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Young Person's Guide to Cinema

Introduction by Julian Ross & Chizuru Usui
Screening on Film
  • Young Person’s Guide to Cinema (Seishonen no tameno eiganyumon)

    Directed by Shuji Terayama.
    With Henrikku Morisaki, Masahiro Saito, Sueshi Sasada.
    Japan, 1974, 16mm, color, 3 min.
  • The Reading Machine (Shokenki)

    Directed by Shuji Terayama.
    With Toshihiko Hino, Keiko Niitaka, Takeshi Wakamatsu.
    Japan, 1977, 16mm, color, 22 min.
    Japanese with English subtitles.

In this Borgesian satire on knowledge and technology, bibliophilic desire leads to the construction of a pedal-powered reading machine. Resembling a combination of gymnastic contraption, printing press and early cinematic apparatus, the machine’s purpose remains ambiguous. And like this machine, Terayama’s film connects his work in poetry, motion picture and graphic design by weaving together printed and projected, still and moving images. Alphabetic characters are shuffled across a board game, and costumed characters shuffle through a cityscape to the tune of J. A. Seazer’s imaginative soundtrack. The camera lingers on an image of a man crawling through a screen—a premonitory illustration of Terayama’s interest in rupturing façades, illusion and identity. The final book we see is blank, and the film ends in a funeral dance. Such ambivalence articulates Terayama’s interrogation of written and cinematic language, evident elsewhere in inky strikethroughs (Video Letter) and Brechtian transgressions (Laura).

  • Les chants de Maldoror (Marudororu no uta)

    Directed by Shuji Terayama.
    Japan, 1977, 16mm, color, 27 min.
    Japanese with English subtitles.

A “reading film” of delirious image and text, Les chants de Maldoror takes its title and inspiration from Comte de Lautréamont’s 1869 proto-Surrealist poetic novel which, for instance, describes beauty as the chance encounter of a sewing machine and an umbrella on an operating table. In the novel’s six cantos, a young misanthrope indulges in depraved and destructive acts. Unexpected encounters abound, with turtles and birds joining Terayama’s regular cast of snails and dogs to wander over books and bare torsos. Feverish video processing posterizes, inverts and overlays images that are further colored by sound—pushing the limits of his literary adaptation. Terayama wrote that the only tombstone he wanted was his words, but, as Les chants de Maldoror demonstrates, words need not be confined to carved monuments or bound hardcopies.

  • An Attempt to Describe the Measure of Man (Issunboshi o kijutsusuru kokoromi)

    Directed by Shuji Terayama.
    Japan, 1977, 16mm, color, 19 min.
    Japanese with English subtitles.

Using bluescreen video techniques, Terayama playfully—and with a silent film theatricality—posits a series of postmodern vignettes featuring realities-within-realities as his protagonist attempts some kind of relationship with a nude woman on the screen-within-the-screen. In his struggles to “free” her, he exposes the absurd flimsiness, deceptiveness and mutability of both the cinema experience and our human dimension.

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