Nagisa Oshima Movies

Nagisa Oshima was the originator and most famous director of the Japanese New Wave. His controversial films are frequently difficult, highly intellectual, and darkly funny; they revolutionized Japanese cinema by infusing it with sex and with biting social and political commentary.
Born on March 31, 1932, in Kyoto, Oshima was the son of a civil servant of samurai descent. After his father died when he was six, he retreated into a lonely childhood spent devouring his father's library, including a large number of books on Socialism and Communism. By high school, he began looking outward and split his time among student activism, baseball, and theater. Oshima later remarked that Akira Kurosawa's No Regrets for Our Youth (1946), about a Kyoto law professor's tribulations at the hands of the repressive pre-war government, probably influenced his choice of schools. In 1950, Oshima was admitted to the law faculty of Kyoto University and quickly became president of the Kyoto Prefecture Student Alliance. In 1953, he led a mass demonstration in which 70 people ended up injured. Oshima entered his senior year dispirited and was branded a Red Student, which impeded his search for a job. Though he knew nothing about filmmaking, he took the entrance exam at Shochiku Ofuna Studio out of desperation, and he received the highest possible score.
While Oshima worked as an assistant director with Masaki Kobayashi and Hideo Oba, he began writing vitriolic film criticism in 1956. He heaped praise on the new, spontaneous style of films from France and Poland, while chiding the slick, Hollywood-inspired productions that his own studio cranked out every month. Because the studio was in the throes of a financial crisis, producer Shiro Kido decided that it needed new blood, and Oshima, Shohei Imamura, Yoshishige Yoshida, and Masahiro Shinoda, were elevated to the rank of director at about the same time. By 1960, when Oshima released his landmark Cruel Story of Youth, Shochiku was marketing these young directors as the Ofuna Nouvelle Vague, a term that Oshima rejected.
Cruel Story of Youth was a sensation when it opened, an exuberant overturning of Ofuna's slick, commercial formulas. The film was striking in its unprecedented depiction of sex and brutal violence mixed with virulent anti-Americanism and utter nihilism. The film was shot with a hand-held camera, giving it an edgy, defiant style similar to that of Jean-Luc Godard's French New Wave masterpiece Breathless, released a year earlier. Later in 1960, Oshima released Night and Fog in Japan, a cinematic essay bitterly railing against the Japanese Communist Party's failure to stop the controversial 1960 U.S.-Japan Security Treaty. The film was so vituperative that it was pulled from circulation just three days after its release, prompting Oshima, instigator of the Ofuna Nouvelle Vague, to leave the studio and start his own production company, Sozosha.
As the 1960s continued, Oshima's work grew remarkably varied and stylistically extreme, while his narratives shattered and spun in unexpected directions. Cruel Story of Youth revealed a fascination with the criminal act and the oppressed fringes of society that would remain constant throughout his films. Nearly every film depicts a murder, rape, theft, or act of blackmail. Most of these acts are carried out by marginalized members of society, usually women, delinquents, or members of Japan's large, oppressed Korean-Japanese community. Instead of exploiting the luridness of the crimes, Oshima uses them to indict society's hypocrisies: racism against Koreans and capital punishment in Death By Hanging; sexual power dynamics in Diary of a Shinjuku Thief; and the hypocrisies of the post-war generation and narrative itself in Ceremony, with a tone of savage irony reminiscent of the surrealist films of Luis Buñuel.
Oshima's defiance of Japan's unusual censorship laws gained him the most notoriety in the West. Starting from the mid-'60s, a genre of sadomasochistic soft-core films called pinku eiga gained prominence. Although the sex in these films was frequently bizarre and brutally violent, they never showed genitalia. Oshima's unnerving, erotic classic In the Realm of the Senses, based on the real life exploits of Sada Abe, exposed the hypocrisies of Japan's censorship policy by exposing his actors. The film was so explicit that it could not even be developed in the country, and an uncensored print has yet to be officially shown in Japan. Since the 1970s, his film output has slowed. In 1983, he released Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence, starring David Bowie and future film auteur Takeshi Kitano, and in 1995, he released 100 Years of Japanese Cinema, an acclaimed documentary on the history of Japanese film. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
2000  
 
