Too outlandish or ahead of its time? This realistic depiction of a group of young contract labourers at the bottom of society was neglected at the time of its release and only re-evaluated recently.
While The Eighteen Who Stirred Up a Storm was made the year after the success of Akitsu Springs, it could hardly be more different. Whether too outlandish or ahead of its time, this film was completely neglected at its release and only re-evaluated recently. Neither a sensationalist gang movie nor a Marxist-humanist outcry over social injustice, Yoshida’s realistic depiction of a group of young contract labourers at the very bottom of society may be closest to Italian neo-realism. The story is simple, the black-and-white widescreen camera work is stark, and the young actors are all amateurs. The young rough labourers are not allowed to become individuals but remain an anonymous group, and human relations are depicted as void of mutual understanding and reconciliation. In this distancing way, however, Yoshida confronts us all the stronger with the absurd reality of human beings used as mere ‘things’ providing labour, without offering any easy explanations. —Rotterdam Film Festival
A legendary figure of the postwar Japanese cinema, Yoshishige Yoshida (b. 1933) is one of Japan’s most artistically ambitious, politically astute and influential filmmakers. Yoshida is best known for his work with the spellbinding Mariko Okada (b. 1934), one of the most beloved and celebrated actresses of her generation, and one of the great stars of the Japanese New Wave. Working together with Okada, Yoshida created an incredible body of films unparalleled for their formal sophistication, philosophical depth and sheer beauty. Underappreciated in this country, Yoshida is rightly considered in Japan and Europe, and especially France, among the preeminent masters of the modern Japanese art film.
Yoshida’s first passion, and the focus of his studies at Tokyo University, was French existential philosophy and literature, a training which deeply informs the intellectual rigor of his subsequent film work and later writing on film and art. By chance, or destiny, Yoshida was drawn into… read more
So much collapse had filled the day—the flattened space and digital collage of Benning’s pixels, especially the exquisite, ink-drawing look