Funeral Parade of Roses.
Transcription
Funeral Parade of Roses.
Funeral Parade of Roses. A a film by Toshio Matsumoto of avant-garde aesthetics and grindhouse shocks (not mention a direct influence on Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange), Funeral Parade of Roses takes us on an electrifying joumey into the nether regions of the 1ate-'60s Tokyo underwor1d. In Matsumoto's controversial debut feature, seemingly nothing is taboo: neither the incorporation of visual flourishes straight from the worids of contemporary graphic design, painting, ic-books , and animation; nor the unflinching depiction of nudity, sex, drug-use, and public toilets. But of all the "transgressions" here on display, perhaps one in particular stands out the most: the film's groundbreaking and unapoiogetic portrayal of feverish collision to com Japanese gay subcu ure. Cross-dressing dub-kid Eddie (played by real-life transvestite entertainer extraordinaire Peter, famed for his role as Kyoami the Fool in Akira Kurosawa's Ran) vies with a rival drag-queen (Osamu Ogasawara) for the favours of drug dealing cabaret-manager Gonda (Yoshio Tsuchiya, himself a Kurosawa player Seven Samurai, Throne of Blood, and High and Low). Passions escalate and blood begins to flow - before all tensions are released in a jolting dimax. who appeared in such films as With its mixture of purely narrative sequences and documentary footage, Funeral Parade of Roses comes to us from a moment when cinema set itself to test - and even eradicate - the boundaries between tiction and reality, desire and experience. Matsumoto achieves a zig-zag modulation between pathos and hilarity that makes his picture utterly unique: a filmic how1 in the face of social, moral, and artistic convention. T he Naslen olllllema Series is proud to present Toshio Matsumoto's Funeral Parade of Roses for the first time outside of Japan on any home video format. SPECIAL • FEATURES New director-approved transfer from the director's personal print • Full length audio commentary by the director Toshio Matsumoto • VIdeo interview with director Toshio Matsumoto (23 minutes) • Promotional material gallery and original Japanese trailer • 4O-pege book with new essays by Jim O'Rourke & Roland Domenig FUNERAL PARADE OF ROSES. Directed by Toshio MATSUMOTO 1969 • Japan. 105 minutes. 1.33: 1 original aspect ratio. DVD9 • R2 Original iapanese soundlrack wilh oplional English sublitles on Ihe fealure and all extras WARNING Contams strobe lighting effects 1111 1 1 1111 1 11111111111111111 5 060000 402261 I eneed from ToIIo International Co., ltd. C 1969 Matlwmolo"'lduII U.K. and Ireland on . For private home use on . Anyc her use ilnc:ludin. COII!iIICt Offieial www.eurekavjdeo.co.uklmoc III I DOLlY I DIGITAL mID Suitable only for persons over the age of eighteen. WARNING: Contains strobe lighting effects. Guild ot Japan Co., ltd. ThIS DVD and paeka!In! C 1006 Eurella. For Slie in till performance in public, in whole or In part, IS expresslyprohlblled byapplk:lblllaws. . - ." ' . £KA482Z6 ·e· . I, . " , 1'_1 TO. "allen 01 Onema ,,,.. #34 Funeral Parade of Roses. © 1969 Toshio Matsumoto ATG / Toho Co. Ltd., Japan OVOCREOITS MoC ProducerlDesignor Nick Wrigley Booklet Production Andrew Utterson Authoring theGarden @ IBF. London Hilary Ashby Andrew Hyde Chaz Morgan Anita O'Donnell Bradley Richards Commentary & Interview SPO Inc., Japan All writing © the respective authors. www.eurekavideo.co.uklmoc www.mastersofcinema.org For sale in U.K. and Ireland only. This product is licensed for private home use only. Any other use including copying. re production or performance in public, in whole or in part, is expressly prohibited by applicable laws. This DVD edition © Eureka 2006. Package design © Eureka 2006. for MoC Jan Bielawski Doug Cummings Craig Keller Trond S. Trondsen Special Thanks Ron Benson Nick Des Barres Roland Domenig Jonathan M. Hall Yukio Kotaki/Toho Toshio Matsumoto Jim O'Rourke Tony Rayns Aki TakabatakelSPO Inc. Charlie Trax F I LM CREDITS Funeral Parade of Roses. Bara no s6retsu DIRECTOR MATSUMOTO Toshio SCREENPLAY MATSUMOT O Toshio PRODUCER CINEMATOGRAPHY MUSIC EDITING STARRING YEAR OF RELEASE KUDO Mitsuru SUZUKI Tatsuo YUASA Joj i IWASA Toshie Peter, OGASAWARA Osamu, TSUCHIYA Yoshio, etc 1969 BOOKLET CONTENTS 4 Timeline for a Timeless Story by Jim O'Rourke 22 The Art Theatre Guild by Roland Domenig a group formed in 1951 dedicated to new ideas in interdisciplinary art. Among its members were painters, Timeline for a Timeless Story photographers, multimedia artist Yamaguchi Katsuhiro, composers Takemitsu Toru and Yuasa Joji, and, freshly graduated from the art department of Tokyo University, a young Matsumoto. It was here that he worked on his first film, the promotional short Bicycle (Ginrin, 1955), a bold hybrid made in collaboration with Takemitsu and by Jim O'Rourke Yamaguchi. But how did a young cinephile such as Matsumoto navigate through these different methods of filmmaking and the rapidly changing social and political Musician, producer, and filmmaker Funeral Parade of Roses within a Jim O'Rourke places cultural lineage of intense creativity and political ferment. landscape of a post-World War II Japan to arrive at Funeral Parade of Roses? T his is the backstory to Matsumoto's film, a condensed timeline for a timeless story. From the beginning, Japanese major film studios held a "I am the wound and the knife! I am the lash and the cheek ... " - from Charles Baudelaire's "L'Heautontimoroumenos" ( collected in Les Fleurs du mal, 1857).' strong grip on production and distribution, usually owning the theatres as well. By the early 1920s some directors had started their own