PREVIOUSLY AT FILM FORUM:

NAKADAI YOJIMBO THE VILLAGE VOICE - MEDIA SPONSOR PRESENTED IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE JAPAN FOUNDATION ANA A STAR ALLIANCE MEMBER WITH GENEROUS SUPPORT FORM ASIAN CULTURAL COUNCIL JANUS FILMS

Scene from NAKADAI

FILM FORUM AND JAPAN FOUNDATION are proud to welcome Tatsuya Nakadai to the U.S. for the opening week of the retrospective and related events (see below). Mr. Nakadai will be accompanied by his close friend Teruyo Nogami, right hand of director Akira Kurosawa for almost 50 years and a legend in her own right.

RELATED EVENTS

  • Luncheon in honor of Tatsuya Nakadai at The Players, Gramercy Park, on Friday, June 20 (discount for Film Forum members).
  • Teruyo Nogami and Mr. Nakadai will sign copies of their respective memoirs at the new Kinokuniya bookstore at Bryant Park on Saturday, June 21.
  • Mr. Nakadai and Ms. Nogami will appear at the Freer Gallery (Smithsonian Institution) and the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., on Sunday, June 22.
  • 50 Years with Akira Kurosawa: An Evening with Teruyo Nogami at Japan Society, Wednesday, June 25 at 6:30 p.m.
 

While his magnetically handsome screen persona probably had him, destined for stardom anyway, the career of actor Tatsuya Nakadai (born 1932) skyrocketed: only five years after a blink-of-the-eye walk-through in Seven Samurai, he was carrying Japan’s biggest epic ever, The Human Condition. First known in the West for coming in second in spectacular swordfights with Toshiro Mifune, Nakadai would become a taking-on-all-comers action super-star himself, and eventually Kurosawa’s lead in Kagemusha and Ran. Early on deciding to regularly play against pretty boy typecasting, Nakadai displayed a range that could encompass the melancholy, intense middle-aged avenger of Harakiri; the Steve McQueen-cool detective of High and Low; the pistol-packing proto-yakuza punk of Yojimbo; and the eyeball-rolling psycho in the cult classic Sword of Doom — all within a four-year period. With his starring roles in bona fide classics by Kurosawa and Kobayashi, and multiple leading parts for masters as disparate in style and subject matter as Naruse, Okamoto, Gosha, Teshigahara, Kinoshita, and the late Kon Ichikawa, Nakadai’s career provides a core sample right through the heart of the Golden Age of Japanese Cinema. One of the few Japanese movie stars to attain international fame, at home his electrifying stage presence has made him a theater legend as well — an Eastern Laurence Olivier, memorably starring in, among many others, Hamlet, Othello, Don Quixote, even Driving Miss Daisy. In October 2007, the Japanese government designated him as Bunka Korosha, “a person of distinguished service” to Japanese culture. But, with or without a title, Tatsuya Nakadai has been, for over 50 years, one of the world’s great actors.

Scene from NAKADAI

ここをクリックしてください。
(information in Japanese: requires Adobe Acrobat)

Special thanks to Isao Tsujimoto, Yukiko Ono (Japan Foundation New York); Atsuko Sato, Marie Suzuki, Yusuke Nakashima (Japan Foundation, Tokyo); Ralph Samuelson (Asian Cultural Council); Sarah Finklea, Peter Becker, Brian Belovarac, Fumiko Takagi (Janus Films); Ryo Nagasawa, Kayoko Akabori (Japan Society); Schawn Belston, Caitlin Robertson (Twentieth Century Fox); Adrienne Halpern, Eric Dibernardo (Rialto Pictures); Peggy Parsons (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.); Tom Vick (Freer & Sackler Galleries, Smithsonian Institution); Shozo Watanabe, Masaki “Luigi” Fujiwara, Kenji Sato (Toho International); Yuka Seki, Akiko Takahashi (Kadokawa); Shiori Takata (Toei); Kimiko Matsunaga, Minako Mita, Shuji Sato (Fuji Tv); John Martello; Keiko Kimura; Donald Richie; Michael Jeck; Toshiko Adilman, Catherine Cadou, Reiko Shimada; Teruyo Nogami; and Tatsuya Nakadai.

A very special thanks to Marty Gross for his contribution to this series.

