Asia Society and Japan Foundation present Film Series: Japanese Cinema 1960s

November 5 – December 10, 2010
Asia Society and Museum
725 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10021

Free admission to all films
“From socially conscious screeds and samurai flicks to psychotronic spy thrillers, this quick survey of ’60s movies from the Land of the Rising Sun promises lots of sound and fury.”—David Fear, Time Out NY
The decade of the ’60s produced a wide array and high quantity of films that made it the golden age of Japanese cinema. Politically radical New Wave films, formally vigorous art films, and mainstream genre films were produced side-by-side contributing to the vibrancy of the industry. This series showcases a sampling of films representative of this period. These diverging voices reflect acute attitudes toward a changing Japan, a sense of exploration, with hints of tradition. (All films in Japanese with English)

Age of Assassins

 

 

 Pleasures of the Flesh
Dir. Nagisa Oshima. 1965. 91 min. 35mm. Color.
Friday, November 5, 2010, 6:45 pm

Pleasures of the Flesh

In a career spanning four decades, Oshima (Cruel Story of Youth, In the Realm of the Senses) has made some of the most memorable as well as formally and politically provocative films highlighting outcasts, criminals and rebellious youth in Japanese film history. In Pleasures, a lovesick young man entrusted with a case of money belonging to an imprisoned bureaucrat embarks on a year of sexual fantasies and indulgence. (Janus Films)
“Japan’s greatest living filmmaker.”—J. Hoberman, Village Voice
 

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Three Outlaw Samurai
Dir. Hideo Gosha. 1964. 95 min. 35mm. B&W.
Friday, November 12, 2010, 6:45 pm

Three Outlaw Samurai
Based on a popular television series of the same name also directed by Gosha, Three Outlaw Samurai features three ronin who found themselves accidentally entangled in the conflict between a group of peasants and their local magistrate. While initially reluctant to get involved, the three quickly make up their mind as to for which side they will fight. A dash of humor, attitude and style accompanies this action-packed picture. (Janus Films)
“The result is cinematic magic, the perfect blend of blood and tears, a film worth watching over and over again.”—Mike Street, The Asian Reporter 
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Yearning
Dir. Mikio Naruse. 1964. 100 min. 35mm. B&W.
Friday, December 3, 2010, 6:45 pm

Yearning

Reiko (Hideko Takamine), a war-widow, keeps her late husband’s family store afloat against supermarket competition and the meddling of her in-laws. Fed up with the pressure, she embarks on a journey home, accompanied by a younger brother-in-law (Yuzo Kayama). The journey, with hints of forbidden romance, ends with a shocking finale. Known as “a great director of women” (Film Comment), Naruse contemplates a society challenged by capitalism and changing social mores in this stunningly shot feature. (Toho Co., Ltd.)
“A masterpiece of portraiture”—Keith Uhlich, Slant magazine
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Age of Assassins
Dir. Kihachi Okamoto. 1967. 99 min. 35mm. B&W.
Sunday, December 5, 2010, 3:00 pm

Age of Assassins

A creepy “mad scientist” who directs an insane asylum trains mental patients to become assassins. One of the targets, a vision-impaired nerd-turned-suave secret agent played by Tatsuya Nakadai, called “Japan’s most distinguished living actor,” (Terrence Rafferty, The New York Times) is able to dodge all attempts on his life. This wacky, farcical chase comedy takes you on a wild ride through a surrealist landscape and a narrative filled with twists and turns. (Film also known as Epoch of Murder Madness) (Toho Co., Ltd.)
“Dashing and angelically handsome, Tatsuya Nakadai is a screen idol to rival Toshiro Mifune.”—David Fear, Time Out New York
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The Fort of Death
Dir. Eiichi Kudo. 1969. 97 min. 35mm. Color.
Friday, December 10, 2010, 6:45 pm

Fort of Death

Peasants in a village hire a bounty hunter to rebel against a shogun who exploits them for money in order to remodel an Edo castle. The bounty hunter summons his fellow fighters to join the fight. What ensues is an epic battle involving samurai, ninjas, powerful guns and cannons. Growing up in a family that ran a horse breeding business, director Kudo has proved particularly adept at choreographing action sequences, making this Japanese version of a B-Western especially enthralling. (Toei Co., Ltd.)
“[Kudo is] an extraordinary stylist…To call him a skilled action director is to understate the power of his set-pieces.”—Henry Sheehan

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