Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1958


The Ballad of Narayama (1958 film)

Buy The Ballad of Narayama (1958 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




is a 1958 Japanese period film directed by Keisuke Kinoshita and based on the 1956 novella of the same name by Shichir Fukazawa. The film explores the legendary practice of 'ubasute', in which elderly people were carried to a mountain and abandoned to die.

Cast



* Kinuyo Tanaka as Orin

* Teiji Takahashi as Tatsuhei

* Yko Mochizuki as Tamayan

* Danko Ichikawa as Kesakichi

* Keiko Ogasawara as Matsu-yan

* Seiji Miyaguchi as Matayan

* Ynosuke It as Matayan's son

* Ken Mitsuda as Teruyan

Reception



The film featured in competition at the 19th Venice International Film Festival and divided critics between those who thought it a masterpiece and those who thought it poor.

The film won three Mainichi Film Awards, including Best Film; it was submitted as the Japanese entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 31st Academy Awards, but was not chosen as one of the five nominees.Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

In a June 1961 review in 'The New York Times', A.H. Weiler called the film "an odd and colorful evocation of Japan's past that is only occasionally striking"; "It is stylized and occasionally graphic fare in the manner of the Kabuki Theatre, which is realistically staged, but decidedly strange to Western tastes."

Roger Ebert of the 'Chicago Sun-Times' rated the film a maximum 4 stars, and added it to his Great Movies list in 2013, making it the final film he added to the list before his death.

Restoration



During the 2012 Cannes Film Festival, a digitally restored version of the film was screened out of competition, as part of the festival's Cannes Classics selections.

In a 2013 review of The Criterion Collection release of the Blu-ray Disc version of the restored film, Slant Magazine's Jordan Cronk said Kinoshita, a "less celebrated" practitioner in the 'jidaigeki' genre,

"takes one of Japan's most chronicled cultural tools, Kabuki theater, as a stylistic blueprint to interpret both a work of literary renown and a legend of ancestral import. And yet for all its solemn reverence (both spiritually and socially), it's one of the era's most radical experiments. Shot exclusively on soundstages, save for one brief final scene, the film consolidates two distinct mediums, theater and cinema, into an analysis of both aesthetic functionality and affinity. By not masking his chosen conceptual conceit (and indeed, by heightening it), Kinoshita is free to explore the formulations and possibilities of both modes of presentation.


Cronk concludes "Kinoshita respects the source material and conventions of the culture he's depicting so much, ...that the film plays more like a cinematic elegy than cosmetic theater. When the film cuts in its final scene to actual location footage, it isn't jarring so much as relieving, a chance to exhale after an exhausting journey."

See also



*'The Ballad of Narayama' (1983 film).

References




Buy The Ballad of Narayama (1958 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1958



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1110560032.