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The Saga of Anatahan

Anatahan

Japan

1953

92 Min
Black and White
English, Japanese
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Josef von Sternberg

PROD Kazuo Takimura

SCR Younghill Kang, Michiro Maruyama, Josef von Sternberg

DP Josef von Sternberg

CAST Akemi Negishi, Tadashi Suganuma, Kisaburo Sawamura, Shôji Nakayama, Jun Fujikawa

MUSIC Akira Ifukube

Director

Original

Josef von Sternberg

Born in Vienna, director Joseph von Sternberg spent much of his youth in New York; his entrée into show business was as a film repairer for the World Film Company of Fort Lee, NJ. After returning to Austria to complete his education, he joined the U.S. Signal Corps as a photographer in 1917, then took assistant director jobs after the end of World War I. It was either actor Elliot Dexter or an anonymous producer who suggested that Sternberg would go farther in the industry if he affixed a “von” to his last name, à la Erich von Stroheim. Von Sternberg went whole hog in creating a “genius” veneer, adopting a strutting, imperious attitude, dressing in regulation beret and puttees, and even growing an obnoxious little mustache so he would be certain to be hated and feared. This posturing tended to obscure his genuine cinematic gifts, especially in the field of photographic lighting and composition (at one point, he was the only director permitted to carry an American Society of Cinematographers… read more

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Howard Orr

27Jan12

A grim and beautiful film, full of light and shadow, movement and horror, and not a little wonder at the destruction man can wreak. I don't feel embarrassed to point out the obvious and say that the jungle is a metaphor for all that's dark inside us, or that it's oddly appropriate that the image of Anatahan at the very end of it could be Mount Fuji at the beginning of any Japanese film.

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Lewis Nolan

16Jul11

Stunning, supposedly true (?) story and brilliantly shot. I recall reading somewhere that it was all filmed in a studio.

Picture of Yuki Aditya

Yuki Aditya

11Jun10

I watched it twice in a row. It's very strange but captivating...lol. I watched it first purely for the visual and didnt care much for the voice over, and I didnt like it that much because visually the film is like a westernized version of the Japanese woman...Then I cant let the visual out of my mind so i played it directly as it finished, oddly only for hearing the voice over without caring much about the visual, and i can tell you i was bowled over. I falter at calling it von Sternberg's greatest film, but it seems it is. It's the only film of him i give 5 stars, and watched twice.

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Tuesday Morning Foreign Region DVD Report: "The Saga of Anatahan" (Josef Von Sternberg, 1953)

By Glenn Kenny on February 23, 2010

Josef von Sternberg's The Saga of Anahatan announces itself as "a postscript" to the Asian portion of World War II, and for many years the

read article
W184

The Auteurs Daily: Toronto and NYFF. Independencia

By David Hudson on October 6, 2009

"Although it occasionally gets carried away by its own reflexive spirit, Independencia is far more than the cute formal exercise its premise

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Saga Of Anatahan

By Howard Orr on January 29, 2012

Perhaps it is tempting to say that von Sternberg’s last film, “Saga Of Anatahan” is the sum of its lacking parts, or at least, the sum of its contingencies. Made rather cheaply, it is shot in a studio…  read review

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