
of 1947; the Pacific War, Emperor Hirohitos capitulation after the bombings at
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the subsequent American occupation of Japan; the mass student
struggle against the Korean War and, most markedly, against AMPO, Japans security
pact with Cold War America. Steeped in Marxist and Freudian thought from his fathers
prodigious library, Oshima opposed using ideological systems to probe his nations
psyche: "I am not a Marxist," he insisted. "In fact, I find Marxism and
Christianity to be the same thing and both of them are bad." Well be screening
various startlingly provocative films directed by Oshima including IN THE REALM OF THE
SENSES, EMPIRE OF PASSION, CRUEL STORY OF YOUTH, VIOLENCE AT NOON, PLEASURES OF THE FLESH,
DIARY OF A SHINJUKU THIEF and more. His movies are for mature audiences, and films
like IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES will be restricted with no one under 18 admitted.
Many of the films will be screened in new 35mm prints! All films in Japanese with English
subtitles. This retrospective continues at LACMAs Bing Theater in May with a
different selection of Oshima masterworks.

Thursday, April 23 7:30 PM
Double Feature:
New 35mm Print! IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES (AI NO CORRIDA),
1976, Janus Films, 105 min. "Perhaps Oshimas greatest" -- Donald
Richie. Banned, butchered, debated and denounced when it was released it caused
riots at Cannes, was forbidden in Ontario, and severely censored in its home country
Nagisa Oshimas ferocious tale of sexual obsession now takes its place
as a classic of world cinema. "Is it pornography or is it politics?"
Godards question about his own film NUMERO DEUX applies just as
well to IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES. An exquisite spectacle that links various kinds of
bondage and subjugation between man and woman, master and servant, individual and
state (note the historical backdrop of war preparations) SENSES is based on
an incident that took place in 1936, in which Abe Sada, a hotel maid, murdered and
castrated her employer after several days of sequestered love-making with him. The film
portrays an erotic abandon so absolute that it creates its own world. One can practically
smell the room in which the lovers isolate themselves, its mats soaked with saké, sweat,
semen, urine, and, in the final shocking sequence, a sluice of blood. Hardcore sex,
hardcore politics, thrilling cinema. With Tatsuya Fuji (STRAY CAT ROCK-SEX HUNTER;
BRIGHT FUTURE), Eiko Matsuda. "One of his most profound films, one as
complex and rich an exploration of the Japanese consciousness as any of his earlier works.
. . . A revolutionary moment in the cinema of Japan." -- Joan Mellen. In Japanese
with English subtitles. Trailer
New 35mm Print! EMPIRE OF PASSION (aka IN THE REALM OF PASSION aka AI
NO BOREI), 1978, 104 min. Positioned as sister and sequel to IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES,
EMPIRE similarly deals with the conflict between sexual desire and social strictures, but
does so in a more decorous and, for many critics, more profound fashion.
Visually sumptuous, it won Nagisa Oshima the Best Director award at Cannes. Set in
a rural village during the last days of the 19th century, PASSION centers on the affair
between an indolent young soldier recently discharged from the army and an older woman who
is married to the boozing, yam-eating local rickshaw man. In the tradition of THE POSTMAN
ALWAYS RINGS TWICE and its ilk, the lovers crime of passion is punished, mostly by
guilt (the old mans ghost returns three years after the murder), and then by
society. With Tatsuya Fuji, Takahiro Tamura, Kazuko Yoshiyuki. As Tony Rayns has
pointed out, Oshimas "hatred of the authority figure here
reaches heights unseen since DEATH BY HANGING." "Beauty of this magnitude
is ravishingly universal." -- Jay Scott, The Globe & Mail. "A
finer work than IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES." -- Richard Roud. In Japanese with
English subtitles. No one under 18 will be admitted to this screening.
