a black and white image of a Japanese man in a hat looking at two other disheveled peoplealr

The Sun’s Burial
(Taiyo no hakaba)

Screening on Film
Vintage Print
Directed by Oshima Nagisa.
With Honoo Kayoko, Sasaki Isao, Tsugawa Masahiko.
Japan, 1960, 35mm, color, 87 min.
Japanese with English subtitles.
Print source: HFA

Assigned to make a topical youth film, Oshima produced an intense, theatrically inflected study of Osaka criminal gangs that, like the films of Pasolini, finds both dignity and cruelty in the violent world of the criminal proletariat. Oshima uses a fragmentary narrative structure to interweave multiple stories of petty criminality and prostitution into a brutal typology of the underworld emerging in Japan’s war-scarred slums. The Sun’s Burial is tempered by the unusual beauty of its mise-en-scène and the choreographed long takes that follow the rhythmic rise and fall of a symbolically overripe sun which casts an unnatural glow over the film. A vintage 35mm US release print from the Harvard Film Archive Collection will be screened

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