PROGRAMMED BY BRUCE GOLDSTEIN



Click Here to view trailers to select NAKADAI fIlms

Click here to read David Mermelstein's recent article on Nakadai in The Wall Street Journal

Click here to listen to Tatsuya Nakadai's recent interview on WNYC's The Leonard Lopate Show

"JAPAN'S MOST DISTINGUISHED LIVING ACTOR"
– The New York Times
Click here to read complete Times article (June 15, 2008)

"ONE OF THE FINEST ACTORS IN THE WORLD. The strikingly handsome Tatsuya Nakadai has wowed audiences (picture a Japanese Elvis) - and made the ladies swoon - for more than 50 years in films ranging from bloody samurai flicks to romantic heartbreakers. Film Forum celebrates his incredible career!"
– The Village Voice

"Film Forum pays tribute to the venerable leading man's anguished intensity, expansive range, and matinee-idol looks. The 27-film retrospective of one of the most distinguished careers in Japanese cinema is as good a primer on post-war Japanese film as one could ask for."
– The Onion

"Nakadai has a subtlety and depth to match his undeniable cool. His characters relied on a delicacy that made his onscreen presence both obsessed and engrossing. While Nakadai's body language is alternately stoic and fluid, it's his eyes that betray his inner turmoil. [Film Forum] provides a great opportunity to celebrate a performer whose blade could never beat his gaze."
– Simon Abrams, New York Press
Click here to read complete article


"From samurai showdowns to yearning melodramas, Tatsuya Nakadai has been a chameleon of genre, mood, and directorial style. Film Forum's program holds its own, whether as a primer of Japanese classics or as an exciting collection of favorites and rarities for longtime fans."
– Nicolas Rapold, The New York Sun
Click here to read full article

"Meet the Japanese Brando. Once you see Nakadai's best movies of the 1960s and '70s you get why he's a living legend. The Film Forum tribute spans so many trends, themes, and directors that it encompasses the best years and best films of postwar Japanese cinema, one of the art form's high-water marks."
– Andrew O'Hehir, Salon.com
Click here to read complete article

"Dashing and angelically handsome, Tatsuya Nakadai is a screen idol to rival Toshiro Mifune."
– Time Out New York
Click here to read complete article

JUNE 20/21/22 FRI/SAT/SUN

HARAKIRI. © SHOCHIKU CO., LTD.HARAKIRIHARAKIRI

(1962, MASAKI KOBAYASHI) At an Edo clan mansion, ronin Nakadai, so penniless that ritual suicide is the only honorable way out, asks for a haven to commit seppuku, and three named samurai as his seconds. But as retainer Rentaro Mikuni relates the horrific outcome of a similar recent request, each of the seconds call in “sick” — and Nakadai begins to tell his story, leading to a climactic battle that’s “as exciting as any action-movie addict could wish” (Terrence Rafferty, New York Times). Winner, Cannes Jury Prize. Approx. 135 min.
FRI 1:00, 3:35, 6:10*, 9:40
SAT/SUN 1:00, 3:35, 6:10, 8:45
* *LISTEN TO OUR LATEST PODCAST: Q & A with Nakadai (with interpreter Catherine) Cadou (recorded at Film Forum, June 20, 2008)

View the trailer High | Low
REQUIRES QUICKTIME- DOWNLOAD HERE

"Has a steady, hypnotic momentum; Kobayashi wrings as much drama out of facial twitches as he does out of sword fights. He’s helped, immensely, by Nakadai’s molten performance."
– Michael Sragow, The New Yorker

"The venality of official indifference to the Edo era's rampant poverty and starving peasant class is reduced to cowering terror by Nakadai's tomb-toned vocal intonations and horror-hollowed cheeks."
– Chuck Stephens

“Kobayashi’s rebellious sensibility found its parallel in the actor he discovered, Nakadai… [whose] fierce individualism serves Kobayashi’s dissidence. He reveals a range worthy of Marlon Brando.”
– Joan Mellen

“Played with something like demonic self-possession by Nakadai...
The pace is calculated to extract every ounce of suspense.”

– Vernon Young

“Amazing... Stirring, subversive and, beneath its dauntingly severe surfaces, sneakily lyrical. The climactic battle, a brilliantly choreographed dance of rage and exhaustion, is as exciting as any action-movie addict could wish... even at its violent end the movie continues to hover, as it has from its opening scenes, between resignation and cold fury.”
– Terrence Rafferty, The New York Times

"Kobayashi's finest movie. Stark, pessimistic, and coldly beautiful."
– Elliott Stein, The Village Voice

RETURN TO TOP.

