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Itami Juzo

This article delves into Juzo Itami's career as both an actor and director, exploring the transition in Japanese filmmaking during the 80s. It discusses Itami's notable roles, the collapse of the studio system, and the rise of independent filmmakers. The text also highlights various filmmakers and actors who emerged during this era, showcasing their contributions to the industry.

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Itami Juzo

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  1. Itami Juzo Referentiality and Self-referenciality

  2. Itami’s Career • Itami Juzo was born in 1933 as a son of Mansaku Itamai, who was a prominent film director in the silent age. • At high school he met Oe Kenzaburo, who was to marry Itami’s sister. • Failing to enter University of Osaka, he became a commercial designer, TV reporter, essayist and actor.

  3. Itami’s Career (Actor) Itami became a dependable supporting actor. He also went to the US to be trained as actor at Hollywood. • A crook student in A False Student (1960) by Masumura Yasuzo, based on the novel of Oe. • Son of a factory owner, friend of the protagonist in Younger Brother (1960) by Ichikawa Kon • Col. Chiba in 55 Days at Peking (1963) by Nicholas Ray • Warris in Lord Jim (1965) by Richard Brooks

  4. Itami’s Career (Actor) • Even after he started directing his films, Itami continued to appear as significant supporting actor. • Memorable characterization • Morita Yoshimitsu’s Family Game • Shinoda Masahiro’s McArthur’s Children

  5. Itami’s Career (Actor) • After he started directing films, Itami continued to appear as significant supporting actor. • Memorable characterization

  6. Filmmaking in the 80s • ‘Collapse’ of the studio system / star system in the 1970s. • The studios stopped contracting directors, stars and staff. (1st wave of the collapse) • The studios reduced their own production (2nd wave of the collapse) and shifted their funds to the part-financing of independent film projects and projects of independent production companies.

  7. Filmmaking in the 80s • The studios are owned by the same film companies which own distribution and exhibition companies (film theatres). The film companies came to distribute works of independent filmmakers and independent production companies, and open their film theatres for those works. • Virtually every film became an independent or a part-independent film: every filmmaker became an independent or a part-independent filmmaker

  8. Filmmaking in the 80s • In the era of the Japanese studio system, only those who worked as assistant director could become directors. • With the collapse of the system, the studios stopped having assistant directors under contract. • People with various backgrounds and experiences become film directors. • Amateur filmmakers, film school graduates, employees in the media, commercial makers, video makers, actors, film critics, etc.

  9. Student and amateur filmmakerMorita Yoshimitsu (1950-2011 ) Ishi’i Sogo (1957 - ) Omori Kazuki (1952 - )

  10. Filmmaking in the 80s • Tsukamoto Shinya (1960 - ) • Yamamoto Masashi (1960 - )

  11. Filmmaking in the 80s • TV Commercial director / video clip director • Iwai Shunji (1963 - ) • Ichikawa Jun (1948 -2009 )

  12. Filmmaking in the 80s From television • Kore’eda Kazuhiro (1962 - ) • Nakata Hideo (1961 - )

  13. Filmmaking in the 80s Director of video film (V-cinema) • Mi’ike Takashi (1960 - ) • Kurosawa Kiyoshi (1955 - )

  14. Filmmaking in the 80s • Soft porn film • Suo Masayuki (1956 - ) • Nakahara Shun (1951 - )

  15. Actor / comedian: Hayashi Kaizo (1957 - )Takenaka Naoto (1956 - )Bando Tamasaburo (1950 - )Kitano Takeshi (1947 - )

  16. Itami’s Films • The Funeral (1984) - an old man dies and his funeral is prepared and carried out following the conventions. The film wryly observes what ensues when the age-old ritual is repeated in modern Japan and how modern people react and respond to death.

  17. Itami’s Films • Satire and commedy of mannersa la Jean Renoir • In this family occasion, some secrets and lies are revealed: extra-marital affairs of the dead man and his son-in-low.

  18. Itami’s Films • Tampopo (1985) - a track driver and his assistant walk into a ramen shop and is appalled with the taste of noodle. The driver helps the owner of the shop, the young widow with a little son, create a great noodle shop.

  19. Itami’s Films • Gourmet movies in the mold of spaghetti western. • Drifter (driver - cowboy), good citizen (the owner of the shop - maiden in a bar) - the undesirable (the constructor - outlaw) • George Stevens, Shane (1953)

  20. Itami’s Films • Taxing Woman (1987) - a female tax inspector investigate serious tax evasions and frauds. • Itami went on a through research on these issues and made a film on tax and tax inspector (unglamorous topics) borrowing the framework of detective thriller (glamorous genre).