production companies, such as Kinugasa Teinosuke, who made his still famous A of Madness (Kurutta ippejl) in Page 1926. While Kinugasa may have set out on his own for artistic reasons, financial Funeral Parade of Roses is a dense and complex testament to the alignment of the historical machinations, filmic, political, and personal, that reached a fever point in the Summer of 1968. It is the child of a rich moment in history where all of the art forms commingled in an incredibly free playing field. It initially reflects the unique mix of aesthetics drawn from Matsumoto Toshio's considerations were also a concern. Popular actors also formed their own companies to hold more control over material and receive a larger percentage of the profits. This is not to imply there were cracks forrning in the foundation of the studio system, as it was still necessary for independents to licence films to them for distribution purposes. early work with Jikken-Kobo (Experimental Workshop), Standing further outside were films financed by the 4 5 burgeoning socialist and communist movements in Japan. These studios, best known under the name "Proletarian Film League," were primarily interested in advocating their concerns in union and labour struggles. The rise of communist sympathies in Japan would play an important part in encouraging the Japanese New Wave cinema of the 1960s. By the end of the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905, which accelerated the overthrow of Tsar Nicholas II and the Bolshevik Revolution, Japan had secured a foothold in Korea and Taiwan. The peace treaty between the two, negotiated by US President Theodore Roosevelt, was seen by many in Japan as an insult. It granted them less land rights and little if any of the monetary reparations expected. This perceived slight was only magnified after Japan's collaboration with Allied forces during World War I. By the end of the war, American policy towards Japan had become increasingly combative, making an effort to influence the British Government, who had a long history of collaboration with the Japanese Navy, to follow suit. This increasing slight from Western powers, who had, relatively speaking, only recently been accepted into Japan, laid the groundwork for the continuation of Japan's territorial ambitions. By 1932 a puppet government was established in Japan-occupied Manchuria (Manchukuo), and in 1937 troops moved into China proper, starting a war which would last into World War II. 2 In 1934, communism was outlawed by the Japanese government, effectively bringing an end to the 6 independent production companies such as the PFL, grew to such an extent that, for example, military forces casting out or even imprisoning many filmmakers, had to be called in to assist, as in the Toho strike of 1949. writers, teachers and others sympathetic with the left. T he larger film companies also found themselves hampered by mandatory submission to a censor board regulated by the Army and Navy Ministries, which strictly promoted the ideals of the traditional family and the value of sacrifice for the country. The influence of imported films with their ideas of individualism and the continuing prevalence of what were called "modern girls" (moga, the Japanese equivalent of flappers) were to be suppressed. Imports of American films were severely curtailed and with the passage of the "Film Law" in 1939, everyone who worked in the film industry, from entry-level assistants to leading actors and actresses, was required to be tested for competency and licenced. By the early 1940s they were required by the law to consolidate under an umbrella of major film companies which included Shochiku, Toho, and Daiei. By the end of the 1940s the Allied forces refocused their energies on the growing power of Russia and China. Leftist sympathisers, who were only recently seen as emancipated political prisoners, were again under duress. Conflicts with the labour unions, growing problems with the Zengakuren (the umbrella organisation for college student government groups) as well as the American government's own shifting priorities resulted in a sweeping anti-communist purge in all levels of society. In the film industry, technicians, composers, writers and directors lost their jobs, forcing many of them to look towards other means in order to continue working. Many of these films were funded in part by labour unions or even the Communist Party itself, and had to be independently distributed, sometimes by Hokusei Eiga, which was primarily a distributor for films from the Soviet Union. Some of these films could still find their way into The effect of the Occupation at the end of World War II fills volumes of books, and while it is difficult to even scratch the surface here, it is important to note the profound effect it had on Matsumoto's generation of filmmakers. The changes required by the peace settlement pulled the roots out from under innumerable layers of society. Religious and political persecution during the previous era was rescinded and communists, Christians, Marxists and others flooded back into the population. The major studios, already financially strapped, now had conflicts with the newly emboldened unions with strong leftist sympathies. These conflicts 8 mainstream cinemas, as many major studios, still under the pressure of union strife, could not keep up the rate of production needed to fill their screens. Assistant directors were promoted to help speed production, setting the stage for what is generally now called Japan's New Wave. At Nikkatsu, Suzuki Seijun and Imamura Shohei were given their start, and at Shochiku, Oshima Nagisa, Shinoda Masahiro, and Yoshida