JUNE 23/24 MON/TUE

THE FACE OF ANOTHER. © TOHO CO., LTD.THE FACE OF ANOTHERTHE FACE OF ANOTHER

(1966, HIROSHI TESHIGAHARA) As nurse Kyoko Kishida (the woman in Teshigahara’s Woman in the Dunes) ministers, a businessman facially scarred in an industrial fire gets fitted for an amazingly lifelike mask — that leaves him looking exactly like Tatsuya Nakadai! The only problem is, wife Machiko Kyo (Rashomon, Odd Obsession) falls for the handsome stranger, then claims she always knew it was him. The third of four collaborations between Teshigahara and novelist Kobo Abe is an elegantly spooky, erotic, and enigmatic examination of identity. Approx. 124 min.
MON 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30
TUE 3:00, 5:30

View the trailer High | Low
REQUIRES QUICKTIME- DOWNLOAD HERE

"Surely one of the strangest films in the long and strange history of Japanese cinema. And a good indication of Nakadai's range."
– Andrew O'Hehir, Salon.com

“Nakadai’s intense part is an apt metaphor for his acting career: he adopts different looks,
expressive methods, and strategies for presenting himself from one film to the next.”

– Howard Hampton

“Its philosophical focus and thriller-like story overpower the allegory, allowing Teshigahara's eclectic mix of styles and forms to move beyond artiness. The theme is brilliantly and imaginatively explored, and the acting is potent.”
– Jonathan Rosenbaum

“Pure claustrophobia is an intended and brilliantly attained result.” – Donald Richie

RETURN TO TOP.

SPECIAL EVENT! JUNE 24 TUE (SEPARATE ADMISSION)
SOLD OUT online - A very limited number of tickets may be available at box office on day of the event

AN EVENING WITH TATSUYA NAKADAI

TATSUYA NAKADAI. NAKADAI PORTRAIT  © TOBIICHI HIROSEFrom his reputed discovery, by director Masaki Kobayashi, as a 20ish shop clerk, to Kobayashi’s epic The Human Condition, through the Kurosawa classics Yojimbo, Kagemusha and Ran, and his legendary theater performances, Tatsuya Nakadai has been a dominant figure of Japanese stage and screen through six decades. Tonight, we’re honored to welcome this world cinema icon in person for an evening of conversation with guest host Michael Jeck, Japanese film specialist, commentator on Seven Samurai and Throne of Blood DVDs, and longtime co-author of Film Forum repertory calendar notes. Admission $25, $15 for Film Forum members.
8:20 (SOLD OUT online; a very limited number of tickets may be available at box office on day of the event.)

RETURN TO TOP.

JUNE 25/26 WED/THU

SWORD OF DOOM. © TOHO CO., LTD.SWORD OF DOOM

(1966, KIHACHI OKAMOTO) Against the background of the Meiji Restoration, Nakadai, as evil fictional character Ryunosuke Tsukue, carves his way to an incredible climax, going berserk in a burning building filled with enemies. The ultimate in action, boasting three of Okamoto’s superbly staged one-against-all stage fights (one, at night as snow softly falls amid the carnage, with guest star Toshiro Mifune). Approx. 119 min.
WED 1:00, 3:20, 5:40, 8:00, 10:15
THU 1:00, 3:20

NOTE: Return Screening added
11am Saturday, July 5 only

"Okamoto's dark masterpiece is a perfect balance of what makes the samurai subgenre so enjoyable: vicious killers (a truly evil protagonist played by Nakadai), psychological complexity and an action climax set to falling snow that's still a stunner." -
– Time Out New York

"A manga-existential masterwork. Okamoto's master's thesis on whirling dervish nihilism. A saber dance of annihilation... Nakadai's increasingly psychotic swordsman wanders from one eviscerative set piece to another, searching for a punch line that will cap his comedy of existential chaos by literally bringing down the house."
– Chuck Stephens

“Nakadai is memorably psychotic as a hired assassin whose cruelty is only exceeded by his swordsmanship… stands up due to dynamic Scope camerawork and half-a-dozen set pieces, including duels choreographed with chess-like solemnity and an astonishing climax in which the whole wide world seems to turn against the haunted Nakadai.”
Time Out (London)

“Ryunosuke is at once hero and villain, demon and potential bodhisattva,
and Nakadai’s stunning performance incarnates perfectly the paradox at the heart of the character.”

– Geoffrey O’Brien. Click here to read Geoffrey O'Brien's complete essay on Sword of Doom

“Making De Niro’s Travis Bickle look like Richard Simmons, the unearthly Nakadai is psychosis crystallized.”
– Jason Sanders, Pacific Film Archive

"A minimalist miracle. Arguably Nakadai's greatest role as a nihilistic psychopath." – Time Out New York

“A brooding, powerful performance by Nakadai as a bloodthirsty master bladesman gives The Sword of Doom a cutting edge.
A stark, meshed and well-made film... The enveloping evil and doom of an intelligent killer,
a man of consciousness if not of conscience, are superbly conveyed in the strong, alert face and panther flexibility of Nakadai.”

The New York Times

RETURN TO TOP.

