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    锂矿湖与复音孤岛 - 电影

    2020中国台湾剧情
    导演:刘窗
    演员:高立沛
    从海洋到矿石,锂广泛地分布在地球表面。然而,它的沉淀技术是将它从一些高原上的几个湖泊(安第斯山脉的乌尤尼盐湖和青藏高原的扎布耶湖)中提取出来。在被制造成锂电池之后,它被嵌入到了一种高科技产业链中——一种基于硅元素的集成设计和制造模式。从硅谷到东亚的半导体产业,形成于冷战-热战-冷战的全球地缘政治成为了这条产业链的兴起的复杂背景。我们可以将整个链条称为技术锁定。人们普遍认为,专业的复音音乐是由单音音乐演变而来的。   Lithium is extensively distributed on the earth's surface, from the ocean to the ore, the way of its precipitation is, however, by separating it out of several lakes on some plateaus—the Salar de Uyuni of the Andes and the Lake Zabuye of the Tibetan Plateau. After being manufactured into lithium batteries, it was embedded into a high-tech chain—an integrated design and manufacture mode based on silicon elements. From Silicon Valley to the semiconductor industry in East Asia, the rise of this industrial chain was given a complicated background—it’s the global geopolitics that’s shaped under the context of Cold War-Hot War-Cold War. One can call the whole chain a technological lock-in.   尽管如此,最新研究表明,按照音乐人类学家的推测,单音的形成不是追随进步,而是失去古老的和弦歌唱传统和音乐文化专业化的结果,单音音乐实际上在人类社会中出现得相对较晚。换言之,复音音乐被认为是古代音乐的一种普遍形式,这一结果动摇了音乐历史,其中对单音到和弦的线性演变的深信。当前复音音乐的地理分布极为混乱。在某些地区,主要音乐形式表现为单音音乐,而在一些其他地区,则是复音形式。在某些特定地区,例如单音音乐占主导地位的东亚地区,复音音乐散布在整个领土上,就像散落在世界各地的小岛一样。   The professional polyphonic music is being widely expected to have evolved from monophonic music. Nevertheless, the latest research shows that rather than following ascending progress, the formation of monophony is, in accordance with the speculation of musical anthropologists, the result of losing the ancient polyphonic singing tradition and the professionalization of music culture, for monophonic music, in fact, appeared relatively late in human society. In other words, polyphonic music is considered to be a universal form of ancient music, and this result has shaken the history of music that was once convinced by a linear evolution from monophony to polyphony. The current geographical distribution of polyphonic music is extremely confusing. In some regions, the major music form appears as monophonic music, while in others, it is polyphonic. In some specific areas, such as East Asia, where monophonic music dominates the musical form, polyphonic music is scattered around the territory, just like small islands lying sporadically in the isolated places of the world.   音乐和技术的起源是相互交织的。将复音音乐想象成古代人开发的一种防御策略,一方面使敌人感到困惑,因为人们总是期望在一个交织的音乐矩阵背后有一个巨大的存在。另一方面,它就像实时通信,节奏的每一个细微的变化或停顿都会吸引每个表演者的注意,从而可以将信号传输到整个网络。在这里,复音音乐可以被理解为一种非本质,无限可复制且非主题的系统。在复音音乐中,演奏者和观众之间是没有区别的,每个人都参与了表演,只有参与其中才能真正理解和掌握表演的节奏。我视这种复音音乐模式为一种技术上的解锁。   The origins of music and technology are intertwined with each other. Imaging polyphonic music as a defense strategy developed by ancient people, it confuses the enemy on the one hand—one always expects an enormous existence behind an entwined musical matrix. On the other hand, it acts as real-time communication, every subtle change or pause of the rhythm would attract the attention of each performer so that signals can be transmitted to the entire network. Here, polyphonic music can be understood as a system that is non-essential, infinitely reproducible and non-thematic. In polyphonic music, there’s no differentiation between the performer and the audience, everyone participates in the performance, and only by participating can one essentially understand and grasp the rhythm of it. I see this pattern of polyphonic music as a technological unlock-in.
    锂矿湖与复音孤岛
    影视