Yoshishige began with great promise. But by the mid-1960s all three had left Shochiku under acrimonious circumstances, most famously when Oshima's Night and Fog in Japan (Nihon no yoru to kiri, 1960), a drama that investigated the 9 moral and political differences between two generations of leftists, was withdrawn from distribution after only a few days. Although the three organised their own production companies, they still relied on the studios for distribution. It was purportedly a time of sweeping change, but the traces of the recent past would prove to be indelible. This uneasy balancing act of the past and present is personified in the conflicting character of Prime Minister Kishi Nobusuke, who had a long and controversial career in politics. During World War II, Kishi was Minister of Commerce and Industry under Prime Minister Tojo Hideki, and fully involved in the activities in Manchuria. At the end of the war, Kishi was tried and convicted as a war criminal, resulting in his barring from public service as accorded by the Allied forces. In 1952, this restriction was lifted and Kishi began the second wave of his political career in the Democratic Party, a forerunner of the Liberal Democratic Party. It was this changing political and artistic landscape that would make Matsumoto question his own nascent work as a documentary filmmaker. In an interview with Aaron Gerow, Matsumoto said: "Even literature and art were wrapped around the little finger of the state during the war. Well, the people who made national propaganda films collaborating with the war effort made an about-face when America arrived after the war and in a blink of the eye began making democratic movies. That was strange because filmmakers did that without going through a stage of internal conflict, without exposing their own responsibility for the war. Both during and after the war, they made films according to 10 \ I -' the dominant trends in society or government without two together: "Both were extremely fascinating to me, thoroughly investigating their own position within this. In but that's where problems arose. Although I found the the film world in particular, people didn't independently freedom of avant-garde's uninhibited, imaginative world pursue their own wartime responsibility. The kind of extremely attractive, it had the tendency to get stuck in character that's able to immediately make democratic a closed world. Documentaries, on the other hand, while movies while feigning ignorance about the past is what intensely related to reality, would not really thoroughly ruined postwar Japanese cinema. That's why, even in address internal mental states and were so dependent terms of the problem of realism, there was no difference upon their temporal contexts they would look old between the realism of militarist films fanning war fashioned if their temporal context changed. I wondered sentiment and the realism of postwar democratic motion whether the point of collision between the limitations and pictures. Only the topic or subject changed." 3 strong points of the two forms could not pose a new set of topics for cinema." 5 Matsumoto initially made documentary films for Shin Riken Cinema, one of many studios dedicated His early work with Jikken-Kobo would prove to be to the form. He soon started an organisation called influential, as Matsumoto collaborated again with the "Association of Documentary Filmmakers" and Takemitsu on his documentary The Song of Stones published the highly polemical magazine Documentary (lshi no uta, Film (Kiroku-eiga). Producers such as Shin Riken and Shikoku, was a radical shift in Matsumoto's documentary This film, about stone cutters in Iwanami Productions would prove to be auspicious work, closer to a tone poem than to straightforward places for this new generation of filmmakers to begin documentation. The synergy between music, space, their careers. Matsumoto worked through all levels of movement and stillness was a subtle but radical production, a relatively liberal education that encouraged synthesis of Matsumoto's stylistic and aesthetic him to reconcile his own concerns through documentary experiences. Soon, the influence of the world pounding films. 4 In his student days, Matsumoto had been inspired by the 12 1963). on art's walls would prove to be unavoidable. In 1960, with the impending renegotiation of US revelations of Italian neorealist and avant-garde films and occupation (the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and he searched for a way to fuse his seemingly disparate Security, better known by its Japanese shorthand interests. This contrast, and his thoughts on their ability name "ANPO") protest grew to a feverish pitch. The to coexist is especially enlightening in the context of the Zengakuren sieged Haneda airport to prevent Prime form of Funeral Parade of Roses. In his interview with Minister Kishi from flying to the US, and while it did not Gerow, Matsumoto spoke of his attempts to bring the prevent the flight, the press coverage was considerable. 