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Conduct Report on Professor Ishinaka

Ishinaka sensei gyojoki

Japan

1950

95 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
Japanese
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DIR Mikio Naruse

PROD Sanezumi Fujimoto

SCR Yasutaro Yagi, Yojiro Ishizaka

DP Hiroshi Suzuki

CAST Toshirô Mifune, Yôko Sugi, Shigeo Miyata, Setsuko Wakayama, Atsushi Watanabe, Yuji Hori, Eitarô Shindô, Kamatari Fujiwara, Yaeko Izumo, Ryô Ikebe, Yôyô Kojima, Chôko Iida, Chieko Nakakita, Kan Yanagiya, Mayuri Mokusho

PROD DES Satoru Chûko

MUSIC Tadashi Hattori

SOUND Hiroshi Kataoka

Synopsis

In Conduct Report on Professor Ishinaka, the professor (Shigeo Miyata) is a novelist living in Aomori prefecture, the northernmost tip of Honshu, just south of Hokkaido, but the professor has only a minor role in the film named for his character. He appears in each of the three short vignettes that make up the film as a local authority who is consulted by the townspeople. Each story features the courtship of a young man and woman, and in each instance it is suggested that the professor will undoubtedly write a novel about the events that have transpired. Based on an original story by Yojiro Ishizaka, the film has a reflexive element by which it comments on its own process of taking the materials of everyday life and transforming them into narrative. This realist conceit is enhanced by the rural setting, which is photographed with some care, including the mountainous landscapes and the farmhouse interiors. Many of the actors have strong Aomori accents, and Naruse even includes footage of several local festivals, complete with lanterns, banners, dances, and songs. —Catherine Russell

Director

Original

Mikio Naruse

Mikio Naruse is one of the least known of Japan’s early master directors, both in the West and in Japan, yet he created some of the most moving, darkly beautiful works in Japanese cinema. Like Kenji Mizoguchi, Naruse showed an uncanny understanding for the psychology of women. Like Yasujiro Ozu, he preferred subtle shifts of character over broad strokes of plot. Unlike either of these early greats, however, Naruse’s vision of humanity was much darker and more clinical. He stripped all vestiges of hope or acceptance from his films, what remains is only a willful struggle to endure. His relentlessly negative view of human existence has resulted in Naruse’s often being labeled a nihilist.

Born in Tokyo, in 1905, Naruse was the youngest of three sons of a desperately poor embroiderer. Although he excelled in elementary school, his family could not afford to further his education. He was instead enrolled in a two-year technical school. There, he spent virtually all of his free time… read more

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