alr

Double Suicide
(Shinju ten no Amijima)

Screening on Film
Directed by Masahiro Shinoda.
With Kamatari Fujiwara, Tokie Hidari, Shima Iwashita.
Japan, 1969, 35mm, black & white, 105 min.
Japanese with English subtitles.

Considered Shinoda’s most experimental film, Double Suicide is based on an eighteenth-century puppet-theater drama. The director retained the genre’s central clash between giri (social obligation) and ninjô (personal emotion) while synthesizing a number of contemporary cultural and political elements. The story concerns an obsessive love affair between a wealthy businessman and a beautiful courtesan. Married and with two children, Jihei (Fujiwara) flaunts the dictates of bourgeois morality in pursuing Koharu (Iwashita, in the double role of courtesan and wife). In a Brechtian gesture, Shinoda retains the kurago, the black-clothed puppet handlers traditional to Bunraku theater, as silent witnesses to the unfolding tale. The couple’s tragic fate, visible at the outset in a wrenching image of two lifeless bodies laid side-by-side, captures the moral dimension of the original while bestowing an erotic inflection to this strikingly modern version.

Part of film series

Read more

Toru Takemitsu and the Japanese New Wave

Other film series with this film

Read more

Double Shinoda

Current and upcoming film series

Read more

Melville et Cie.

Read more

Psychedelic Cinema

Read more

Fragments of a Faith Forgotten: The Art of Harry Smith

Read more

The Shochiku Centennial Collection

Read more

António Campos and the Promise of Cinema Novo

Read more
sepia photo of Artie Freedman in silhouette with a video camera at show

Boston Punk Rewound / Unbound. The Arthur Freedman Collection

Read more

The Yugoslav Junction: Film and Internationalism in the SFRY, 1957 – 1988

Read more

From the Jenni Olson Queer Film Collection

Read more
a mausoleum that looks like a miniature Spanish cathedral, next to a variety of others, against an evening sky

The Night Watchman by Natalia Almada