- Double Suicide
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Double Suicide Directed by Masahiro Shinoda Produced by Masahiro Shinoda
Masayuki NakajimaStarring Kichiemon Nakamura
Shima Iwashita
Hosei Komatsu
Yusuke Takita
Kamatari FujiwaraMusic by Tōru Takemitsu Cinematography Toichiro Narushima Release date(s) May 24, 1969
February 11, 1970Running time 105 minutes Country Japan Language Japanese Double Suicide (心中天網島 Shinjū: Ten no amijima ) is a 1969 film directed by Masahiro Shinoda. It is based on the 1721 play The Love Suicides at Amijima by Monzaemon Chikamatsu. This play is often performed in the bunraku style (that is, with puppets). In the film, the story is performed with live actors, but also makes use of Japanese theatrical traditions such as the kuroko (stagehands dressed entirely in black) who invisibly interact with the actors, and the set is non-realist. The film opens with the preparations by the kuroko for a modern-day presentation of a puppet play while a voice-over is heard of someone, presumably the director, calling on the telephone to find a location for the penultimate scene of the lovers' suicide. Soon human actors are substituted for the puppets, and the action proceeds in a naturalistic fashion, until from time to time the kuroko intervene to accomplish scene shifts or heighten the dramatic intensity of the two lovers' resolve to be united in death.
The stylized sets and the period costumes and props simultaneously convey a classical theatricality and contemporaneous modernity. Jihei's fatal love interest, Koharu the prostitute, and his neglected wife, Osan, are both played by actress Shima Iwashita.
This film was released on DVD in Japanese with English subtitles in Region 1 on 30 January 2001.
External links
- Double Suicide at the Internet Movie Database
- Double Suicide at AllRovi
- Criterion Collection essay by Claire Johnston
- "心中天網島 (Shinjû: Ten no amijima)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. http://www.jmdb.ne.jp/1969/cs001700.htm. Retrieved 2007-07-18.
- New York Times review by Roger Greenspun
- Double Suicide on Rotten Tomatoes
Films directed by Masahiro Shinoda Assassination (1964) · Pale Flower (1964) · Samurai Spy (1965) · Double Suicide (1969) · The Scandalous Adventures of Buraikan (1970) · Silence (1971) · Himiko (1974) · Ballad of Orin (1977) · MacArthur's Children (1984) · Gonza the Spearman (1986) · Childhood Days (1990) · Sharaku (1995)
Mainichi Film Award for Best Film 1946–1959 Aru yo no Tonosama (1946) · Ima Hitotabi no (1947) · Drunken Angel (1948) · Late Spring (1949) · Until We Meet Again (1950) · Repast (1951) · Ikiru (1952) · An Inlet of Muddy Water (1953) · Twenty-Four Eyes (1954) · Floating Clouds (1955) · Mahiru no ankoku (1956) · The Rice People (1957) · The Ballad of Narayama (1958) ·
Kiku to Isamu (1959)1960–1979 Her Brother (1960) · A Soldier's Prayer (1961) · Harakiri (1962) · High and Low (1963) · Woman in the Dunes (1964) · Red Beard (1965) · Shiroi Kyotō (1966) · Samurai Rebellion (1967) · The Profound Desire of the Gods (1968) · Double Suicide (1969) · Kazoku (1970) · Silence (1971) · Shinobu Kawa (1972) · Tsugaru Folk Song (1973) · Castle of Sand (1974) · The Fossil (1975) · Fumō Chitai (1976) · The Yellow Handkerchief (1977) · The Incident (1978) ·
Ah! Nomugi Toge (1979)1980–2009 Kagemusha (1980) · Muddy River (1981) · Fall Guy (1982) · Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence (1983) · W's Tragedy (1984) · Ran (1985) · The Sea and Poison (1986) · A Taxing Woman (1987) · My Neighbor Totoro (1988) · Black Rain (1989) · Childhood Days (1990) · My Sons (1991) · Sumo Do, Sumo Don't (1992) · All Under the Moon (1993) · A Dedicated Life (1994) · A Last Note (1995) · Shall We Dance? (1996) · Princess Mononoke (1997) · Begging for Love (1998) · Poppoya (1999) · Face (2000) · Spirited Away (2001) · The Twilight Samurai (2002) · Akame 48 Waterfalls (2003) · Blood and Bones (2004) · Break Through! (2005) · Sway (2006) · I Just Didn't Do It (2007) · Departures (2008) · Shizumanu Taiyō (2009) · Villain (2010)
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