- Gate of Flesh
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Gate of Flesh Directed by Seijun Suzuki Produced by Kaneo Iwai Starring Joe Shishido
Satoko Kasai
Yumiko NogawaMusic by Naozumi Yamamoto Cinematography Shigeyoshi Mine Distributed by Nikkatsu Release date(s) May 31, 1964 (Japan)
December 11, 1964 (U.S.)Running time 90 minutes Country Japan Language Japanese Gate of Flesh (肉体の門 Nikutai no mon ) is a 1964 Japanese film directed by Seijun Suzuki.
Contents
Synopsis
In an impoverished and burnt out Tokyo ghetto of post-World War II Japan, a band of prostitutes defend their territory, squatting in a bombed-out building. Somehow they eke out a living together. Forming a sort of family in an environment where everyone (American soldiers and Japanese yakuza) is a potential antagonist, the girls cajole each other, and ruthlessly punish any of their group who violate the cardinal rule—no having sex for free. A new girl, Maya (Yumiko Nogawa), joins their group and learns the trade. An ex-soldier, Shintaro Ibuki (Joe Shishido), is shot nearby and holes up with the girls. Each of them starts to crave Ibuki, placing strains on the group. Maya feels it worse, seeing him as replacement for her brother (who died in Borneo). She takes him after a night of drunken revelry, and both are ostracized. Agreeing to run away together, he is shot in a double-cross, and she is left as she was at the beginning of the film—alone and hopeless.
Production
Planned as an "adult release" (Japanese films were classified by the country's film board as "general release" or "adult"), the usual pace of production at Nikkatsu (10 days pre-production, 25 days shooting, 3 days post-production) allowed Suzuki and his innovative production designer Takeo Mimura precious little time to construct sets to recreate post-war firebombed Tokyo. Sets were slapped together on the backlot using materials purloined from studio warehouses, and theatrical set design techniques which could compromise the film's "realism." The resulting production has been lauded for its resulting visual flair.[1]
Most female actresses at Nikkatsu refused to work in the film due to the nudity and subject matter, so the cast's female roles were filled by actresses from outside the studio.[1]
Cast
- Joe Shishido as Shintaro Ibuki
- Yumiko Nogawa as Borneo Maya
- Satoko Kasai as Komasa Sen
- Koji Wada as Abe
- Tomiko Ishii as Roku
- Kayo Matsuo as Mino
- Misako Tominaga as Machiko
- Keisuke Noro as Ishii
- Chico Rolando as Catholic Priest
Other versions
There are 3 other film versions (1948), (1977), (1988 starring Katase Rino), and a recent 2008 TV drama series.
References
- ^ a b Suzuki, Seijun; Takeo Kimura (2005). Gate of Flesh (Interviews) (DVD). The Criterion Collection. http://www.criterion.com/asp/release.asp?id=298. Retrieved 2007-01-02.
External links
- Gate of Flesh at the Internet Movie Database
- Gate of Flesh at AllRovi
- Criterion Collection essay by Chuck Stephens
- Gate of Flesh (Japanese) at the Japanese Movie Database
Films directed by Seijun Suzuki 1950s Victory Is Mine · Pure Emotions of the Sea · Satan's Town · Inn of the Floating Weeds · Eight Hours of Terror · The Naked Woman and the Gun · Underworld Beauty · Spring Never Came · Young Breasts · Voice Without a Shadow · Love Letter · Passport to Darkness · Age of Nudity
1960s Take Aim at the Police Van · Sleep of the Beast · Clandestine Zero Line · Everything Goes Wrong · Go to Hell, Hoodlums! · Tokyo Knights · The Big Boss Who Needs No Gun · Man with a Shotgun · A New Wind Over the Mountain Pass · Blood Red Water in the Channel · Million Dollar Smash and Grab · Teen Yakuza · The Guys Who Put Money on Me · Detective Bureau 23: Go to Hell, Bastards! · Youth of the Beast · The Bastard · Kanto Wanderer · The Flower and the Angry Waves · Gate of Flesh · Our Blood Will Not Forgive · Story of a Prostitute · Stories of Bastards: Born Under a Bad Star · Tattooed Life · Carmen from Kawachi · Tokyo Drifter · Fighting Elegy · Branded to Kill
1970s 1980s Zigeunerweisen · Kagero-za · Capone Cries a Lot · Lupin III: Legend of the Gold of Babylon
1990s Yumeji · Marriage
2000s Categories:- 1964 films
- Japanese films
- Japanese-language films
- 1960s drama films
- Films about prostitution
- Films directed by Seijun Suzuki
- Nikkatsu films
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