Posted: Tue Apr 10, 2007 11:47 pm
Spinning out of an Off-Topic discussion in the 50s List Suggestions Thread about the glories of Japanese Cinema in the 1960s, and spurred by my ignorance:
To start off, my jaundiced view depends partly on the passing of grand masters (no more Ozu and Naruse), partly on the production / funding difficulties of major auteurs (Kurosawa most obviously, who only manages to complete two films in the decade, but Suzuki also spends the decade in the wilderness), and partly on the marginalisation of key New Wavers (ATG runs out of steam, Imamura rtereats into television after the comparative failure of Profound Desire of the Gods, Teshigahara goes back to flower arranging).
Most of the great 70s films I can think off are 'last gasp' Japanese New Wave titles: the tail end of Oshima's dream run (The Man Who Left His Will on Film, The Ceremony - I see a drastic falling off of quality when he comes back with In the Realm of the Senses), Mujo, and several unseen films I have to take on trust (Yoshida's Heroic Purgatory and Coup d'Etat, Shinoda's Silence). And of course, Imamura comes back with a bang at the end of the seventies with Vengeance Is Mine.
Otherwise, my 70s viewing has been pretty sparse. Neither Kurosawa is a particular favourite, and Shinoda's Demon Pond, though colourful, was rather pallid alongside his best 60s work.
This thread is about all the great Japanese films of the 1970s that have been overlooked, or about What Went Wrong (if Anything Did).It may partly be ignorance on my part, but there seems to be a really stark contrast with the 1970s, when so many of these filmmakers were drastically less active (or deceased). Actually, did any of the filmmakers mentioned maintain the same level and quality of output in the following decade?
To start off, my jaundiced view depends partly on the passing of grand masters (no more Ozu and Naruse), partly on the production / funding difficulties of major auteurs (Kurosawa most obviously, who only manages to complete two films in the decade, but Suzuki also spends the decade in the wilderness), and partly on the marginalisation of key New Wavers (ATG runs out of steam, Imamura rtereats into television after the comparative failure of Profound Desire of the Gods, Teshigahara goes back to flower arranging).
Most of the great 70s films I can think off are 'last gasp' Japanese New Wave titles: the tail end of Oshima's dream run (The Man Who Left His Will on Film, The Ceremony - I see a drastic falling off of quality when he comes back with In the Realm of the Senses), Mujo, and several unseen films I have to take on trust (Yoshida's Heroic Purgatory and Coup d'Etat, Shinoda's Silence). And of course, Imamura comes back with a bang at the end of the seventies with Vengeance Is Mine.
Otherwise, my 70s viewing has been pretty sparse. Neither Kurosawa is a particular favourite, and Shinoda's Demon Pond, though colourful, was rather pallid alongside his best 60s work.