Trailer
Friday, April 24 7:30 PM
Double Feature:
New 35mm Print! PLEASURES OF THE FLESH (ETSURAKU), 1965, Janus
Films, 104 min. None other than Martin Scorsese put this on his list of essential Nagisa
Oshima films. Oshimas second "debut" his return to filmmaking
after a long period making television documentaries and writing criticism proved so
popular, it turned his career around. The bizarrely funny PLEASURES OF THE FLESH satirizes
Japans "economic miracle" with its crazed tale about a young college
graduate, alienated in his white-collar job and pining for a woman for whom he has
committed murder, though she isnt aware of it. In a complicated twist, the naive
young murderer ends up entrusted with a vast sum of money by a corrupt government official
and squanders it on a series of prostitutes, planning to commit suicide when the cash runs
out. His pursuit of sensual abandonment in a hyper-modern "love hotel" yields
many funny, caustic insights into Japanese society. Oshimas themes are writ in
extremis -- sex and death, desire and capitalism, the body personal and the body politic
are bound together in this symbolic setting, which looks forward to IN THE REALM OF THE
SENSES. (Oshimas original title, PLEASURES IN THE COFFIN, better captures the
films sense of dead-end dissolution.) With Katsuo Nakamura (KWAIDAN),
Mariko Kaga (PALE FLOWER). "One of Oshimas 10 best films. . . . A
brilliant stylistic exercise on a sensual subject." -- Max Tessier. In Japanese
with English subtitles. Trailer

New 35mm Print! JAPANESE SUMMER: DOUBLE SUICIDE (MURI
SHINJU NIHON NO NATSU), 1967, Janus Films, 98 min. "One of Oshimas 10
best films. . . a landmark. Profoundly tragic and examines most of Oshimas
obsessions." -- Max Tessier. Never before shown in Los Angeles, this extremely
rare Oshima film puts his twist on a traditional Japanese tale that of the double
suicide, basis of, most famously, the classic film of that title by Masahiro Shinoda. Set
in the criminal underworld in a setting even more stylized than that of THE SUNS
BURIAL, the film "centers on the death-impulse in Japanese
society." -- Tony Rayns. The theme is prismed through a trio of the
directors most neurotic outsiders: an androgynous man; a paranoid gangster known as
the "gun-toting devil," who hopes to find someone to kill him; and a woman
looking for someone to make love to her. Their elaborate game of hide-and-seek in a world
of what the director calls "television, toys and demons" pushes so far into the
fantastic and anarchic that the film feels like it could slip the bonds of its sprockets
altogether. (Oshima took pride in Mishimas saying he did not understand the film.)
With Kei Sato, Keiko Sakurai. In Japanese with English subtitles. More
Saturday, April 25 7:30 PM
Double Feature:
New 35mm Print! CRUEL STORY OF YOUTH (SEISHUN ZANKOKU MONOGATARI),
1960, Janus Films, 96 min. A controversial film subgenre exploded in Japan in the
mid-1950s called taiyozoku, or "sun tribe," referring to dissolute,
spoiled delinquents running wild in the streets. A number of excellent films were made,
including Kon Ichikawas PUNISHMENT ROOM, Ko Nakahiras CRAZED FRUIT, Seijun
Suzukis EVERYTHING GOES WRONG and Koreyoshi Kuraharas THE WARPED ONES. But
CRUEL STORY OF YOUTH was the first in color and proved the seminal work, the BREATHLESS,
of the Japanese New Wave. "One of Oshimas best films," pronounced
the formidable Japanese film critic Tadao Sato, who said this epoch-making work its
shocking ending was widely decried made Oshima "the darling of the
age." Never more beautiful (or crueler!) than in this recently struck print,
which emphasizes its sublime riot of retro hot neon; red, blue and turquoise
telephones; rockabilly-teased, shellacked hair; a V-neck terry towel T-shirt to die for
the film focuses on a couple of teenage lovers who declare: "We have
no dreams, so we wont see them destroyed." Emblems of the alienated youth
culture that had emerged in Japan, the two rebels lounge in sleazy bars, make love in
brackish industrial backwaters and roar through Tokyo on a motorcycle, attempting to
achieve total freedom but finding only its opposite. Full of virtuoso sequences which
feature Oshimas innovative use of hand-held camera and decentered compositions
within the widescreen frame, CRUEL STORY makes for a vertiginous visual experience that
reflects the disoriented, precarious quality of his characters lives. With Yusuke
Kawazu, Miyuki Kuwano (THREE OUTLAW SAMURAI). The No. 1 Essential Oshima, according to
Chuck Stephens in Film Comment: "Oshimas second feature is as lurid
and full-fistedly tabloid as anything by Sam Fuller." In Japanese with English
subtitles. Trailer
SHIRO FROM AMAKUSA (AMAKUSA