JUNE 26 THU (SEPARATE ADMISSION)

ONIMASA

NEW 35mm PRINT!(1982, HIDEO GOSHA) In brutal undercutting of the yakuza genre, 1920s oyabun (gang boss) Nakadai’s decades-long duel with corrupt boss of bosses Tetsuro Tamba begins with his vow to avenge a dog (the sore owner of the loser in a mastiff duel had killed the winner’s entry). Mostly viewed through the eyes of his adopted daughter Masako Natsume (her tag line: “I’m the daughter of the great Onimasa! Don’t mess with me!”), this is as much a character portrait as an action drama, with dewy Ozu star Shima Iwashita memorable as Nakadai’s tough tomato wife. Nominated for ten Japanese Academy Awards and winning for Art Direction. Approx. 146 min.
6:30, 9:15

"Welcome to The Sopranos, yakuza-style." – Time Out New York

RETURN TO TOP.

JUNE 27 FRI

GOYOKIN. © 1969 FUJI TELEVISION NETWORK, INC. AND TOKYO EIGA SHINSHA CO. ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDGOYOKIN

(1969, HIDEO GOSHA) “Swept away by the gods,” an entire village disappears overnight; a Shogunate gold shipment (goyokin) sinks at sea; and feudal retainer Tetsuro Tamba, faced with clan bankruptcy, decides he must take the ultimate step. But when a similar horror looms again, Nakadai must return from self-imposed exile to face both the extinction and the salvation of his clan. With Nakadai (at his most icily relentless) reaching new heights of derring-do, leading up to the final duel in yard-deep snowdrifts, this was a last peak in the genre. Approx. 124 min.
2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30

"This engaging movie's great final battle is among the most cinematically impressive in the genre."
– Elliott Stein, The Village Voice

"Recommended! A high-octane samurai flick."
– Time Out New York

“Glorious Technicolor hell-scroll vistas
and blood-speckled snow bluffs!”

– Chuck Stephens, The Village Voice
“A scintillating, marvelous action movie with breath-catching pictorial beauty.” – Michael Wilmington, LA Times

RETURN TO TOP.

JUNE 28 SAT • EXTRA SUNDAY MATINEE JUNE 29 AT 11AM

YOJIMBO. © TOHO CO., LTD.YOJIMBO

(1961, AKIRA KUROSAWA) Met in a seemingly deserted village by a stray mutt sauntering past with a severed hand in its jaws, unemployed Toshiro Mifune realizes a skilled yojimbo (bodyguard) could sure rake in the ryo in this town. And after checking out the saké merchant’s thugs squaring off against the silk merchant’s goon squad, twice as much, if he hires out to both sides — but then he nearly meets his match in Nakadai’s pistol-waving killer (their confrontations are “like a face-off between John Wayne and Elvis Presley” – Stuart Gailbraith). See the sequel on July 17. Approx. 110 min.
SAT 11:00am, 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40
SUN 11:00am

Click here to listen to TATSUYA NAKADAI DISCUSSING YOJIMBO (in onstage interview at Film Forum, 6/24/08; moderator: Michael Jeck; interpreter: Catherine Cadou)

ADDED 11:00 AM SHOWS
ON SATURDAY & SUNDAY !

"Kurosawa delivers a mix of genre thrills and unrepentant cynicism that, nearly a half-century later, stills feels unmistakably modern."
The Onion AV Club

"THE BEST SAMURAI FILM EVER MADE. Kurosawa's oft-imitated, ultra-sardonic slash ‘em up remains a treasure trove of attitude."
– J. Hoberman

"Nakadai's anachronistic, scarf-wearing, pistol-wielding punk damn near steals this show in this amazing genre gem."
– Time Out New York

“Nakadai essays the part of a flashy young assassin who according to some, 'looks as timid as a rabbit' in order to conceal the savagery of 'a wolf inside' - as if he were some sort of time-out-of-joint chinpira... a gale-force wind sends him through most of the picture.”
– Chuck Stephens

“Irresistible…An elegant, poised, balletic, remorseless, and deeply amusing picture.”
– Donald Richie

“This belongs in that select group of films noirs which are also comedies.”
Time Out London

“A B-movie pulp adventure to the core… and a drop-dead gorgeous picture. Each frame is like a work of art.”Entertainment Weekly

“Kurosawa’s technical mastery, freshness of vision, and dramatic instinct are of the first order.” – Stanley Kauffman

RETURN TO TOP.

