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The Wanderers

Matatabi

Japan

1973

100 Min
Color
Japanese
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
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DIR Kon Ichikawa

PROD Kinshirô Kuzui

SCR Kon Ichikawa, Shuntaro Tanikawa

DP Setsuo Kobayashi

CAST Isao Bitô, Tadao Futami, Kenichi Hagiwara, Reiko Inoue, Akiko Nomura, Ichirô Ogura

Synopsis

Ichikawa parodies the warrior code and the popular lone-wolf vagabond of 19th-century Japanese lore in The Wanderers, in which the paladins are little more than punks. The story tells of three young farm boys who set out to become toseinin, wandering professional gamblers. In its tour-de-force structure-layered and digressive, working up to a devastating climax through deceptive humor-and in its focus on youthful nihilism, The Wanderers is comparable to the modern themes of such films as Badlands or Road Warrior. For example, the hero, angry at his father, “acts out” by killing him; later, he sells his girlfriend to a whorehouse in order to get food. In 1973, Ichikawa was criticizing not only the insatiable hunger for yakuza films, but a conservative political trend which held that a return to the bushido spirit would add a level of meaning to Japanese culture. “Comic, elegant, mordant, breathtaking… a film to be vividly remembered.” (William Johnson, Film Quarterly) —BAM

Director

Original

Kon Ichikawa

Kon Ichikawa was considered one of the masters of the immediate postwar generation of Japanese filmmakers, a generation often overshadowed by the titanic presence of Akira Kurosawa. Unlike Kurosawa, Ichikawa imbued his films with a sense of irony that swings from the sardonic to the compassionate. Born in 1915 in southern Mie Prefecture, Ichikawa grew up a sickly child and spent much of his childhood drawing. Like Kurosawa, he aspired to be a painter. He also grew to be an enthusiastic movie fan, seeing most of the early samurai epics by Daisuke Ito and Masahiro Makino while marveling at Charles Chaplin films. Yet it was Walt Disney’s Silly Symphonies series that proved to be a revelation for Ichikawa, as he realized that animation could combine his passions for art and for movies. After finishing technical school in Osaka in the 1930s, he got a job at the animation department of J.O. studios just as it was expanding from a rental film house to a full-fledged production company. As… read more

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