Ken Ogata

  • Kinji Fukasaku – Kataku no hito AKA House on Fire (1986)

    Kinji Fukasaku1981-1990AsianDramaJapan

    Adapted from the autobiographical story by Kazuo Dan which was published a few months before his death, House Of Fire tells story of a popular writer sharing his complicated life with his family, his numerous mistresses and his work.Read More »

  • Yasuzo Masumura – Sekkusu chekku: Daini no sei aka The Sex Check (1968)

    1961-1970AsianDramaJapanYasuzô Masumura

    Quote:
    Ogata’s first leading role was in Masumura’s Sex Check — the Second Sex (1968). Here, Ogata plays Shiro Miyagi, a sprinter with Olympic aspirations whose dreams were shattered by WWII. A broken man, he leads the dissolute life of a gigolo until a chance meeting with a fiery young athlete named Hiroko (Michiyo Yasuda, who also plays Naomi in A Fool’s Love). Realizing that she has talent as a sprinter, Miyagi sees a second chance at Olympic glory in becoming her coach. Following Miyagi’s unconventional, military-style training, Hiroko sets a record for the 100-meter dash, but her greatest hurdle proves to be a “sex check” which all professional athletes must pass. The Second Sex shows the love-hate relationship between athlete and coach as a means to explore a hypothesis about gender, androgyny, and human potential. This is, simply put, an unclassifiable film.Read More »

  • Shôhei Imamura – Zegen (1987)

    Arthouse1981-1990ComedyJapanShohei Imamura

    Quote:
    This movie is black satire of Japanese imperial ambitions in the 20th century. In Meiji era Japan (1868-1910), the Japanese state sought to establish itself as an empire as a way to both catch up to and remain free from the West. These activities also lay the foundation for the disasters to come mid-century. This movie satirizes those efforts from a mid-1980s perspective, giving it an obvious subtext of being a commentary on the efforts of late 20th century Japanese businessmen abroad as well. The “hero” is a businessman who, realizing that the Japanese armed forces will likely soon be advancing across Asia, decides that they will require brothels wherever they go as well and so sets up shop in Southeast Asia. A very black comedy from one of Japan’s finest film satirists (cf. “Pigs and Battleships,” “The Pornographers”) best known abroad ca. 1999 for “The Eel” and “Black Rain” (the film based on the novel about Hiroshima, not the Michael Douglas flick).Read More »

  • Paul Schrader – Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters (1985) (HD)

    1981-1990DramaPaul SchraderQueer Cinema(s)USA

    A fictionalized account in four chapters of the life of celebrated Japanese author Yukio Mishima. Three of the segments parallel events in Mishima’s life with his novels while the fourth depicts the actual events of the 25th Nov. 1970.Read More »

  • Shinji Sômai – Gyoei no mure AKA The Catch (1983)

    1981-1990AsianDramaJapanShinji Sômai

    Tuna fishing. It doesn’t exactly evoke the stuff of drama, yet very dramatic is this gripping yarn (puns intended) about the solemn, solitary lives of the men who catch what ends up as our sushi and sashimi. Opening with a shot of a young couple traversing sand dunes, the woman posits a question – women or fishing? This question fuels the drama of the next two-plus hours. – See more at: linkRead More »

  • Shôhei Imamura – Fukushû suru wa ware ni ari AKA Vengeance Is Mine (1979)

    1971-1980CrimeDramaJapanShohei Imamura

    Synopsis:
    Vengeance Is Mine is the come-back feature of master Shohei Imamura after a 10 year hiatus. The film is based on a real-life serial killer who went on a killing spree across Japan in the 60s.Read More »

  • Paul Schrader – Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters (1985)

    Drama1981-1990AsianPaul SchraderQueer Cinema(s)USA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    A fictional account of the life of Japanese author Yukio Mishima, combining dramatizations of three of his novels and a depiction of the events of November 25th, 1970.Read More »

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