SHIRO TOKISADA aka THE REBEL), 1962, Toei, 100 min. Hired to make a vehicle for hot young
star Hashizo Okawa (CRUELTY OF THE SHOGUNATES DOWNFALL), Nagisa Oshima settled
on a true story, familiar to every Japanese student: that of a 1637 rebellion in which
starving Christian peasants, oppressed by landowners and samurai alike, rose up, led by a
teenage boy called Shiro, against the Shogunate. No surprise that Oshima fashioned this
historical pageant a genre seemingly at odds with his sensibility into a
lightly-veiled comment on the contemporary rebellion of Japanese youth against the
countrys repressive rulers. (The persecution of the Christians is shockingly
depicted, so determined is Oshima on emphasizing their martyrdom.) Oshima aims at making a
popular historical epic, but his rebellious ways turn SHIRO FROM AMAKUSA into a
fascinating succession of subversions. "No classes, no tyranny, our ideal," the
Christian rebels proclaim, giving voice to Oshimas own beliefs. This would be
Oshimas last samurai film before GOHATTO, and he makes the most of it with long
takes in CinemaScope, some astonishing tracking shots, scenes daringly lit only by fire,
an insistent music score (that sometimes sounds like Schnittke!) and a young actor who
storms the screen, even when kept in the background of several compositions. Oshimas
trailblazing period film also made it easier for other veteran iconoclast Toei Studios
filmmakers Tai Kato, Tadashi Imai and Eiichi Kudo to make their own gritty, brutal and
fiercely rebellious samurai pictures. Veteran Rentaro Mikuni stars as a treacherous
artist. "Blatantly subversive." -- J. Hoberman, The Village Voice
In Japanese with English subtitles. More
Sunday, April 26 7:30 PM
Double Feature:
New 35mm Print! VIOLENCE AT NOON (HAKUCHU NO TORIMA) 1966, Janus Films,
99 min. "One of Oshimas greatest films." -- Noël Burch. A
chilling, brilliant crime film, based on a true story about a serial killer who terrorized
Japan in the 1950s, VIOLENCE AT NOON was once considered the most highly edited
work in the history of Japanese cinema; dozens of cuts are often used for one short
sequence, and there are over 2,000 shots in all. Seemingly influenced by Godard and
Resnais, Nagisa Oshima transcends mere formal virtuosity, employing the rapid
editing, as well as a swirling, swooping camera and a blurring of past and present, to
penetrate the psychology of a criminal and the two women who love him: one his
schoolteacher wife, the other the first victim of his crimes. After a youth commune
collapses, its members driven to despair or suicide, a psychotic drifter encounters a
co-worker from the collective who is now working as a maid. She falls under his spell,
becoming his witness, abettor and protector as he repeatedly rapes and murders, with the
police close on his trail. Always concerned with the connections between individual and
societal pathology, Oshima here goes to new extremes to explore the failure of idealism in
Japan and its aftermath. With Kei Sato, Akiko Koyama, Saeda Kawaguchi. "A
masterpiece . . . portrayed with a poignancy that is both ominous and compelling." --
Tadao Sato; "One of three top essential Oshimas." -- Chuck Stephens, Film
Comment. In Japanese with English subtitles. Trailer
New 35mm Print! DIARY OF A SHINJUKU THIEF (SHINJUKU DOROBO NIKKI),
1968, Oshima Productions, 94 min. A new print of a film that always elicited superlatives:
"One of Oshimas most important films." -- David Desser; "Probably
the most extraordinary agit-prop movie ever made." -- Tony Rayns. DIARY
tells the story of, in the words of Oshima, "a boy and girl in search of their
rightful moment of sexual ecstasy." The title refers to Genets A
Thiefs Journal, and Oshima begins his brilliant study of sexual frustration and
political subversion with an accusation of thievery: A young man is chased by a crowd in
Shinjuku, Tokyos center of youth culture and strips to a loincloth to show that he
is hiding nothing, only a big rose tattoo over his navel. He inspires an onlooker, called
Birdey Hilltop, to his own larceny in a local bookstore (watch for the Genet book), and
soon Birdey and his girlfriend Umeko, a counterfeit clerk at the store another
instance of imposture in Oshima are led into "the labyrinth of the world of
sex." Theft, sex and spectacle ensue as the two attempt to find their place in the
world. Shocking in its day for its copious nudity and sexual depictions, DIARY
in
hindsight takes pride of place alongside Godards films of the same period, which
says a great deal. Tender, funny, moving, its unspeakably wonderful. With Tadanori
Yoko, Rie Yokoyama, Juro Kara (VIOLATED ANGELS), Kei Sato, Fumio Watanabe. In
Japanese with English subtitles. Trailer |