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After a 13-year absence, partially due to a life-threatening stroke, master filmmaker Nagisa Oshima returns to the silver screen with this revisionist samurai epic. From his first major film, Cruel Story of Youth to his most notorious work Ai no Korrida, Oshima has coupled the political and the sexual in a manner that transgresses all social norms. In this film, Oshima explores homosexuality among the ranks of the much hallowed samurai. The film is set in Kyoto in 1865 during a critical moment of Japanese history--the country's 300-year-long self-imposed isolation was coming to an abrupt halt leading to the end of the Shogunate. In its place came a more internationally-minded government with the Emperor as its nominal head. Feeling both their traditions and their grip on power threatened, samurai militia sprang up throughout the country to fight this foreign encroachment. One such group, the Shinsengumi, is auditioning new recruits at the film's opening. Commander Kondo (Yoichi Sai) and Captain Hijikata (Takeshi Kitano, a renowned filmmaker in his own right) select the ruggedly handsome Tashiro (cult actor Tadanobu Asano) and Kano (Ryuhei Matsuda), an effeminate lad with long locks and a thirst for blood. Worried about the perceived slightness of the latter, Kondo and Hijikata order Kano to perform an execution, which he does with grim aplomb. The lad's androgynous beauty soon raises the general blood pressure of the militia. While Tashiro snuggles up with him nightly, Hijikata, who suspects that something other than manly appreciation is going on between the two neophytes, also seems unduly interested in the youth. This film was screened in competition at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Beat Takeshi KitanoShinji Takeda, (more)
1996  
 
This French documentary chronicles a sobering and little known event that occurred during the Battle of Okinawa, the final bloody man-to-man struggle between American and Japanese troops before the A-bombs were dropped. The event is framed by the story of a woman in the process of creating a computer program about the tragic event in which Japanese soldiers and officers killed their own families and then themselves en masse in hopes of frightening the American troops with the shock of it all. Unfortunately, the horrific gambit failed; the Americans misunderstood and this made it easier for them to justify using the bomb. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Catherine BelkhodjaNagisa Oshima, (more)
1995  
 
This Japanese documentary represents director Nagisa Oshima's entry in the British Film Institute commissioned series, "Century of Cinema," designed to be a collection of the personal opinions of renowned international filmmakers concerning the cinema of their native countries. It is entirely comprised of B&W stills and short film clips. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1994  
 
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This documentary profiles the creative aspects of innovative Japanese film music composer Toru Takemitsu. Takemitsu has been composing film scores since the 1960's. Included are clips from 16 movies he scored, interviews with the composer and his friends, and movie directors. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Toru TakemitsuHiroshi Teshigahara, (more)
1990  
 
The modest, highly praised, award-winning cinematic production designer Pierre Guffroy is the subject of this reportedly somewhat uneven documentary. Among the notable directors he worked for were Luis Buñuel, François Truffaut, Milos Forman, Jean Cocteau and Roman Polanski; not only that, but he was the designer for many of their most famous films. Some of these gentlemen, as well as actors Nastassja Kinski and Harrison Ford, discuss the man and his work. The designer indicates that though he is looking for very precise effects, he always takes the difficulties of shooting into account, and does not demand impossible shots from the cinematographers. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Nastassja KinskiHarrison Ford, (more)
1986  
 
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Fabled Japanese filmmaker Nagisa Oshima was the guiding hand behind the fast-paced French comedy Max, Mon Amour. The "Max" with whom the elegant Charlotte Rampling falls in love is a circus chimpanzee (played by a short-statured man in a monkey suit). Charlotte's British-ambassador husband Anthony Higgins has long suspected that his wife was cheating on him, but he certainly isn't prepared for her simian paramour. Amazingly, the film never descends into goofiness: Oshima uses his unorthodox plotline to poke holes in the self-protective pretensions of the Bourgeoisie. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Charlotte RamplingAnthony Higgins, (more)
1983  
 
Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence was the first English-language project of Japanese director Nagisa Oshima (Death by Hanging, In the Realm of the Senses). In tune with his previous filmic essays on racism and brutality, Merry Christmas concentrates on a war of wills between rebellious POW David Bowie and camp commandant Ryuichi Sakomoto. Assuming that his other prisoners' unwillingness to protest their cruel treatment is a sign of weakness, Sakomoto is most impressed by Bowie's enigmatic defiance. While Bowie and Sakomoto seem to be operating on a high spiritual and intellectual plane, bilingual prisoner Tom Conti (the "Mr. Lawrence" of the title) engages in a more standard adversarial relationship with sadistic sergeant Takeshi Kitano. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
David BowieTom Conti, (more)
1978  
R  
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Also known as Phantom Love, the French/Japanese co-production L'Empire de la Passion follows famed Japanese director Nagisa Oshima's multinational production, the chilling and erotic In the Realm of the Senses, which was banned in several countries and was disqualified from appearing at the Cannes Film Festival. This straightforward Japanese murder-mystery and ghost story, unlike that previous movie, does not focus on eroticism but concerns the aftermath of passion and the fruits of crime. In the story, based on an 1895 incident in rural Japan, Seki (Kazuko Yoshiyuki), a beautiful peasant woman, and her young lover Toyoji (Tatsuya Fuji), conspire to murder her husband when their erotic games get out of hand. After getting the husband drunk, the two lovers kill him and throw his body down an abandoned well, claiming that he has gone to do business in Tokyo. In order to avoid suspicion, the two only see each other seldom. In the meantime, Seki begins seeing visions of her husband, and her grown stepdaughter has dreams of him. Guilt consumes both of them, and their nemesis, in the form of a bumbling police inspector sent to investigate an unrelated murder, pursues them. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kazuko YoshiyukiTatsuya Fuji, (more)
1976  
 
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Based upon a true incident in 1930s Japan, Nagisa Oshima's controversial film effectively skirts the borderline between pornography and art -- making Bernardo Bertolucci's Last Tango in Paris of four years earlier look like children's programming in comparison. The story concerns servant and former prostitute Sada Abe (Eiko Matsuda) who becomes sexually obsessed with her employer Kizicho (Tatsuya Fuji), a businessman, after seeing him making love to his wife. After making love to Sada, Kizicho becomes obsessed with her as well. As their love-making becomes more and more intense, they find themselves unable to separate themselves from each other, until every waking hour is spent in more and more dangerous sexual acts with Sada becoming more and more of the aggressor. Finally, for the ultimate in eroticism, Kizicho agrees to be strangled during sexual ecstasy for the ultimate in orgasmic fulfillment. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Eiko MatsudaTatsuya Fuji, (more)
1972  
 
Dear Summer Sister (alternate English title: Summer Sister), released in the US in 1985, was completed in 1972 by Japanese director Nagisa Oshima. Hardly the most important work of this prolific filmmaker, it probably earned a non-Japanese release on the strength of Oshima's 1983 critical success Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence. Summer Sister, like many of Oshima's films, is an experimental exploration of moral corruption, partly based on a true story. Its uncompromising viewpoint was evidently not widely appreciated by Japanese filmgoers of the period, inasmuch as Oshima was forced shortly afterward to relinquish his independent-filmmaker status. Dear Summer Sister was originally titled Natsu no imoto. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1971  
 
This well-known film by auteur director Nagisa Oshima offers a humorous and trenchant commentary on trends in Japanese society. Looking through the eyes of a younger son in a lesser branch of an important Japanese family, we see simultaneously the boy's history, the family's history and the history of Japan. This is done by showing important family ceremonies over the years: anniversaries, weddings, funerals, etc. Various factions in the family, which reflect the factions in Japanese society, struggle for superiority. Viewers of this film will find their enjoyment enriched if they have some knowledge of recent Japanese history . ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kenzo KawarazakiAtsuo Nakamura, (more)
1970  
 
