From star-crossed lovers in the Meiji era to early feminists fighting societal norms, the Japanese Film Festival (JFF) presents a FREE classic film program from 29 September – 2 December. The Festival will present a curated program: Passion & Obsession in Sydney with an abridged version in Melbourne and Canberra.
Featuring works adapted from novels by celebrated authors such as Junichiro Tanizaki and Kyoka Izumi, the program showcases influential works from cinematic masters from the Japanese Golden Age and New Wave.
Highlights include: The Pornographers, Cannes Palme d'Or-winning filmmaker Shohei Imamura's darkly comical portrayal of a pornographer hustling to keep his business alive amidst Japan's post-war economic boom; and Japanese auteur Seijun Suzuki's multi-award-winner Kagero-za, an adaptation of Kyoka Izumi's story of a playwright who meets a beautiful woman he suspects is the ghost of his patron's deceased wife.
Novelist-turned-politician Shintaro Ishihara's seminal Sun Tribe classic Juvenile Jungle will also screen. Exploding into a cultural phenomenon soon after its release, this controversial depiction of the sexual revolution of disillusioned post-war youth stars Yujiro Ishihara, the James Dean of Japan.
"The 2018 program depicts passion and obsession in varying shades of eroticism, ranging from melodramatic romance to fraught love affairs," said Japanese Film Festival Program Coordinator Alison Groves. "Beneath the drama, these films also offer us fascinating glimpses into the many different faces of Japan throughout the decades."
Two films offer intriguing insights into the world of geisha. In Cannes Jury Prize-winning director Kon Ichikawa's first colour film Nihonbashi, two geishas compete in a cut-throat competition to reign over Tokyo's premier geisha district; and an aspiring geisha and her established mentor navigate the realities of their profession in post-war Kyoto, in poignant drama A Geisha.
Also screening will be Yasujirō Shimazu's 1935 film, Okoto and Sasuke, starring prolific star of the Japanese Golden Age Kinuyo Tanaka as a blind koto (Japanese lap guitar) virtuoso; feminist New Wave film The Affair, starring prolific actress Mariko Okada (Akitsu Springs); and maverick director Yasuzo Masumura's intriguing queer melodrama Manji: The Goddess of Mercy.
The classics program arrives in: Sydney at the Art Gallery of New South Wales (Oct 3 – 31); Melbourne at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (Nov 23 - Dec 2); and Canberra at the National Film and Sound Archive (Sept 29 - 30).
The FREE program is a satellite event of the annual Japanese Film Festival (17 Oct – 2 Dec). The Festival's main ticketed program travels across Canberra, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Sydney and Melbourne, offering the best in new release, contemporary Japanese cinema.
The Classics programs is free admission. See japanesefilmfestival.net for ticketing details.
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