13 By this time the group had nearly severed ranks with the socialist democratic and communist parties, disagreeing bitterly over the worth of political versus direct action. In June of 1960, the Zengakuren opted to attack the Diet Building in an assault that would result in the death of student Kanba Michiko, who would stand as a martyr-symbol for years to come. A further protest at Narita made a blunder of White House press secretary James Haggerty's trip to prepare for President Dwight Eisenhower's forthcoming visit. Although Prime Minister Kishi was forced to delay Eisenhower's already highly contentious visit, the treaty was renewed in 1960. With the rise of the Cultural Revolution in China in 1966, passions were further inflamed on campuses throughout Japan. During the next few years, the Zengakuren fractured and split into factions with varying degrees of allegiance to the Communist Party. What had previously been a face of unity dispersed into various concerns such as the American bases in Okinawa. Their possible use as a base of operations for American expansion into Vietnam implicitly involved Japan in military action, something it had been forbidden from under the terms of the peace treaty. Student-government organisations continued physical confrontations with university officials at Tokyo's Keio and Waseda Universities, amongst many others, as well as recruitment for the growing resistance to the expansion of Narita Airport, infringing on the land rights of farmers. At first they received overwhelming support from the general public for their physical confrontations with construction workers, but by 1968, the time of the filming of Funeral Parade of Roses, US 14 nuclear aircraft carriers were docking in Okinawa and attacked by contemporary art criticism, Zero Jigen involvement at the student protests even included high did find itself regularly chronicled in newspapers and school children. By this time the early public support for magazines, usually under racy headlines likening them these actions had begun to wane, as continuing violence to "orgies" or "porn parties." Unlike this inflammatory both on campus and in urban areas had begun to wear rhetoric, Zero Jigen created situations that were more in out their welcome with many who were now just wanting sympathy to the "ritualistic" concerns of many artists of to move on with their lives. In Funeral Parade of Roses the time, replacing overt political or literary references the interviewed student protester seems almost like an with a series of interchangeable movements, props, and outlaw, on the run from a society that just does not want heavy use of repetition. to hear from students anymore. Experimental film, which reaches back to the roots of 16 Theatre groups also began to make a break from their Matsumoto's early fascinations, and the new generation past traditions. Many took their productions to alternative which was embracing the then-new video medium, is locations, such as Kara Juro's "Situation T heatre," which personified in "Guevera," a critical hybrid of the many used its red tent to move from place to place (This different movements that formed the underground. T hese group, as well as its tent, are featured prominently in activities were led in Japan by such filmmaker/artists as Oshima's Diary of a Shinjuku Thief (Shinjuku dorobo limura Takahiko and Katsuhiro and coalesced in events nikki, 1968)). Legendary playwright Terayama Shuji such as the important "Tokyo-New York Video Express" would also explore similar confrontational methods with of 1974, which brought together many interdisciplinary his Sajiki Tenjo group, many times treating the audience artists such as Paik Nam June, Kubota Shigeko, Woody as trapped victims. T his street-theatre also overlapped and Steina Vasulka, Michael Snow, Kosugi Takehisa, with the growing movement of Fluxus related artists and even Allen Ginsberg. T he electronic manipulation such as Genpei Akasegawa (Hi-Red Centre) and the of television in Guevera's film invokes the work of Paik, Zero Jigen (Zero Dimension) group, whose discordant Yamaguchi, and Matsumoto himself, and the statement "happenings" can be seen scattered throughout Funeral "But you must feel something with your body" makes Parade of Roses. T he group was started in Nagoya by an allusion to the growth of "system" or "structuralist" Kato Yoshihiro and Iwata Shinichi who soon became films that were concurrent to the rise of video/television infamous for their "ceremonies," as they chose to call art. Snow's Wavelength (1967) and Tony Conrad's The them. Moving to Tokyo, their performances were noted Flicker (1966) were two of the most internationally known for their nudity and unabashed confrontation with films that explored the actual physical effect of time, light, shoppers in the major neighbourhoods of Shinjuku, and space on the viewer's sense of consciousness, and Ginza, and Shibuya. While generally ignored or even was readily co-opted by many as an accessory to "mind- 17 expansion." Matsumoto himself would later make several films using his footage from Funeral Parade of Roses' "experimental film." In the background of these scenes you can also see the requisite poster for Terayama and Sajiki's Rope (Jun) designed by Yokoo Tadanori. Just these scenes alone demonstrate the incredible commingling of the rebirth of all of the arts, and their cohabitation. Another element of "underground culture" (angura) is referenced through Eddie's participation in a pomographic film shoot, which not only heightens the complex "reality / fiction" structure of the film, but also makes a contemporary reference to the rise of underground pornography. The director in this scene is Matsumoto, who despite not making such films himself, was related in spirit to many of the new wave of pornographic, or "pink", filmmakers. Directors found increasingly creative ways to skirt the censor, and due to its incredible revolving door production schedule and high demand for product, pornography was one of the easiest ways for a young filmmaker to get his hands on a camera. This open door policy allowed filmmakers with political and avant-garde interests (such as Adachi Masao); beefs with authority (such as Wakamatsu Koji); and highly analytical and theoretical writers (such as