The Kon Ichikawa Story ((Ichikawa Kon monogatari, 2006)

Japan Ponyo Canyon 2 disc DVD edition

(Originaltitel: Ichikawa Kon monogatari, 2006)

Text below written 2018-12-10

 

Detta är Shunji Iwai's (per oktober 2010) senaste regisserade film, om man bortser från hans segment i den internationella mix-episodfilmen
NY I Love You från 2009, och först 2011 kommer hans nya USA producerade alster Vampire.

Shunji Iwai bjuder här på en egensinnig drama-dokumentär om sin vän och favoritregissör, den japanske mästaren Kon Ichikawa, född 1915
och när Iwai gjorde denna hyllning var han still going strong (med sin 2006 nyversion av hans legendariska 70-tals kriminaldrama The Inugami
Family) men Kon avled i februari 2008. Skönt att han fick sig en hyllning innan han tassade vidare till det okända.

Filmen är obskyr förstås då Ichikawa lär vara okänd utom för de mer inbitna filmvetarna och filmen är så vitt jag vet inte utgiven i väst, där Kon
Ichikawa nog är mest känd för sina starka krigsfilmer "The Burmese Harp" och "Fires on the Plain".

Läcker tung japansk utgåva med ett snyggt fodral bestående av kartongcase med 2 böcker och ett texthäfte
anamorfisk widescreen, 2.0 japanskt tal med engelsk text, black & white och color, 83 min. Disc 2 extramaterial UTAN subs, ett långt samtal mellan
Shunji Iwai och vitale över 90 år gamle Kon Ichikawa (ca 45 min för de som behärskar japanska), biografier, trailer, pressvisning med frågor
..............................................................

At the beginning of this documentary and homage Shunji Iwai tell us his favourite film directors are Kon Ichikawa and Yukio Mishima.

When making this film Kon Ichikawa was still alive and surely Iwai prepared this project with long interviews with the old master, and on DVD
disc 2 there's a 45 long interview, or a conversation between Iwai and Ichikawa. Sadly, this talk have no english subtitles, only the documentary
on disc 1 has got subtitles. Also the included Booklet with text and pictures has no english text.

Kon started with animated pictures at Toho Studios in Tokyo and his whole family survived and fled from the atomic bomb in Hiroshima. His
mother and sister were A-bomb victims and witnessed the obliteration of the city, but his mother lived until she was 90 years old and his
sister was over 100 years old when this film was made, so The Ichikawas had genes of steel. His wife Natto wrote his scripts.
Ichikawa on his chain-smoking - "If they can withstand radioactivity, nicotine should be OK"

The documentary is 82 minutes long and done in a slightly experimental way, with white text against black background and Iwai narration,
photos, stop motion photos and with film clips. The film give you a warm-hearted feeling and it's clear that they were friends.

It's a pity that their conversation on disc 2 isn't subtitled as Iwai is one of my favourite film directors and if Ichikawa was Iwai's favourite
director he surely must've given his younger colleague many ideas of how to make films.

 

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