    锂矿湖与复音孤岛 - 电影

    2020中国台湾剧情
    导演:刘窗
    演员:高立沛
    从海洋到矿石,锂广泛地分布在地球表面。然而,它的沉淀技术是将它从一些高原上的几个湖泊(安第斯山脉的乌尤尼盐湖和青藏高原的扎布耶湖)中提取出来。在被制造成锂电池之后,它被嵌入到了一种高科技产业链中——一种基于硅元素的集成设计和制造模式。从硅谷到东亚的半导体产业,形成于冷战-热战-冷战的全球地缘政治成为了这条产业链的兴起的复杂背景。我们可以将整个链条称为技术锁定。人们普遍认为,专业的复音音乐是由单音音乐演变而来的。   Lithium is extensively distributed on the earth's surface, from the ocean to the ore, the way of its precipitation is, however, by separating it out of several lakes on some plateaus—the Salar de Uyuni of the Andes and the Lake Zabuye of the Tibetan Plateau. After being manufactured into lithium batteries, it was embedded into a high-tech chain—an integrated design and manufacture mode based on silicon elements. From Silicon Valley to the semiconductor industry in East Asia, the rise of this industrial chain was given a complicated background—it’s the global geopolitics that’s shaped under the context of Cold War-Hot War-Cold War. One can call the whole chain a technological lock-in.   尽管如此,最新研究表明,按照音乐人类学家的推测,单音的形成不是追随进步,而是失去古老的和弦歌唱传统和音乐文化专业化的结果,单音音乐实际上在人类社会中出现得相对较晚。换言之,复音音乐被认为是古代音乐的一种普遍形式,这一结果动摇了音乐历史,其中对单音到和弦的线性演变的深信。当前复音音乐的地理分布极为混乱。在某些地区,主要音乐形式表现为单音音乐,而在一些其他地区,则是复音形式。在某些特定地区,例如单音音乐占主导地位的东亚地区,复音音乐散布在整个领土上,就像散落在世界各地的小岛一样。   The professional polyphonic music is being widely expected to have evolved from monophonic music. Nevertheless, the latest research shows that rather than following ascending progress, the formation of monophony is, in accordance with the speculation of musical anthropologists, the result of losing the ancient polyphonic singing tradition and the professionalization of music culture, for monophonic music, in fact, appeared relatively late in human society. In other words, polyphonic music is considered to be a universal form of ancient music, and this result has shaken the history of music that was once convinced by a linear evolution from monophony to polyphony. The current geographical distribution of polyphonic music is extremely confusing. In some regions, the major music form appears as monophonic music, while in others, it is polyphonic. In some specific areas, such as East Asia, where monophonic music dominates the musical form, polyphonic music is scattered around the territory, just like small islands lying sporadically in the isolated places of the world.   音乐和技术的起源是相互交织的。将复音音乐想象成古代人开发的一种防御策略,一方面使敌人感到困惑,因为人们总是期望在一个交织的音乐矩阵背后有一个巨大的存在。另一方面,它就像实时通信,节奏的每一个细微的变化或停顿都会吸引每个表演者的注意,从而可以将信号传输到整个网络。在这里,复音音乐可以被理解为一种非本质,无限可复制且非主题的系统。在复音音乐中,演奏者和观众之间是没有区别的,每个人都参与了表演,只有参与其中才能真正理解和掌握表演的节奏。我视这种复音音乐模式为一种技术上的解锁。   The origins of music and technology are intertwined with each other. Imaging polyphonic music as a defense strategy developed by ancient people, it confuses the enemy on the one hand—one always expects an enormous existence behind an entwined musical matrix. On the other hand, it acts as real-time communication, every subtle change or pause of the rhythm would attract the attention of each performer so that signals can be transmitted to the entire network. Here, polyphonic music can be understood as a system that is non-essential, infinitely reproducible and non-thematic. In polyphonic music, there’s no differentiation between the performer and the audience, everyone participates in the performance, and only by participating can one essentially understand and grasp the rhythm of it. I see this pattern of polyphonic music as a technological unlock-in.
    锂矿湖与复音孤岛
    影视