JUNE 29/30 SUN/MON

HIGH AND LOWHIGH AND LOW

(1963, AKIRA KUROSAWA) Shoe company exec Toshiro Mifune is in the midst of a mortgage-everything takeover battle when the phone rings with a giant ransom demand for his son — but then in walks... Adapted from an Ed McBain “87th Precinct” novel, this is the ultimate kidnap movie, with Kurosawa at the peak of his filmmaking powers: moral battles rage in a first hour almost totally confined to a single room jammed with distraught family, cynical advisers, and recorder-wielding cops led by super-cool detective Tatsuya Nakadai; the de rigueur money transfer aboard the Shinkansen (bullet train); sweaty police conferences shot in deep focus; a near-invisible drug pass in a jammed dance hall; and the jailhouse interview punctuated by the heaviest steel door closing in film history. Approx. 142 min.
SUN: 1:00, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15
MON: 1:00, 3:45, 9:00

Click here to listen to TATSUYA NAKADAI DISCUSSING HIGH AND LOW (in onstage interview at Film Forum, 6/24/08; moderator: Michael Jeck; interpreter: Catherine Cadou)

"Kurosawa’s policier, transcends its genre and premise and becomes an Olympian urban action movie."
– Michael Sragow, The New Yorker
Click here to read entire review

"The masterpiece of Kurosawa's modern-day movies. A stunning film, the great Japanese director develops an extraordinary visual style within the wide-screen format."
– Elliott Stein, The Village Voice

"Undoubtedly the most complex detective film of all… It contains so many nuances of narrative, photographic technique, and acting,
that it demands seeing far more than once."

– William K. Everson

“Both a superb thriller that never lets up in suspense for a second of its two hours and twenty minutes, and a metaphysical probe of the ambiguities of guilt and innocence that elevates the crime-movie genre to the level of Dostoevsky... Possibly more timely today then when it was made. Steeped in moral anguish and social compassion, it’s one of Kurosawa’s best films.”
– Pacific Film Archive

“Illuminates its world with a wholeness and complexity you rarely see in film. As Akira Kurosawa weaves together character study, social commentary and police procedure, he combines what might have been a whole series of movies for another, lesser director. Nakadai glides through in narrow-lapeled G-man suits, suave, imperturbable and crisply decisive.”
The Washington Post

“Part thriller and part morality play… Spans fascinating Dostoevskian depths.” – Tom Milne, Time Out (London)

RETURN TO TOP.

JUNE 30 MON (SEPARATE ADMISSION)

PORTRAIT OF HELL. © 1969 TOHO CO., LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED;PORTRAIT OF HELL

(1969, SHIRÔ TOYODA) Arrogant, oppressive lord Kinnosuke Nakamura, who wants a mural of Buddhist heaven, gives a conditional okay to the counter offer of obsessive artist Nakadai (who tortures apprentices to fine-tune his portrayals of agony) to portray the hell he sees in the lord’s domain. But there’s a surprise catch in store. Lavishly colorful and stylized adaptation of the story by Ryunosuke Akutagawa, author of Rashomon — with a truly horrific payoff. Music by Yasushi Akutagawa, the author's son. Approx. 95 min.
7:00 ONLY

View the trailer High | Low
REQUIRES QUICKTIME- DOWNLOAD HERE

“A beautiful and eerie medieval parable of the consequences of oppression, conceit and decadence, with breathtakingly gorgeous cinematography and phantasmagorical production design.”
– American Cinematheque

“Both a piercing plea for racial tolerance and a nightmarish allegory of life on earth. Taking stylistic risks to capture the painting’s texture, Toyoda not only generates a sense of evil, but also a fair measure of socio-political indignation.”
Radio Times

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 1 TUE

AGE OF ASSASSINS. © 1967 TOHO CO., LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDAGE OF ASSASSINS

(1967, KIHACHI OKAMOTO) Those killers, led by scrawnily creepy “mad scientist” ex-Nazi Eisei Amamoto keep on coming after slightly nerdy but hard-fighting Nakadai, a goofy pal, and sexy Reiko Dan — what are they after anyway? Why, the lost diamond he’s unknowingly had on him since he was . . . eight!? Cuckoo, but bitingly satirical contemporary chase comedy, with Nakadai’s sputtering, backfiring mini-car providing farcical punctuation, in dazzling b&w Scope from action legend Okamoto. Aka Killer’s Age. Approx. 99 min.
1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40

“Okamoto’s sharp-edged action lampoon compares favorably with such other mod 60s treasures as Petri’s The 10th Victim and Suzuki’s Branded to Kill.”
– American Cinematheque

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 2 WED

I AM A CAT. © 1975 TOHO CO., LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDI AM A CAT

