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Willful murder

Nihon no atsui hibi bôsatsu: Shimoyama jiken

Japan

1981

132 Min
Black and White
Japanese
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DIR Kei Kumai

PROD Yahito abe, Masayuki Satô, Toru Aisawa, Takeshi Tono

SCR Ryûzô Kikushima, Kimio Yada

DP Shunichiro Nakao

CAST Tatsuya Nakadai, Ichirô Nakatani, Yoko Asaji, Takashi Ebata, Torahiko Hamada, Isao Hashimoto, Daisuke Ryû, Kôji Yakusho, Kei Yamamoto, Kaneko Iwasaki

MUSIC Masaru Satô

Berlinale (In Competition)

Synopsis

In 1949, Mr. Shimoyama, governor of Japan National Railroads, was found dead on the raildroad, run by train, after the mysterious disappearance. Officially it was considered suicide, but many suspected he was killed for some political conspiracy. It remains one of the 3 big mysteries in post-WWII occupied Japan. Based on this true story, the film follows a journalist who tries to reveal the truth behind it. —Asianwiki.com

Director

Original

Kei Kumai

Kei Kumai (June 1, 1930 – May 23, 2007) was a Japanese film director from Azumino, Nagano prefecture. After his studies in literature at Shinshu University, he worked as director’s assistant.

Often overshadowed by the achievements of his better-known contemporaries within the Japanese film industry, such as Akira Kurosawa and Yasujiro Ozu, filmmaker Kei Kumai nonetheless reigned supreme in terms of raw cinematic craftsmanship. Over the course of nearly six decades, Kumai acquired and honed a reputation for creating unapologetically adult-oriented dramas that consistently explored social themes relevant to Japan. In the process, Kumai swept up a veritable pantheon of awards from the world’s top festivals, including Berlin, Montreal, Venice, and San Sebastian.

The Nagano-born Kumai joined the Nikkatsu Film Studios in the early ’50s and, over the course of six years, worked his way up through the ranks to the level of screenwriter and director. He debuted as a helmer with… read more

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John

11Oct12

The most underrated director from Japan. Hope that this one gets out to the West, and the rest of his work.

Varun Anisetty likes this

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