    孤岛 - 电影

    1973苏联动画·短片
    导演:费多尔·希特鲁克
    演员:Elena Chepoy
    本短片用拼贴手法将现实中的新闻照片糅合进由简练线条勾勒的动画里,讲述了所谓的现代文明是多么喜欢不理不睬孤立无缓的小人物。   一个被困在某个荒岛的落难者向路人求救,一艘艘船、一个个人从他面前经过,都是要么当作没看见,要么好奇地打量一番扬长而去。后来,某个国家的军队野蛮地插上国旗,将该荒岛视为本国领土。接着,媒体蜂拥而至,对他问长问短;科学家纷纷到访,拿他做实验品;旅游者一时兴起,向他推销各种无用的广告;资源开发商瞧见商机,将该岛资源采劫一空。没有人注意到,这位无助的落难者只想离开这座荒岛,回到自己的家。
    孤岛
    搜索《孤岛》
    影视

    孤岛 - 电影

    2014中国内地惊悚·恐怖
    导演:廉涛 王琨皓
    演员:周舒亦 菲菲 肖竞晡
    年轻网络小说作家左展鹏(毛毅 饰)车祸意外身亡,妻子张可欣(李依伊 饰)痛不欲生。 展鹏死后,可欣家中发生各种恐怖灵异事件暗示着展鹏没有死,还意外…
    孤岛
    搜索《孤岛》
    影视

    孤岛 - 电影

    2020中国大陆剧情
    导演:周行 周璟豪 马晓辉 陈筠 朱晨亮 梅俪潆 林秉翰
    演员:王学兵 王佳佳 郭柯宇
    今年,FIRST训练营召集7位青年导演,8位青年摄影师完成七部风格各异的类型短片,这七部以疫情为背景的短片将组成电影《孤岛》。导师曹保平这样释义“孤岛”主题:“过去的日子里,我们不得不退回到被分割、被分隔的生活区间中,有更长时间和自己相处。一些隐秘的、不易察觉的日常细节、思绪脉络浮现出来。”
    孤岛
    搜索《孤岛》
    影视

    孤岛 - 电影

    2019中国大陆剧情·动画·短片
    导演:梁津
    一个忠犬一次次拯救想要自杀的主人的故事。   本片为中国传媒大学艺术学部动画与数字艺术学院15级学生毕业作品。
    孤岛
    搜索《孤岛》
    影视