Here, director Oshima (best-known in America for Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence and Empire of the Senses) tells the tragic story of a young man who becomes involved in a confusing political struggle involving film from his camera. Even though he was covering a demonstration, the film he shot of it is fairly ordinary, and he cannot understand why it is important to so many people. His camera is stolen during the demonstration, and the thief, whom he follows, commits suicide. The police are reluctant to return the camera and film to him, and when he does obtain them, his co-workers try to wrest them from him. He repeatedly regains and then loses both the camera and the film, and when he finally views the developed film, the images are uninformative. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kazuo GotoEmiko Iwasaki, (more)
1969  
 
A family of four lives off of scams in which they pretend to be injured by automobiles. After suffering an injury during the war, the father believes he is an invalid. He and his wife have a 10-year-old boy and a 3-year-old girl. The adults pretend to be injured by autos in crowded traffic, blackmailing the fearful motorists with threats to call in the police. When the mother becomes pregnant, the young boy is called on to participate in the schemes. The wife promises her husband she will get an abortion but soon changes her mind without telling him. One motorist welcomes police intervention after an incident, frightening the father that his scam will be exposed. They live in separate hotels until the coast is clear, but the young boy is questioned by police. He maintains his silence as he fears his family will be put in jail in this symbolic drama. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Akiko Koyama
1968  
 
This sad tale, based on a true story of a Japanese-born Korean student who raped and killed two girls in 1958 and was then hanged in 1963 when he reached maturity, is turned by director Nagisa Oshima into a black farce reminiscent of the darkly satirical, anti-authoritarian films of Luis Buñuel. The film opens with the hanging of the criminal, but the noose fails to kill him. Instead he gets amnesia, and the executioners and officials reenact the crime, hoping to jog his memory and prove that he is guilty. Soon they begin to identify with their roles, and the line blurs between the crime and its reenactment. The film ends as a bitter indictment of Japanese nationalism, capital punishment, and Japanese institutional prejudice against Koreans. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kei SatoFumio Watanabe, (more)
1968  
 
The title character, played by Tadanori Yokoo, takes the first step on the road to ruin when he steals an inconsequential item from a bookstore. Caught in the act by the shopgirl (Rie Yokoyama), the shoplifter becomes the girl's sexual partner-and virtual slave. The film is rife with erotic symbolism that will be lost on no one. Originally titled Shinjuku Dorobo Nikki, Diary of a Shinjuku Thief is director Nagisa Oshima's homage to controversial French author (and unregenerate thief) Jean Genet. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Tadanori YokooRie Yokoyama, (more)
1968  
 
After students prankishly steal the clothes of two people swimming nude in the ocean, the swimmers return to land and wander around au naturel. They are assumed to be Korean illegal immigrants, and are chased and hounded. This comedy takes a rare look at Japanese racism. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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1967  
 
Director Nagisa Oshima teams with comic-strip artist Shirato Sampei in this feature. Still pictures are used as some of Japan's more recognizable thespians provide the voices to tell the story. The ninja warriors use their powers to become invisible, walk on water, and climb castle walls. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kei SatoHideo Kanze, (more)
1966  
 
The unstable social milieu of postwar Japan is brought into play in Violence at Noon. Two young women, whose lives are far from blissful, are raped by an equally disenfranchised assailant. Director Nagisa Oshima seems to argue that it is the horrid living conditions endured by the rapist and his victims, rather than the rape itself, that should be condemned. Oshima sustains audience interest with his lightning-paced editing, offering some 2000 separate shots in the space of 90 minutes. Violence at Noon begins simply, but ends in so complex a fashion that more questions are raised than can ever possibly be answered. The film's original Japanese title was Hakuchu no Torima. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kei SatoSaeda Kawaguchi, (more)
1965  
 
Director Nagisa Oshima's film uses the "pink" genre to mask an allegory about the materialism of post-war Japan (the original title translates as "Indulgence"). Katsuo Nakamura stars as a man blackmailed by a thief, who makes him hold on to some stolen loot while the thief serves a jail sentence. Nakamura is led into temptation by all that money sitting around, so he decides to spend it on wild partying and sex before killing himself to avoid retribution. Like the films of Paul Morrissey, Etsuraku simultaneously exploits its subject matter and condemns it, to peculiar effect. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

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