Yamatoya Atsushi) the latitude to create films, albeit on incredibly small budgets, in an environrnent that was previously closed to them. These three filmmakers are of special interest in the context of of Roses, Funeral Parade as they also worked with ATG (Art Theatre Guild), who would fund and release Matsumoto's film, 18 and become a nexus for the zeitgeist of the late 1960s. of all that was outside the lines. The intermingling of all Adachi (also involved with Hi-Red Centre) and Yamatoya the arts was not only an aesthetic choice, but the reality (maybe best known in the West as the author of Suzuki's of everyone being drawn to one small area, filled with Branded to Kill (Koroshi no rakuin, 1967)) represented old style coffee shops (kissaten), hippies, galleries, bars the talent that was coming from "film study groups" at (both gay and otherwise), protesters, expatriates of every various universities, and they, like Matsumoto, were stripe, musicians, filmmakers, writers, philosophers, filmmakers who had their fingers on the increasing pulse of unrest in Japan. There was collusion with other 1 and of course police. It was the most contaminated of petri dishes, and that means culture. It was here that the directors like Oshima (Adachi for example co-wrote Diary ATG was born. I will concede here to the accompanying of a Shinjuku Thief and participated in the first ATG film, text by Roland Domenig to more fully expand on the Oshima's brilliant farce Death by Hanging (Koshikei, importance of the ATG, and how it was not only a child 1968)). Wakamatsu and Adachi's masterpiece Ecstasy of the history above, but the new beginning of one of of the Angels (Tenshi no kokotsu, 1972, also for ATG) Japan's most brilliant eras of film. is another film, like Funeral Parade of Roses which timelessly manifested this moment of critical mass. REFERENCES Doubtless, most pink film production was for the purpose of profit, and these efforts would become accepted into the mainstream as part of Nikkatsu's "pink film" (pinku eiga) and the "pinky violence" films that were released primarily by the Toei studio. One popular Toei series 1 T he original 2 I Je Even today, what to call this war, or even to call it such, is a continuing source of tension between China and Japan. 3 Matsumoto Toshio (1996) interviewed by Aaron Gerow in Documentary Box 9 (December 31). 4 Also was the "sukeban" films. A "sukeban" is the leader of working at Iwanami was Suzuki Tatsuo, who would later serve as cinematographer on Funeral Parade of Roses. It was common at Iwanami to use a tripod-mounted camera, in part for a girl gang (dropouts, ne'er do wells, etc), and Funeral aesthetic reasons, and also because handheld cameras at that time were still cumbersome and noisy. Suzuki, however, became Parade of Roses features such a gang, sent out to rough well known for his incredibly reliable and elegant hand-held up Eddie. The sequence both mimics and satirises their camerawork and mastery of telescopic lenses. In his earlier feature films, such as Yoshida's mannerisms, and while it would be a bit much to say that A Story Written with Water ( Mizu de kakareta monogatari, 1965) and Kuroki Kazuo's Silence Has No Wings Matsumoto made the first "sukeban" short, he seems to have been a few years ahead of the curve! French reads: "Je suis la plaie et Ie couteau! suis Ie soufflet et la joue ..... ( Tobenai chinmoku, 1966), Suzuki's handling of the similar themes explored in Matsumoto's film are enlightening. 5 Matsumoto Toshio (1996). It becomes apparent that all of these disparate movements seemed to share a central hub, and ©2006 by Jim O'Rourke geographically that was East Shinjuku, a convergence 20 21 The Art Theatre Guild by Roland Domenig In this extract from a longer article on independent Japanese cinema (published in a special issue of www.aaj.at). Roland Domenig Minikomi, available for purchase at (a lecturer in Japanese Studies at the University of Vienna, Austria) places Funeral Parade of Roses in the context of the Art Theatre Guild, a company dedicated to the exhibition and production of experimental film, including Matsumoto's groundbreaking debut. Kurosawa Akira's Rashomon winning the Golden Lion at the Venice film festival in 1951 gave the Japanese movie industry a first glimpse of the international market. The subsequent success of other Japanese films at European festivals impressively demonstrated the strength of the Japanese film industry. Still, film exports could in no way compare to film imports. Foreign movies had always been popular in Japan, but after WW2 their number was limited because of currency regulations, and importers were allocated quotas by the government. As domestic film production in the 1950s increased at the 22 expense of foreign imports, distributors were less willing to take risks. They preferred films that could guarantee commercial success and largely ignored ambitious and "difficult" films. There were several initiatives that attempted to adjust this imbalance. One was instigated by the group Cinema 57 which had been founded in 1957 by the young directors Teshigahara Hiroshi, Hani Susumu, Matsuyama Zenzo and Kawazu Yoshiro, the critics Ogi Masahiro and Kusakabe Kyushiro, Maruo Sadamu (later director of the National Film Centre), the editor of the journal Geijutsu Shincho Sakisaka Ryuichiro and Mushanokoji Kanzaburo. Their first project was the film Tokyo 58, which was shown at the first festival of experimental film in Brussels in 1958. Another project was the formation of the Association of the Japanese Art Theatre Movement (Nihon ato shiata undo no kai), which aimed at setting up special cinemas for the showing of non-commercial art movies. This Association was joined by the critic Togawa Naoki, the director Horikawa Hiromichi and Kawakita Kashiko, vice-president of Towa, who became a driving force of the Japanese Art Theatre Movement. Before the war, Kawakita, together with her husband Kawakita Nagamasa, had imported many important European films to Japan. After the war the Kawakitas were still committed to the ambitious European art cinema. In the mid-1950s Kashiko spent two years in Europe, getting acquainted with the art ) )I))�)))) t .. .