    森林与湖的祭祀 - 电影

    1958日本剧情
    导演:内田吐梦
    演员:高仓健 香川京子 三国连太郎
    One of the major joys of writing about Japanese movies is that whenever you begin to get that tired, jaded feeling that you think you’ve seen it all and that there’s nothing left that’s ever going to set your pulse racing, you stumble across a whole previously hidden seam of movies that completely revolutionises any ideas of what Japanese cinema is. I remember getting this feeling watching the works of Hiroshi Shimizu at the 2003 Tokyo FILMeX, and I got it again at the same festival exactly one year later, during a 13-film retrospective of Tomu Uchida, which travelled to the Rotterdam Film Festival in a slimmed-down version a couple of months later.   In English-language film circles, not much is really generally known about Japanese cinema prior to the 1960s. Anderson and Richie’s The Japanese Film: Art and Industry is still the bible for those who want to find out more, but more recent non-academic publications are limited by the films that are available for viewing. It’s a catch-22 situation, which DVD is slowly overcoming. Yet still, outside of the work of a few major directors like Kurosawa and Ozu, recent releases have tended to stick with products from more recent years, more often than not focused around the twin poles of art and exploitation.   It is therefore really difficult to get any broader picture of what the industry was doing before the days of yakuza movies and Roman Porno. Yet the 1950s were the decade when the Japanese cinema had reached full maturity and cinema attendances were at a peak, the so-called Golden Age when the major companies were between them turning out around 500 films a year, all made by directors with several decades of experience behind them, at long-established studios with a large highly-trained professional team of technicians. Far from being the bastion of conservativeness that Oshima and the New Wave directors labelled it to be, I am coming to look at the decade as a vast lucky dip with some fabulous treasures still waiting to be found – such as The Outsiders, for example, an epic outdoor adventure in which an embittered Ken Takakura fights for the rights of Hokkaido’s oppressed Ainu population.   Tomu Uchida was one of those names I’d heard bandied about a lot, most often in conjunction with the film Earth (Tsuchi) made in 1939. A seminal piece of social-realism made by a director noted for his leftist inclinations, Earth focused on the harsh lives of a community of farmers at a time when rapid urbanisation was bleeding the countryside dry. It was a political film in that it confronted the swelling ranks of the emergent urban middle classes who made up the large bulk of cinema audiences with the plight of the rural poor, paralleling the release of John Ford’s adaptation of John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath in America around the same time in 1940.   Remember, long before the days of television, cinema was the only way of seeing how the other half lived, and in today’s image-saturated mass-media culture it is easy to overlook the power and immediacy of what people saw on the big screen. Uchida’s film was all the more political because it was made at the time when the lion’s share of agricultural production was being put towards Japan’s wartime expansion. Needless to say, it went bang in the face of the type of films the government was promoting at the time.   Earth was filmed over the course of a year with a documentarist’s attention to detail, taking in each of the seasons and focusing very much on man’s relationship with the soil. This approach of drawing out the realism and charting the passage of time through the use of the four seasons much later became a staple of the documentary films made by the collective centred around Shinsuke Ogawa, such as Magino Village – A Tale (Sennen Kizami no Hidokei: Magino-Mura Monogatari, 1987), or more recently in the documentary-styled fictional work of Naomi Kawase, specifically the films Suzaku and Hotaru.   Uchida’s film, by the way, is not to be confused with the German-Japanese co-production, The New Earth (Atarashii Tsuchi), directed by Mansaku Itami, the father of Tampopo director Juzo Itami. This film, released in 1941, was a nationalist propaganda work made under the instigation of Dr Arnold Fanck, the German director who sparked off the peculiar genre of the “Mountain Film” as typified by The Holy Mountain (Der Heilige Berg, recently released on DVD in the UK by Eureka). As written by Fanck, its goal was to portray “unity of the Nazi group-spirit and the racial spirit of the Japanese as opposed to the weak spirit of the democracies”, but there was conflict between the Japanese and the German creative elements throughout the production due to the way in which Fanck constantly misrepresented elements of Japanese culture in service of the film’s higher propagandist purpose (The Last Samurai, anyone?). Released overseas at the time as The Daughter of the Samurai, one of the first co-productions Japan ever made with the West thus ended up a classic textbook example of orientalist filmmaking.   Much of what has been written about Uchida’s career in the English language – basically in Anderson and Richie’s book – has focused on his pre-war career. But as the FILMeX retrospective clearly demonstrated, this was only half of the story. In 1945, the left-leaning director travelled to the formerly Japanese-occupied area of Manchuria in China to join the Manchuria Film Association, or Man’ei, and was not to come back until 1953. Upon his return he continued for almost two decades to produce a wide range of films that fit into every genre conceivable, from traditional kabuki adaptations to melodrama and yakuza movies.   