NEW 35mm PRINT!(1975, KON ICHIKAWA) In Ichikawa’s adaptation of Natsume Soseki’s classic comic novel, sad-eyed, turn-of-the-20th-century academic Nakadai (here carefully mustachioed to resemble Soseki himself) philosophizes about life, constantly interrupted by motor-mouthed, pretentious friends, pompous student intellectual-wannabes, and freeloading relatives with romance problems, all narrated by his smart-thoughted cat — who proves to have issues of his own, topped by the most bizarre tragicomic suicide on film. Approx. 115 min.
1:00, 3:15, 5:30, 7:45, 10:00

"Subtle and tender... Ichikawa lays out the crisscrossing romantic intrigues with gentle humor but punctuates them with sudden moments of overwhelming emotion. The long setup culminates in a series of grand, serene insights, which also turn the film's title from a dryly comic refrain to a deeply satisfying, cathartic revelation"
– Richard Brody, The New Yorker Click here to read the full review:

"Wonderful. Taps into an unexpected, hitherto almost completely unsuspected vein of comedy in Nakadai's persona. His performance as this uncomfortable man is spectacularly assured, his familiar wide-eyed amazement deployed cunningly to portray the melancholy befuddlement of the character, the perpetual unwelcome surprise of feeling neither here not there. A deeply funny piece of acting in a movie whose gentle, antic spirit sometimes recalls the inebriated self-reflexiveness of Tristam Shandy."
– Terrence Rafferty, The New York Times

“Has a morbid sense of mischief. Satisfyingly eccentric even at its most absurd.” – Janet Maslin, The New York Times

“A comically misanthropic portrait. The feline aspects are fun.” Time Out (London)

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 3 THU

WHEN A WOMAN ASCENDS THE STAIRSWHEN A WOMAN ASCENDS THE STAIRS

(1960, MIKIO NARUSE) Just-turned-thirty widow Hideko Takamine works as a bar hostess in an exclusive Ginza nightclub, remaining high-minded while dreaming of opening her own place, as round-heeled colleagues cash in and her skirt-chasing manager Nakadai cheers her on while admiring her from afar, amid suicides, her own ulcers, and marriage proposals. Approx. 111 min.
1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40

Click here to listen to TATSUYA NAKADAI DISCUSSING WHEN A WOMAN ASCENDS THE STAIRS (in onstage interview at Film Forum, 6/24/08; moderator: Michael Jeck; interpreter: Catherine Cadou)

Click here to read Chris Fujiwara's article on Nakadai and director Mikio Naruse

“The supreme triumph of Scope filmmaking.”
– Chris Fujiwara, Film Comment

“An elegant essay in black and white CinemaScope and tinkling cocktail jazz… could give heartbreak lessons to Fassbinder and Sirk.”
– J. Hoberman, The Village Voice

“Fascinating as social study, painstakingly assured as storytelling, this compares with All That Heaven Allows. A new classic.”
Time Out (London)

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 4 FRI • EXTRA SUNDAY MATINEE JULY 6 AT 11AM

BLACK RIVER © SHOCHIKU CO., LTDBLACK RIVER

(1957, MASAKI KOBAYASHI) Amid the bars, brothels, pachinko parlors, souvenir stands, and noodle shops around a U.S. base, engineering student Fumio Watanabe plunges right into triangle drama when his search for a cheap room leads to a dive run by Isuzu Yamada (Throne of Blood’s “Lady Macbeth”): waitress Ineko Arima is also pursued by aggressive, sun-glassed gangster Nakadai, secretly on assignment from a wheeler-dealer to drive out Yamada’s boarders. Searing portrait of the unchecked corruption around U.S. bases in Japan, with memorable final sequence in the rain, and Nakadai’s first, dynamic, starring role. Approx. 114 min.
FRI: 1:00, 3:15, 5:30, 7:45, 10:00
SUN: 11:00AM

Added 11:00AM Show
on Sunday, July 6!

Click here to listen to TATSUYA NAKADAI DISCUSSING BLACK RIVER (in onstage interview at Film Forum, 6/24/08; moderator: Michael Jeck; interpreter: Catherine Cadou)

"A very rare pungent lower-depths kind of social melodrama." – Terrence Rafferty, The New York Times

“Nakadai is convincingly scary in one of his earliest roles. Gripping from beginning to end.”
American Cinematheque

RETURN TO TOP.