-1 theatre movement, which became international in " . 1955, as the International Association of European Art Theatres, or CICAE (Confederation Internationale des Cinemas d'Art et d'Essai), was founded. On returning to Japan she worked towards the establishment of a 24 , \ " film library, of an institution similar to the Cinematheque Fran9aise and the British Film Institute, and a movie art theatre like the National Film T heatre in london, which had opened in 1957 with Kurosawa's Throne of Blood (Kumonosu-j6, 1957 [Kumonosu-j6Iiterally means and OS Kogyo joined in with ¥1 ,000,000 respectively and four cinemas (the Sotetsu Bunka in Yokohama, the Korakuen Art T heatre in Tokyo, the Kyoto Asahi Kaikan in Kyoto and the Sky Cinema in Kobe). Thus, ATG had at their disposal ten cinemas in the whole of Japan. "Spiderweb Castle"]). In April 1962, ATG started their programme with Mother Kawakita Kashiko and the Japanese Art T heatre Movement were supported by Mori Iwao, then vice-president of Toho and a close associate of the Kawakitas. Mori had started out as a film journalist and had written the first comprehensive study of the American movie business in Japanese. T hen he started to write screenplays, became a producer and, in the late 1920s, initiated the "Association for the Recommendation of Good Films" (Yoi eiga 0 susumeru kai). Mori talked Iseki Taneo, the president of Sanwa Kogyo, into supporting them and on November 15, 1961 the Art T heatre Guild of Japan (Nihon ato shiata girudo) was launched. Iseki became its first president. In the 1920s, he had edited the programmes of the Musashinokan, one of Tokyo's most prestigious first-run cinemas. later Joan of the Angels (Matka Joanna ad aniol6w, 1961) by Polish director Jerzy Kawalerowicz (available on DVD in the UK from Second Run). The repertoire was chosen by a programming committee mainly consisting of film critics. At the time of its founding these were lijima Tadashi, lida Shinbi, Izawa Jun, Uekusa Jin'ichi, Shimizu Chiyota, Togawa, Nanbu Keinosuke and Futaba Juzaburo. Most of them had published in the programmes of the Musashinokan and knew Iseki from that time. Further members of the committee were Ogi, Hani, Matsuyama, Sakisaka, Kusakabe, Maruo and Kawakita Kashiko from the Association of the Japanese Art Theatre Movement. Teshigahara was not included as he had already started work on Pitfall (Otoshiana, 1962), which was later distributed by ATG. he had worked for Shochiku and PCl (a predecessor of Toho), and in 1946 he had gone into business for himself. He founded the cinema chain Sanwa Kogyo and become an exhibitor. Sanwa Kogyo brought ¥1,000,000 and a cinema, the Shinjuku Bunka, into the new undertaking. Toho contributed ¥5,000,000 and five cinemas (the Nichigeki Bunka in Tokyo, the Meiho Bunka in Nagoya, the Kitano Cinema in Osaka, the Toho Meigaza in Fukuoka, and the Koraku Bunka in Sapporo). T he cinema operators Eto Rakutenchi, Teatoru Kogyo 26 Setting up an independent committee was a radically new approach. As most of its members were film critics the films were chosen with artistic instead of commercial considerations in mind. At first, the films distributed by ATG were predominantly European productions, mostly contemporary, but also some classics that had never been shown in Japan such as the films of Sergei Eisenstein and Orson Welles' Citizen Kane (1941). Apart from masterpieces by Ingmar Bergman, Jean Cocteau, 27 Michelangelo Antonioni, Luis Bunuel, Federico Fellini, Alain Resnais and other established directors, ATG introduced several less famous names such as young Polish directors (Kawalerowicz, Andrzej Wajda, Andrzej Munk), the French Nouvelle Vague (Jean-Luc Godard, Franyois Truffaut, also Agnes Varda and Bertrand Blier), Soviet filmmakers (Mikhail Kalatozov, Mikhail Shvejtser, losif Kheifits, Sergei Parajanov), young rebels like John Cassavetes and Tony Richardson, and, not to be forgotten, Satyajit Ray and Glauber Rocha. ATG thus played a vital role in the creation of a new consciousness of film history in Japan. Apart from foreign movies, ATG also acted as distributor for several independently produced Japanese films such as Teshigahara's Pitfall as well as films by Shindo Kaneto, Hani, Kuroki Kazuo, Yoshida Yoshishige, Oshima Nagisa and Jissoji Akio, all of whose subsequent films ATG also produced. Not only the method of selecting the films was new, the way in which they were presented was novel, too. One of ATG's basic rules was to show each film for at least a month, irrespective of attendance. In the 1960s, the repertoire was usually changed weekly, and a four-week run was exceptional even for box-office hits. ATG's flagship was the Art T heatre Shinjuku Bunka in Tokyo, which was managed by Kuzui Kinshiro who remained pivotal until the mid-1970s. T he Shinjuku Bunka had been built in 1937 as a contract cinema for Toho. Kuzui readapted it according to his own plans and created a completely new type of cinema. T he whole cinema was painted dark grey, bills and posters and any other kind of flashy advertising were banished, there were only 28 afternoon shows (most cinemas opened in the