The diversity of his oeuvre therefore means that getting a grip on what elements typify an Uchida picture is a difficult task, but on the evidence of The Outsiders, one of the original program that tellingly did not go over to the Rotterdam festival, perhaps it is fruitful to turn once again to the parallel with John Ford. The film’s mixture of heroic action, making full use of one of the top macho icons of its day, an expansive sense of location, masterful use of colour and composition and a focus on social injustice meted out on large sectors of the nation’s indigenous people had me thinking in terms of The Searchers. In what seems like another unlikely case of synchronicity, Ford’s film was released just two years previously in 1956.   The Outsiders is something of a revelation. It certainly looks nothing like what you’d expect from a Japanese movie made around the mid-50s, which is perhaps the reason why it is completely unknown outside of Japan. Opening with a lengthy pan across the barren mountaintops of Hokkaido, Uchida’s third film in colour, after the two parts of the jidai-geki Daibosatsu Pass (Daibosatsutoge, 1957/58) is an undeniably exhilarating visual experience, making full use of the Toeiscope widescreen format to capture Japan’s northernmost territory in all its rugged beauty. It also is of particular interest for drawing attention to the destruction of the culture and the discrimination against the indigenous Ainu people, a dwindling race faced with danger of extinction since the Japanese nation began its concerted push northwards with the government extending administration over all parts of the landmass in 1868.   Screen legend Ken Takakura is Ishitaro Kazamori, known as Byakki “the Phoenix” by the local Ainu population, as he whisks from village to village on horseback delivering supplies and educational books to the locals, an outcast Robin Hood character working for the future of his people. But Byakki’s rough methods aren’t to everyone’s tastes. Money has been going missing from the funds raised by the chairman of the Ainu Society, Dr. Ike (Kitazawa), a well-meaning “shamo” (non-Ainu) who has dedicated much of his life to researching the history and culture of Japan’s aboriginal people.   When Dr Ike brings a young landscape painter Yoshiko Saeki (Kagawa) from Tokyo with him on his field trips to sketch the local landscapes, there is initially resentment of another outsider treating the local populations as her own pet project. But Yoshiko soon befriends Mitsu (Fujisato), an Ainu girl who was jilted years ago on the eve of the holy Bekanbe Festival by her “shamo” lover who couldn’t go through with the stigma of marrying into this ostracised class. Mitsu may also hold the key to Byakki’s whereabouts.   Meanwhile, as the next Bekanbe Festival approaches, tension is growing between the Ainu and the Japanese settlers in the coastal town of Nanbetsu due to Byakki’s increasingly unruly antics. One local who steadfastly refuses to pitch in to Dr. Ike’s project is Oiwa (Mikuni), who runs the local fishery with his old father (Susukida), and runs a strict policy of not hiring any Ainu workers. Oiwa bears Byakki a particular enmity, because Byakki knows that Oiwa is living in denial, masquerading as a “shamo” and keeping his real Ainu ancestry well hidden. But Oiwa also knows a few secrets about Byakki.   Hokkaido is in many ways Japan’s northernmost frontier, its own equivalent to the Wild West, and The Outsiders, though based on the novel Mori to Mizuumi no Matsuri by Taijun Takeda, most clearly resembles an American western, a gripping action film letting forth a righteous cry against social injustice against the indigenous population and unfolding against an epic landscape. Such genre appropriations can’t be coincidental. As could be seen as early back as Uchida’s own 1933 silent, The Police Officer (Keisatsukan), which also played at FILMeX, Japanese filmmakers were certainly not above borrowing heavily from typically American staples such as the cops-and-robbers film. I can’t say whether Uchida consciously modelled his film on the western, but the crucial fact about The Outsiders is that the story makes sense and works in its own right, rather than just being noteworthy as a cross-cultural hybrid curio.   The main drawing point is of course Hokkaido itself, shot beautifully by cinematographer Shoe Nishikawa, picking out the autumnal russet-tinged hues of the majestic countryside of lakes, plains and woods, as the camera glides and tracks through a series of mainly exterior locations. But aside from this vibrant use of colour, also used to great effect in the matsuri (festival) scenes and the coloured fabrics of the traditional costumes, The Outsiders is also unique for revealing a facet of Japanese culture almost completely disregarded in its cinema. Bold, beautiful, and packing a powerful dramatic punch, there is little else quite like it. We can only hope that some adventurous DVD company will pick it up soon, because this is a film that could change people’s perceptions and prejudices about Japanese film for good. from midnighteye
    森林与湖的祭祀
    搜索《森林与湖的祭祀》
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    森林与湖的祭祀 - 电影