SATURDAY, JULY 5 MATINEE

SWORD OF DOOM. © TOHO CO., LTD.SWORD OF DOOM

(1966, KIHACHI OKAMOTO) Against the background of the Meiji Restoration, Nakadai, as evil fictional character Ryunosuke Tsukue, carves his way to an incredible climax, going berserk in a burning building filled with enemies. The ultimate in action, boasting three of Okamoto’s superbly staged one-against-all stage fights (one, at night as snow softly falls amid the carnage, with guest star Toshiro Mifune). Approx. 119 min.
11:00AM

NOTE: Return Screening added
11:00AM Saturday, July 5 only

"Okamoto's dark masterpiece is a perfect balance of what makes the samurai subgenre so enjoyable: vicious killers (a truly evil protagonist played by Nakadai), psychological complexity and an action climax set to falling snow that's still a stunner." -
– Time Out New York

"A manga-existential masterwork. Okamoto's master's thesis on whirling dervish nihilism. A saber dance of annihilation... Nakadai's increasingly psychotic swordsman wanders from one eviscerative set piece to another, searching for a punch line that will cap his comedy of existential chaos by literally bringing down the house."
– Chuck Stephens

“Nakadai is memorably psychotic as a hired assassin whose cruelty is only exceeded by his swordsmanship… stands up due to dynamic Scope camerawork and half-a-dozen set pieces, including duels choreographed with chess-like solemnity and an astonishing climax in which the whole wide world seems to turn against the haunted Nakadai.”
Time Out (London)

“Ryunosuke is at once hero and villain, demon and potential bodhisattva,
and Nakadai’s stunning performance incarnates perfectly the paradox at the heart of the character.”

– Geoffrey O’Brien. Click here to read Geoffrey O'Brien's complete essay on Sword of Doom

“Making De Niro’s Travis Bickle look like Richard Simmons, the unearthly Nakadai is psychosis crystallized.”
– Jason Sanders, Pacific Film Archive

"A minimalist miracle. Arguably Nakadai's greatest role as a nihilistic psychopath." – Time Out New York

“A brooding, powerful performance by Nakadai as a bloodthirsty master bladesman gives The Sword of Doom a cutting edge.
A stark, meshed and well-made film... The enveloping evil and doom of an intelligent killer,
a man of consciousness if not of conscience, are superbly conveyed in the strong, alert face and panther flexibility of Nakadai.”

The New York Times

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 5 SAT

SAMURAI REBELLION. © TOHO CO., LTD.SAMURAI REBELLION

(1967, MASAKI KOBAYASHI) In a time of peace under the shogunate, faithful retainer Toshiro Mifune tests swords on straw dummies and always plays it his Lordship’s way, even when the lord decides to unload mistress Yoko Tsukasa (Yojimbo) on Mifune’s son. But when the lord’s eldest son dies, Tsukasa’s first child suddenly becomes heir, and the lord wants her back. The incredibly built-up tension is orgasmically released in Mifune’s most dramatically powerful one-against-all fight, and in the final sequence, as Mifune squares off with very reluctant buddy Nakadai (“As exciting as any duel ever put on film.” – David Shipman). Winner, Kinema Jumpo Award for Best Japanese film of 1967. Approx. 121 min.
2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30

View the trailer High | Low
REQUIRES QUICKTIME- DOWNLOAD HERE

Click here for more information about SAMURAI REBELLION

"The tension builds slowly until all hell breaks loose... The final duel between Mifune and Nakadai is as exciting as any ever put on film."
– David Shipman

"Travis Bickle, the ticking time bomb of Taxi Driver, might well recognize the profoundly alienated warrior heroes of Kobayshi's picture."
– Terrence Rafferty, The New York Times

“As extreme a samurai film as I've seen in both senses (the ethics and the violence), and one of the best." – Roger Ebert

“Kobayashi's stately yet subversive epic. Equal shares of exhilaration and heartbreak.” – Michael Sragow, The New Yorker

Samurai Rebellion distinguishes itself as not only impressively intellectual...but refreshingly feminist. You want to stand up and cheer!”
– Joshua Rothkopf, Time Out New York

“With crystal clarity and every word counting, it states a case for human justice… when the murderous showdown comes, and come it does, the slaughter not only underscores the hero’s bravery but also opens up the story on several philosophical levels… it will haunt you.”
The New York Times

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 6/7 SUN/MON

KAGEMUSHAKAGEMUSHA

NEW 35mm PRINT!(1980, AKIRA KUROSAWA) ... or The Shadow Warrior. An epic evocation of 16th century Japan, as well as an ironic tale of loyalty and illusion, with thief-turned-double Tatsuya Nakadai first taking the place of a dying lord (also Nakadai), then getting to like the part. Featuring an incredible minutes-long opening scene with both Nakadais on screen without a visible cut or splice; some of the greatest battle sequences ever put on the screen — and an overwhelming final scene. Kurosawa’s triumphant return to Japanese filmmaking after a decade-long absence. Approx. 159 min.
SUN 1:30, 4:30, 7:30
MON 1:30, 4:30

