Ichikawa, Kon

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ICHIKAWA, Kon



Nationality: Japanese. Born: Uji Yamada in Ise, Mie Prefecture, 20 November 1915. Education: Ichioka Commercial School, Osaka. Family: Married scriptwriter Natto Wada, 1948. Career: Worked in animation dept. of J.O. Studios, Kyoto, from 1933; assistant director on feature-filmmaking staff, late 1930s; transferred to Tokyo when J.O. became part of Toho company, early 1940s; collaborated on scripts with wife, 1948–56; used pen name "Shitei Kuri" (after Japanese rendering of Agatha Christie), from 1957; writer and director for TV, 1958–66. Awards: San Giorgio Prize, Venice Festival, for Harp of Burma, 1956.


Films as Director:

1946

Musume Dojoji (A Girl at Dojo Temple) (+ co-sc)

1947

Toho senichi-ya (1001 Nights with Toho) (responsible for some footage only)

1948

Hana hiraku (A Flower Blooms); Sanbyaku rokujugo-ya (365Nights)

1949

Ningen moyo (Human Patterns; Design of a Human Being); Hateshinaki jonetsu (Passion without End; The EndlessPassion)

1950

Ginza Sanshiro (Sanshiro of Ginza); Netsudeichi (Heat andMud; The Hot Marshland) (+ co-sc): Akatsuki no tsuiseki ( Pursuit at Dawn)

1951

Ieraishan (Nightshade Flower) (+ co-sc): Koibito (The Lover) (+ co-sc); Mukokuseki-sha (The Man without a Nationality); Nusumareta koi (Stolen Love) (+ co-sc); BungawanSolo (River Solo Flows) (+ co-sc); Kekkon koshinkyoku (Wedding March) (+ co-sc)

1952

Rakkii-san (Mr. Lucky); Wakai hito (Young People, YoungGeneration) (+ co-sc); Ashi ni sawatta onna (The WomanWho Touched Legs) (+ co-sc); Ano te kono te (This Way,That Way) (+ co-sc)

1953

Puu-san (Mr. Pu) (+ co-sc); Aoiro kakumei (The Blue Revolution); Seishun Zenigata Heiji (The Youth of Heiji Zenigata) (+ co-sc); Ai-jin (The Lover)

1954

Watashi no subete o (All of Myself) (+ co-sc); Okuman choja (A Billionaire) (+ co-sc); Josei ni kansuru juni-sho (TwelveChapters on Women)

1955

Seishun kaidan (Ghost Story of Youth); Kokoro (The Heart)

1956

Biruma no tategoto (The Burmese Harp; Harp of Burma); Shokei no heya (Punishment Room); Nihonbashi (Bridge ofJapan)

1957

Manin densha (The Crowded Streetcar) (+ co-sc); Tohoku nozummu-tachi (The Men of Tohoku) (+ sc); Ana (The Pit; TheHole) (+ sc)

1958

Enjo (Conflagration)

1959

Sayonara, konnichiwa (Goodbye, Hello) (+ co-sc); Kagi) (The Key; Odd Obsession (+ co-sc); Nobi (Fires on thePlain); Jokyo II: Mono o takaku uritsukeru onna (A Woman'sTestament, Part 2: Women Who Sell Things at High Prices)

1960

Bonchi (+ co-sc); Ototo (Her Brother)

1961

Kuroijunin no onna (Ten Dark Women)

1962

Hakai (The Outcast; The Broken Commandment); Watashi wanisai (I Am Two; Being Two Isn't Easy)

1963

Yukinojo henge (An Actor's Revenge; The Revenge of Yukinojo); Taiheiyo hitoribotchi (My Enemy, the Sea; Alone on thePacific)

1964

Zeni no odori (The Money Dance; Money Talks) (+ sc)

1965

Tokyo Orimpikku (Tokyo Olympiad) (+ co-sc)

1967

Toppo Jijo no botan senso (Toppo Gigio and the Missile War) (+ co-sc)

1969

Kyoto (+ sc)

1970

Nihon to Nihonjin (Japan and the Japanese) (+ sc)

1972

Ai futatabi (To Love Again)

1973

Matatabi (The Wanderers) (+ pr, co-sc); "The Fastest" episode of Visions of Eight

1975

Wagahai wa neko de aru (I Am a Cat)

1976

Tsuma to onna no aida (Between Women and Wives) (co-d); Inugami-ke no ichizoku (The Inugami Family) (+ co-sc)

1977

Akuma no temari-uta (A Rhyme of Vengeance; The Devil'sBouncing Ball Song) (+ sc); Gokumonto (The Devil'sIsland; Island of Horrors) (+ co-sc)

1978

Jo-bachi (Queen Bee) (+ co-sc)

1980

Koto (Ancient City) (+ co-sc); Hi no tori (The Phoenix) (+ co-sc)

1982

Kofuku (Lonely Hearts, Happiness) (+ co-sc)

1983

Sasame Yuki (The Makioka sisters; Fine Snow)

1985

Ohan; Biruma no tategoto (The Burmese Harp)

1987

Eiga Joyu (The Actress); Taketori Monogatari (Princess fromthe Moon)

1991

Tenkawa Densetsu Satsujin Jiken

1993

Fusa (+ sc)

1994

47 Ronin

1996

Yatsuhaka-mura (The 8-Tomb Village) (+ sc)

1999

Dora-heita



Other Film:

1970

Dodes'ka-den (Kurosawa) (pr)



Publications


By ICHIKAWA: books—

Seijocho 271 Banchi, with Natto Wada, Tokyo, 1961.