    1958日本剧情
    导演:内田吐梦
    演员:高仓健 香川京子 三国连太郎
    One of the major joys of writing about Japanese movies is that whenever you begin to get that tired, jaded feeling that you think you’ve seen it all and that there’s nothing left that’s ever going to set your pulse racing, you stumble across a whole previously hidden seam of movies that completely revolutionises any ideas of what Japanese cinema is. I remember getting this feeling watching the works of Hiroshi Shimizu at the 2003 Tokyo FILMeX, and I got it again at the same festival exactly one year later, during a 13-film retrospective of Tomu Uchida, which travelled to the Rotterdam Film Festival in a slimmed-down version a couple of months later.   In English-language film circles, not much is really generally known about Japanese cinema prior to the 1960s. Anderson and Richie’s The Japanese Film: Art and Industry is still the bible for those who want to find out more, but more recent non-academic publications are limited by the films that are available for viewing. It’s a catch-22 situation, which DVD is slowly overcoming. Yet still, outside of the work of a few major directors like Kurosawa and Ozu, recent releases have tended to stick with products from more recent years, more often than not focused around the twin poles of art and exploitation.   It is therefore really difficult to get any broader picture of what the industry was doing before the days of yakuza movies and Roman Porno. Yet the 1950s were the decade when the Japanese cinema had reached full maturity and cinema attendances were at a peak, the so-called Golden Age when the major companies were between them turning out around 500 films a year, all made by directors with several decades of experience behind them, at long-established studios with a large highly-trained professional team of technicians. Far from being the bastion of conservativeness that Oshima and the New Wave directors labelled it to be, I am coming to look at the decade as a vast lucky dip with some fabulous treasures still waiting to be found – such as The Outsiders, for example, an epic outdoor adventure in which an embittered Ken Takakura fights for the rights of Hokkaido’s oppressed Ainu population.   Tomu Uchida was one of those names I’d heard bandied about a lot, most often in conjunction with the film Earth (Tsuchi) made in 1939. A seminal piece of social-realism made by a director noted for his leftist inclinations, Earth focused on the harsh lives of a community of farmers at a time when rapid urbanisation was bleeding the countryside dry. It was a political film in that it confronted the swelling ranks of the emergent urban middle classes who made up the large bulk of cinema audiences with the plight of the rural poor, paralleling the release of John Ford’s adaptation of John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath in America around the same time in 1940.   Remember, long before the days of television, cinema was the only way of seeing how the other half lived, and in today’s image-saturated mass-media culture it is easy to overlook the power and immediacy of what people saw on the big screen. Uchida’s film was all the more political because it was made at the time when the lion’s share of agricultural production was being put towards Japan’s wartime expansion. Needless to say, it went bang in the face of the type of films the government was promoting at the time.   Earth was filmed over the course of a year with a documentarist’s attention to detail, taking in each of the seasons and focusing very much on man’s relationship with the soil. This approach of drawing out the realism and charting the passage of time through the use of the four seasons much later became a staple of the documentary films made by the collective centred around Shinsuke Ogawa, such as Magino Village – A Tale (Sennen Kizami no Hidokei: Magino-Mura Monogatari, 1987), or more recently in the documentary-styled fictional work of Naomi Kawase, specifically the films Suzaku and Hotaru.   Uchida’s film, by the way, is not to be confused with the German-Japanese co-production, The New Earth (Atarashii Tsuchi), directed by Mansaku Itami, the father of Tampopo director Juzo Itami. This film, released in 1941, was a nationalist propaganda work made under the instigation of Dr Arnold Fanck, the German director who sparked off the peculiar genre of the “Mountain Film” as typified by The Holy Mountain (Der Heilige Berg, recently released on DVD in the UK by Eureka). As written by Fanck, its goal was to portray “unity of the Nazi group-spirit and the racial spirit of the Japanese as opposed to the weak spirit of the democracies”, but there was conflict between the Japanese and the German creative elements throughout the production due to the way in which Fanck constantly misrepresented elements of Japanese culture in service of the film’s higher propagandist purpose (The Last Samurai, anyone?). Released overseas at the time as The Daughter of the Samurai, one of the first co-productions Japan ever made with the West thus ended up a classic textbook example of orientalist filmmaking.   Much of what has been written about Uchida’s career in the English language – basically in Anderson and Richie’s book – has focused on his pre-war career. But as the FILMeX retrospective clearly demonstrated, this was only half of the story. In 1945, the left-leaning director travelled to the formerly Japanese-occupied area of Manchuria in China to join the Manchuria Film Association, or Man’ei, and was not to come back until 1953. Upon his return he continued for almost two decades to produce a wide range of films that fit into every genre conceivable, from traditional kabuki adaptations to melodrama and yakuza movies.   