morning), the seats were spacious and comfortable, there was enough space between the rows so nobody had to get up to let someone pass, and the audience could not simply come and go during a performance like they did in the other cinemas, but were asked to wait until the next screening started. T he foyer acted as a gallery where well-known painters and illustrators exhibited their work. ATG posters were often designed by famous artists and were utterly different from traditional movie bills. In the evenings, after the movies were over, Kuzui, who was also interested in modern theatre, started to organise theatrical performances. He benefited from the fact that several new troupes had split off from established ensembles in the early 1960s and were now looking for suitable venues. T he first stage performance in the Shinjuku Bunka was the Japanese premiere of Edward Albee's The Zoo Story on June 1, 1963, followed by more plays by Albee, Tennessee Williams, Samuel Beckett, Harold Pinter, LeRoi Jones, Tankred Dorst, Jean Genet, Edward Bond, Barbara Garson, and other contemporary foreign dramatists. Many of these were Japanese debuts. Apart from these, the Shinjuku Bunka also put on plays by leading Japanese writers such as Terayama Shuji, Kara Juro, Betsuyaku Minoru, Shimizu Kunio and Mishima Yukio. Thus the Shinjuku Bunka was not only one of the most important cinemas in T his page, and page from 33, contain actual frame enlargements Funeral Parade of Roses. All other images in this booklet are production stills, provided courtesy of the director Matsumoto Toshio, and Toho Co. Ltd. Japan but also (despite the tiny stage) one of the major venues for contemporary drama. Kuzui envisaged an expansion of the Shinjuku Bunka into a comprehensive art theatre. Together with ATG productions and in 31 special programmes he presented experimental short films, among them works by limura Takahiko, Tomita Katsuhiko, Donald Richie, Obayashi Nobuhiko (whose films were shown publicly for the first time), Itami Juzo (who designed the ATG logo) and Adachi Masao's Sain (1963), which was shown as the first "Night Road Show" in 1965. T he Shinjuku Bunka was the first cinema in Japan that had regular shows later than 9pm, a practice that was later adopted by many small theatres. In order to present even Smm and 16mm films in the best possible quality (the screen of the Shinjuku Bunka was too big for these formats), Kuzui had a small theatre built in the basement of the Shinjuku Bunka for film and theatrical performances, concerts, and other events. T he Sasori-za was inaugurated on June 10, 1967 with a performance by the flamenco dancer Komatsubara Yoko. The first film that was shown there in August 1967 was Adachi's Galaxy (Gingakei, 1967). It was Mishima who was responsible for the name Sasori-za (Theatre Scorpio), a tribute to Kenneth Anger's film Scorpio Rising (1964) that had been shown at the Shinjuku Bunka before. T he Sasori-za was the first underground theatre in Japan, others soon followed. It was a centre of experimental drama and experimental film (beside Teshigahara's Sogetsu Art Centre) as well as a popular meeting place for all kinds of artists. There were movie and theatre performances, concerts and recitals, happenings, and dance performances by Hijikata Tatsumi, the founder of buto dance. T he Sasori za was one of the major centres of the Japanese avant garde and set an example for many other underground theatres. 32 Five days after the opening of the Sasori-za, ATG released Imamura Shohei's controversial documentary A Man Vanishes (Ningen johatsu, 1967). This was the first film that ATG also co-produced. The idea of not only distributing, but actually producing films had taken shape in 1965 with Mishima's Death (Yukoku), The Rites of Love and the only film he directed, which was screened with great success at the Shinjuku Bunka. As the film is merely 28 minutes long, it was shown as a double feature together with Bunuel's Diary of a Chambermaid (Le Joumal d'une femme de chambre, 1966). A little later, Oshima's no nikki, 1965) was similarly Yunbogi's Diary (Yunbogi successful. These triumphs provided the encouragement for ATG to start producing films. Calculating the profits of their previous films, ATG decided that with a budget of approximately (then less than $28,000) ¥1 0,000,000 they should be able to cover the production costs. What eventually facilitated the decision to expand into production was the liberalisation of the import market. In 1964, the ofticial limit for importing foreign movies was abolished. So was the allocation of quotas that had determined the number of films per distributor. One result of this liberalisation was a rise in distribution costs so that it became increasingly uneconomical to import foreign films. ATG decided that it would be more profitable to produce its own movies. In the case of Imamura's A Man Vanishes ATG had not been involved in the planning stage but had only helped out in the final phase of production. The first film planned and produced by ATG was Oshima's Death by Hanging (Koshikef), 34 which was released in February 1968. Production costs were split between At the same time, ATG gave several experimental ATG and Oshima's production company Sozosha. Later directors the chance to realise their extremely individual productions followed the same pattern. The films were fantasies, most importantly Matsumoto Toshio and financed by ATG and the director's company in equal Terayama whose first feature films Funeral Parade of share. Compared to those of the studios, feature film Roses and Pandemonium (Shura, 1971) respectively, budgets were quite modest. Even though the estimated