Kon, with Shuntaro Tanikawa, Kyoto, 1999.


By ICHIKAWA: articles—

Article in Filmmakers on Filmmaking, edited by Harry M. Geduld, Bloomington, Indiana, 1967.

"Kon Ichikawa at the Olympic Games," an interview in AmericanCinematographer (Los Angeles), November 1972.


On ICHIKAWA: books—

Anderson, Joseph, and Donald Richie, The Japanese Film: Art andIndustry, Rutland, Vermont, 1960; revised edition, Princeton, 1982.

Mellen, Joan, Voices from the Japanese Cinema, New York, 1975.

Soumi, Angelo, Kon Ichikawa, Florence, 1975.

Mellen, Joan, The Wave at Kenji's Door: Japan through Its Cinema, New York, 1976.

Bock, Audie, Japanese Film Directors, New York, 1978; revised edition, Tokyo, 1985.

Burch, Noël, To the Distant Observer: Form and Meaning in theJapanese Cinema, Berkeley, 1979.

Allyn, John, Kon Ichikawa: A Guide to References and Resources, Boston, 1985.

On ICHIKAWA: articles—

Richie, Donald, "The Several Sides of Kon Ichikawa," in Sight andSound (London), Spring 1966.

Milne, Tom, "The Skull beneath the Skin," in Sight and Sound (London), Autumn 1966.

Tessier, Max, "Kon Ichikawa l'entomologiste," in Jeune Cinéma (Paris), March 1967.

Dewey, Langdon, "Kon Ichikawa," in International Film Guide1970, London, 1969.

"Ichikawa Issue" of Cinema (Los Angeles), no. 2, 1970.

Johnson, W., "Ichikawa and The Wanderers," in Film Comment (New York), September/October 1975.

Gillett, John, "Kon Ichikawa," in Film Dope (London), January 1983.

Oliva, Ljubomír, in Film a Doba (Prague), December 1985.

Schidlow, Joshka, "Découvrir Kon Ichikawa," in Télérama (Paris), 3 August 1994.

Elley, Derek, "47 Ronin (Shijushichinin ni shikaku)," in Variety (New York), 26 September 1994.

Matteuzzi, F., "Fuochi nella pianura: Immagini del tempo," in Cineforum (Bergamo), June 1996.


* * *

Kon Ichikawa is noted for a wry humor that often resembles black comedy, for his grim psychological studies—often of misfits and outsiders—and for the visual beauty of his films. He is noted as one of Japan's foremost cinematic stylists, and has commented, "I began as a painter and I think like one."

His early films show a perverse sense of humor as they reveal human foibles and present an objective view of corruption. In Mr. Pu, a projector breaks down while showing scenes of an atomic explosion. In A Billionaire, a family dies from eating radioactive tuna, leaving only a lazy elder son and a sympathetic tax collector. In The Key, a group of rather selfish, despicable people are poisoned inadvertently by a senile old maid, who becomes the only survivor. The film is a study of an old man who becomes obsessed with sex to compensate for his fears of impotency. He becomes a voyeur, and through the manipulation of the camera, we come to share in this activity. Slowly, however, he emerges as being sympathetic while the other characters are revealed in their true light.

Throughout his career Ichikawa has proven himself a consistent critic of Japanese society, treating such themes as the rebirth of militarism (Mr. Pu), the harshness and inhumanity of military feudalism (Fires on the Plain), the abuse of the individual within the family (Bonchi and Her Brother), as well as familial claustrophobia and the tendency of repression to result in perversion and outbreaks of violence (The Key). His films usually refuse a happy ending, and Ichikawa has been frequently criticized for an unabashed pessimism, bordering on nihilism.

Two of his most important films, Harp of Burma and Fires on the Plain, deal with the tragedies of war. The former concerns a soldier who adopts Buddhist robes and dedicates himself to burying the countless Japanese dead on Burma; the latter is about a group of demoralized soldiers who turn to cannibalism. A third work, Tokyo Olympiad, provided a new approach to sports films, giving as much attention to human emotions and spectator reactions as to athletic feats. Ichikawa is a master of the wide screen and possesses a strong sense of composition, creating enormous depth with his use of diagonal and overhead shots. Often he utilizes black backgrounds to isolate images within the frame, or a form of theatrical lighting, or he blocks out portions of the screen to alter the format and ratio.

Ichikawa remains fascinated with experimental techniques. His excellent use of the freeze frame in Kagi reflects his case study approach to characterization. He has also done much in the way of color experimentation. Kagi is bathed in blues, which bleach skin tones to white, thus creating corpse-like subjects. Her Brother is so filtered that it resembles a black and white print with dull pinks and reds. On most of his films, Ichikawa has used cameramen Kazuo Miyagawa or Setsuo Kobayashi.

After Tokyo Olympiad Ichikawa encountered many studio difficulties. His projects since then include a twenty-six-part serialization of The Tale of Genji and The Wanderers, a parody of gangster films with a nod to Easy Rider, plus a dozen documentaries and fiction features, among which The Inugami Family, a suspense thriller, proved to be the biggest box office success in Japanese film history.

—Patricia Erens

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