The diversity of his oeuvre therefore means that getting a grip on what elements typify an Uchida picture is a difficult task, but on the evidence of The Outsiders, one of the original program that tellingly did not go over to the Rotterdam festival, perhaps it is fruitful to turn once again to the parallel with John Ford. The film’s mixture of heroic action, making full use of one of the top macho icons of its day, an expansive sense of location, masterful use of colour and composition and a focus on social injustice meted out on large sectors of the nation’s indigenous people had me thinking in terms of The Searchers. In what seems like another unlikely case of synchronicity, Ford’s film was released just two years previously in 1956.   The Outsiders is something of a revelation. It certainly looks nothing like what you’d expect from a Japanese movie made around the mid-50s, which is perhaps the reason why it is completely unknown outside of Japan. Opening with a lengthy pan across the barren mountaintops of Hokkaido, Uchida’s third film in colour, after the two parts of the jidai-geki Daibosatsu Pass (Daibosatsutoge, 1957/58) is an undeniably exhilarating visual experience, making full use of the Toeiscope widescreen format to capture Japan’s northernmost territory in all its rugged beauty. It also is of particular interest for drawing attention to the destruction of the culture and the discrimination against the indigenous Ainu people, a dwindling race faced with danger of extinction since the Japanese nation began its concerted push northwards with the government extending administration over all parts of the landmass in 1868.   Screen legend Ken Takakura is Ishitaro Kazamori, known as Byakki “the Phoenix” by the local Ainu population, as he whisks from village to village on horseback delivering supplies and educational books to the locals, an outcast Robin Hood character working for the future of his people. But Byakki’s rough methods aren’t to everyone’s tastes. Money has been going missing from the funds raised by the chairman of the Ainu Society, Dr. Ike (Kitazawa), a well-meaning “shamo” (non-Ainu) who has dedicated much of his life to researching the history and culture of Japan’s aboriginal people.   When Dr Ike brings a young landscape painter Yoshiko Saeki (Kagawa) from Tokyo with him on his field trips to sketch the local landscapes, there is initially resentment of another outsider treating the local populations as her own pet project. But Yoshiko soon befriends Mitsu (Fujisato), an Ainu girl who was jilted years ago on the eve of the holy Bekanbe Festival by her “shamo” lover who couldn’t go through with the stigma of marrying into this ostracised class. Mitsu may also hold the key to Byakki’s whereabouts.   Meanwhile, as the next Bekanbe Festival approaches, tension is growing between the Ainu and the Japanese settlers in the coastal town of Nanbetsu due to Byakki’s increasingly unruly antics. One local who steadfastly refuses to pitch in to Dr. Ike’s project is Oiwa (Mikuni), who runs the local fishery with his old father (Susukida), and runs a strict policy of not hiring any Ainu workers. Oiwa bears Byakki a particular enmity, because Byakki knows that Oiwa is living in denial, masquerading as a “shamo” and keeping his real Ainu ancestry well hidden. But Oiwa also knows a few secrets about Byakki.   Hokkaido is in many ways Japan’s northernmost frontier, its own equivalent to the Wild West, and The Outsiders, though based on the novel Mori to Mizuumi no Matsuri by Taijun Takeda, most clearly resembles an American western, a gripping action film letting forth a righteous cry against social injustice against the indigenous population and unfolding against an epic landscape. Such genre appropriations can’t be coincidental. As could be seen as early back as Uchida’s own 1933 silent, The Police Officer (Keisatsukan), which also played at FILMeX, Japanese filmmakers were certainly not above borrowing heavily from typically American staples such as the cops-and-robbers film. I can’t say whether Uchida consciously modelled his film on the western, but the crucial fact about The Outsiders is that the story makes sense and works in its own right, rather than just being noteworthy as a cross-cultural hybrid curio.   The main drawing point is of course Hokkaido itself, shot beautifully by cinematographer Shoe Nishikawa, picking out the autumnal russet-tinged hues of the majestic countryside of lakes, plains and woods, as the camera glides and tracks through a series of mainly exterior locations. But aside from this vibrant use of colour, also used to great effect in the matsuri (festival) scenes and the coloured fabrics of the traditional costumes, The Outsiders is also unique for revealing a facet of Japanese culture almost completely disregarded in its cinema. Bold, beautiful, and packing a powerful dramatic punch, there is little else quite like it. We can only hope that some adventurous DVD company will pick it up soon, because this is a film that could change people’s perceptions and prejudices about Japanese film for good. from midnighteye
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