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SEQUENCE:54953
CREATED:20050109T054400Z
DESCRIPTION:This winter quarter, a rare and beautiful treat is coming to Cubberley 
 Auditorium on Wednesday evenings at 7:30pm. Asian Languages will be 
 sponsoring a Tanaka Kinuyo film series of 8 movies, free of charge and open 
 to the general public. These are masterpieces of Japanese cinema, many of 
 them never before screened outside of Japan, and you may never have another 
 chance to see these again. All 35mm prints with English subtitles, these 
 incredible films will be accessible to all movie-lovers.   The movie series 
 features Tanaka Kinuyo, one of the most amazing actresses of all time. Her 
 career is exceptional in its longevity, breadth of genres and depth of 
 character portrayal. She is a major star actress exemplifying Japan during 
 the tumultuous changing times of pre-, during, and post-war Japan through 
 her long career spanning from the 20’s to the 70’s. The following films 
 will be shown, starting on January 12th and on every following Wednesday: 
 Dragnet Girl, Tale of Shunkin, The Army, Ugetsu, The Moon Has Risen, 
 Flowing, Red Beard, and Sandakan 8.   In the 20’s and 30’s, in such 
 movies as the “Dragnet Girl,” Tanaka was a cultural icon for young 
 females as a “modern girl,” representing a new sense of femininity for 
 her fans. With the coming of the war, she fits herself into the 
 nationalistic tones of the wartime era, establishing herself as the ideal 
 wartime heroine, such as the self-sacrificing mother of a young soldier in 
 the patriotic movie, “The Army.” The famous last scene in this movie, 
 though perhaps manipulative, cannot fail to move the audience as a mother 
 holds back her tears and runs after her son as he marches off to war. 
 Amazingly enough, as the war ended and the American occupation began, this 
 beautiful actress who had been the icon of patriotic wife and mother during 
 the war was chosen by the Japanese government as the first public relations 
 delegate from Japan to the United States. In the 1950’s, Tanaka Kinuyo 
 starred in one of the most hauntingly beautiful films ever made, 
 Mizoguchi’s “Ugetsu.” Tanaka as a murdered wife who returns as a 
 ghost to see her husband and child one last time takes the audience to a 
 different world. Tanaka Kinuyo is also the first female director in Japan, 
 her greatest masterpiece being “The Moon Has Risen,” a gentle domestic 
 comedy, directed in collaboration with Ozu.  By focusing on Tanaka Kinuyo, 
 a leading actress of this era starring in many films by the top directors 
 of Japanese cinema, this film series also allows us to sample films by  the 
 famed “great masters” of Japanese cinema: Ozu (Dragnet Girl), Mizoguchi 
 (Ugetsu), Naruse (Flowing), Kinoshita (The Army) and Kurosawa (Red Beard). 
 Shimazu is also a great master of cinema, though not as well-known, and his 
 film “The Tale of Shunkin” offers a beautiful adaptation of a Tanizaki 
 Junichiro novel. The films themselves are hailed as great cinema on an 
 international scale, especially “Flowing” and “Ugetsu,” Tanaka 
 Kinuyo films from the 50’s, recognized as two of the greatest films in 
 world cinema.   Towards the end of her career, Tanaka Kinuyo purposefully 
 sought out fringe productions dealing with counter-culture and 
 controversial topics, such as the movie “Sandakan 8,” directed by Kei 
 Kumai. Kei Kumai is known for other provocative films offering critical 
 looks at Japanese society, and this film won Tanaka Kinuyo the prestigious 
 Golden Bear prize at the Berlin Film Festival. In “Sandakan 8,” Tanaka 
 Kinuyo touchingly portrays the conflicted life of a karayuki-san, Japanese 
 women coerced into prostitution in Southeast Asia during the Japanese 
 occupation.   The film series is a must-see for all; the movies are 
 outstanding on an international level, directed by superb directors, 
 showcasing world-class performances by remarkable actors, especially Tanaka 
 Kinuyo. It is truly a once in a lifetime opportunity to see some of these 
 movies since they are so rarely screened outside of Japan, and a shame to 
 miss it as they are all movies of such incredible caliber, with some of the 
 best actors and directors that world cinema has to offer.  Please go to the 
 following website on this movie series for more detailed information on 
 Tanaka Kinuyo and her films.  
 http://www.stanford.edu/dept/asianlang/events/film/  \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/01/08/54953.php
SUMMARY:Kinuyo Tanaka Film Series
LOCATION:Cubberley Auditorium  School of Education
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/01/08/54953.php
DTSTART:20050113T033000Z
DTEND:20050113T053000Z
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