  21. Itami’s Films • A Taxing Woman Returns (1988) - the tax inspector returns to investigate this time a huge tax evasion by the leader of a religious sect. • Timely social issues of the late 80s - corporate greed, land shark, land bubble, and the collapse of communities are shown in the mold of detective thriller and action film.

  22. Itami’s Films • A-Ge-Man (1990) - Nayoko, a unhappy geisha is an ageman, who brings luck on anybody who is partnered with. She has an affair with an unfaithful company executive. He is protected by Nayoko’s special power in revealing dirty business deals.

  23. Itami’s Films • Minbo: the Gentle Art of Japanese Extortion (1992) - a yakuza group makes a hotel a place for hangout and a target of extortion. A female lawyer unite hotel staff to face up the threats from yakuza thugs and defeat them.

  24. Itami’s Films • Minbo made yakuza look greedy, extremely vulgar, self-indulgent, foolish, dim-witted, and dangerous to themselves and society. • The angered yakuza (three) attacked Itami outside his home and slashed his face. • A social critique in the mold of yakuza film

  25. Itami’s Films • The Last Dance (1993) - a satire on the traditional system and practice of the medicine in Japan, particularly such as informed consent and sharing information with patients.

  26. Itami’s Films • Supermarket Woman (1996) - the owner of a supermarket, which suffers from price-cutting competition from its rival, employ his former classmate housewife for its survival. • Revelation of the back-stage reality of the retailing industry and satire on its business practice.

  27. Itami’s Films • Woman of the Police Protection Program (1997) - an actress witness a murder (a cult group murders a lawyer) and two cops go everywhere with her to protect her from the group’s attempt to gag her. In the end, she gives her evidence at court.

  28. Itami as Auteur • Contemporary social issues, behaviour and manners in Japan: funeral, adultery, culinary boom, economic babble, corporate greed, tax evasion, organized crime (land shark, loan shark, tax evasion, corporatization of yakuza), welfare system, problems in the retail industry, and the protection of witness. • Cynical and satiric representation of the issues. • Frank Capra like social awareness and consciousness.

  29. Itami as Auteur • Make ‘un-cinematic’ events and situations the subject of his film. • Dealing with social and moral issues, films are by no means preachy • Satiric stories are told borrowing the formulae of entertainment film genres - Western, suspense film, detective film, yakuza film, etc.

  30. Itami as Auteur Reference to films of other filmmakers. • Itami as a cine-phile • Telling his own story in a referential framework, quoting and imitating other films.

  31. Itami as Auteur • Itami ‘While continuing to watch films, I accumulated in my mind a number of impressive shots: a wonderful shot of a slope, a wonderful shot of a rainy night, a wonderful shot of people running together, a wonderful shot of a finger touching something, a wonderful shot of a thing moving in the air, a wonderful shot of two people staring each other, etc.’ • Interviewer: ‘Then, you had wanted to make your own film full of such shots?’ • Itami: ‘Yes.’

  32. Itami as Auteur • Carl Theodor Dreyer’s Vampyr (1932) • Itami quotes the mise-en-scène of the vampire coffin in his film Funeral

  33. Itami as Auteur • Ozu Yasujiro’s The End of Summer • At the end of The End of Summer, smoke comes out of a chimney as it does in The Funeral.

  34. Itami as Auteur • George Stevens, Shane (1953) • Tampopo borrows the narrative structure of Shane. Goro walks into arun-down noodle shop owned by a widow with a boy and helps them out as Shane wanders into a farm managed by a widow with a son.

  35. Itami as Auteur • Jean-Luc Godard, A bout de souffle (1959) • The man in a white suit in Tampopo is modelled after Michel Poicard in A bout de souffle and a James Cagney character.http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=Z9ONQLXV1Do

  36. Itami as Auteur • Louis Buñuel’s film, The Discreet Charm of Bourgeoisie • The satire on the hypocritical discreetness of the bourgeoisie is inserted in Tampopo referring to the Buñuel’s film. http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=7Z50Gg_16H4

  37. Itami as Auteur • Chusingura • Taxing Woman and Taxing Woman Returns base their narrative structure on Chusingura. A group of people bring justice to evil doers.

  38. Itami’s Films Self-referentiality of Itami’s films • Refer to itself - refer to filmmaking - film is about filmmaking • Conscious foregrounding of various aspects of filmmaking: what is filmmaking. • E.g. The Funeral, the scene of the making of TV advertisement; a video tape explaining how to put up a funeral; amateur video recording the preparation for funeral.

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