and Terayama's Throw Away Your Books, Rally in the ¥10,000,000 were hardly ever enough, ATG's films were Streets (Sho wo sute yo, machi e de yo, 1971) and referred to as "¥10,000,000 movies" (issenman-en-eiga). Pastoral: To Die in the Country (Den 'en ni shisu, 1974) were made possible by ATG. Terayama's last film, Projects were again chosen by an independent planning Farewell to the Ark (Saraba hakobune, 1984), was committee of film critics. In the beginning, the directors again co-produced by AT G. Jissoji and Kuroki were of the Japanese New Wave were at the centre of ATG's also experimental in their approach; in the 1970s they production activities. Many of their major works were became ATG's leading directors. Jissoji had started out made in collaboration with ATG: Death by Hanging, in television and had only directed one short film, When Boy (Shonen, 1969), The Man Who Left His Will on Twilight Draws Near (Yoiyami semareba, 1969), which Film (Tokyo senso sengo hiwa, 1969), The Ceremony ATG had distributed and shown as a double feature (Gishiki, 1971), and Little Summer Sister (Natsu no together with Oshima's Diary of a Shinjuku Thief. This imoto, 1973) by Oshima; Heroic Purgatory (Rengoku Transient Life (Mujo, 1970) was the first of four films that eroica, 1970) and Coup d'Etat (Kaigenrei, 1973) Jissoji realised with ATG. The story of the incestuous by Yoshida Yoshishige; Double Suicide (ShinjO-ten relationship of two siblings became ATG's biggest hit and Amijima,1969 [literally "Amijima Effaced to Heaven received international recognition by winning the Grand by Lovers' Suicide"]) and Himiko (1974) by Shinoda Prix at the Locarno Film Festival in 1970. Together with Masahiro, as well as The Infemo of First Love (Hatsukoi Mishima's The Rites of Love and Death, the film was the jigoku-hen, 1968) by Hani. Furthermore, ATG distributed most controversial of those discussed at the FIPRESCI Oshima's Manual of Ninja Martial Arts (Ninja bugeicho, conference on "Eroticism and Violence in Cinema" held 1967) and Diary of a Shinjuku Thief (Shinjuku dorobo in Milan in October 1970. However, like so many other nikki, 1968) as well as Yoshida Yoshishige's Farewell films of this period it soon fell into oblivion and is still to the Summer Light (Saraba natsu no hikari, 1968), waiting to be rediscovered as one of the masterpieces of Eros Plus Massacre (Eros 36 + gyakusatsu, 1970) and Japanese cinema. This can also be said of Kuroki's films Confessions among Actresses (Kokuhakuteki joyuron, from this period. ATG distributed his early masterpiece 1971). ATG's importance for the Japanese New Wave Silence Has No Wings (Tobenai chinmoku) in 1966 and can hardly be overestimated. produced his following feature films Evil Spirits of Japan 37 (Nihon no akuryo, 1970), The Assassination of Ryoma After 1972, political topics faded into the background. (Ryoma ansatsu, 1974), Preparation for the Festival It is possible to identify two strands of escapism in (Matsuri no junbi, 1975) and Lost Love (Genshiryoku ATG's films: an escape from urban life to more rural senso, 1978). settings and an escape into the past. Symptomatic of this development are Saito Koichi's Tsugaru Folk Song Other directors, many of whom worked for a studio, got (Tsugarujongara-bushi, 1973) and Ichikawa Kon's T he the chance to finally realise their dream projects which Wand they could not do within the structure of the studios: by studio directors, which indicates a development . rers (Matatabi, 1973). Both films were directed Okamoto Kihachi made Human Ballet (Nikudan, 1968) toward and Battle Cry (Tokkan, 1975); Nakahira Ko Hensokyoku contlnu d to co-operate with experimental directors such Increasingly orthodox films. ATG, admittedly, (1976); Kumai Kei Apart from Life (Chi no mure, 1970); as'-; k b yashi Yoichi and, later, Obayashi, but the films Masumura Yasuzo Music (Ongaku, 1972) and Double m Suicide of Sonezaki (Sonezaki shinju, 1978); Nakajima film . Th d fter 1973 were much less radical than the earlier main reason, apart from the general spirit of Sadao Aesthetics of a Bullet (Teppodama no bigaku, th g , was the closing of the Shinjuku Bunka in 1975. 1973); and Nakagawa Nobuo's swansong T he Living A tt1U Koheiji (Kaidan: Ikiteiru Koheiji, 1982 [literally: "A Ghost AT Story: Living Koheiji"]). ATG also produced several films w r Imply not big enough, neither were the people in ufficiently farsighted. The last film to be shown at by Shindo, the veteran of Japanese independent film, 111nJuku Bunka before it was closed was Terayama's among them A Paean (Sanka, 1972) and Love Betrayed (Kokoro, 1973 [literally: "The Heart"]). lost one of its most important assets. Most of ther cinemas had already bailed out. The profits P(I, I Cln I I: To Die in the Country. When in 1978 the Kitano "'c in Osaka also closed down, the Nichigeki Bunka The early films of ATG were determined by the explosive III Yur, kucho was the last of the original ten cinemas political climate of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The dlr( highlight of their political films is Wakamatsu Koji's Hunk tty run by ATG. With the closing of the Shinjuku nded the heyday of the Art Theatre Guild. Ecstasy of the Angels (Tenshi no kokotsu, 1971), which, in 1971, was closer to the events of the day than any other film. Ecstasy of the Angels is based on a ©2003 by Roland Domenig, reprinted with permission screenplay by Adachi, who two years later defected to Lebanon and became a member of the Japanese Red Army. The film anticipated the terrorism of the left-wing END. guerrilla in an almost prophetic manner and thus made for one of the biggest scandals in the history of ATG. 38 39