"KUROSAWA'S DARK MASTERPIECE."
– Time Out New York

"The walrus-whiskered Nakadai's confusion results in one of the most unsettling performances he'd ever give."
– Chuck Stephens

“Kurosawa’s most physically elaborate, most awesome film. Majestic, stately, cool, and in many of its details, almost abstract.”
– Vincent Canby, The New York Times
“A sweeping epic of the times of clan wars in 16th century Japan... Tatsuya Nakadai is extraordinary..."
Variety

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 7 MON (SEPARATE ADMISSION)

SOLAR ECLIPSE

(1975, SATSUO YAMAMOTO) How to bankroll an epic 1964 battle for the Prime Ministership? Why, hit up dentally-challenged old school moneylender Jukichi Uno for a mammoth loan, then pay it off with a kickback-stoked sweetheart deal to build a gigantic river dam. No problem for cold-blooded Cabinet Secretary Nakadai — except for the resentment of the crafty Uno and the scandal-mongering of Rentaro Mikuni. Based on the actual Kuzuryu Dam Case, from ace muckraker Yamamoto (The Family, The Corporation, etc.). Approx. 155 min.
7:30 ONLY

"Nakadai makes for a persuasive political snake in this drama torn right from Japan's headlines." – Time Out New York

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 8 TUE

TENCHU (HITOKIRI)

(1969, HIDEO GOSHA) Meiji Restoration historical drama, with anti-shogunate bigwig Nakadai playing star assassin Shintaro (Zatoichi) Katsu for a sucker until he realizes that, if he can’t save himself, he can take evil with him. A personal favorite of Nakadai’s and containing perhaps Katsu’s finest serious performance, this is Gosha’s action-packed masterpiece, with a last scene shock effect guaranteed to straighten you in your seat. And with the real Yukio Mishima, in a magnetic cameo, a year before his real-life seppuku. Approx. 140 min.
1:20, 4:00, 6:40, 9:20

"Recommended. Another ruthless villain, another Nakadai scene-stealing opportunity... An extremely rare public showing!"
– Time Out New York

“One of the most penetrating and intense films Japan or any nation has produced in the last two decades.” – Alain Silver

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 9 WED

UNTAMED

NEW 35mm PRINT!(1957, MIKIO NARUSE) It’s not a man’s world for iron-willed Hideko Takamine in this adaptation from Shusei Tokuda’s 1915 classic, a rare period film from the great Naruse. Arranged marriage — forget it! Problem with eventual merchant husband — goodbye! And then, after even her brother lets her down, the unthinkable in that time and place — Takamine opens her own business! Powerful, indomitable character portrait by Takamine, with Nakadai’s memorable guest star performance earning him the “Rookie of the Year” award. Approx. 121 min.
2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30

Click here to read Chris Fujiwara's article on Nakadai and director Mikio Naruse

"Superb. Naruse pushes the other-woman theme to an extreme of clarity and tension in a film
that reverses cinematic clichés about 'strong, independent women'."

– Chris Fujiwara, Film Comment

"A testament to Naruse's superior talent."All Movie Guide

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 10 THU

IMMORTAL LOVE © SHOCHIKU CO., LTDIMMORTAL LOVE

NEW 35mm PRINT!(1961, KEISUKE KINOSHITA) 1932, and Hideko Takamine, with fiancé Keiji Sada fighting in China, is raped, then forced into marriage with landowner’s son Nakadai; and in four more chapters over three decades, children of the Takamine/Nakadai and resulting Sada/Nobuko Otowa (Onibaba) unions find love. But there’s one condition. Striking b&w Tohoscope photography of Mount Aso locations highlight a complex, bitter and sweet family relation saga. Approx. 103 min.
1:10, 3:15, 5:20, 7:25, 9:30

"Endowed with understanding, characters of depth and complexity, and good direction."
All Movie Guide

“In Kinoshita’s hands, the classic subject takes on a profound, even modern resonance as he invests melodrama with sharp insights into the economics of the human condition and compassion for woman’s place within this structure.”
– Pacific Film Archive

“By the 1960s... largely due to the decline of the old bourgeoisie after 1945, [the poor girl/rich boy] theme was suddenly behind the times, and Kinoshita's Immortal Love was its last masterpiece"
– Tadao Sato, Currents in Japanese Cinema

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 11/12 FRI/SAT

RAN. ©STUDIOCANALRAN

(1985, AKIRA KUROSAWA) A giant battle fought solely to music, culminating in a single gunshot; an entire castle burnt to the ground, as Nakadai’s glassy-eyed lord staggers down steep stone steps; an ice-cold seducer stopping in mid-embrace to kill a bug: Kurosawa’s adaptation of King Lear proved the master’s flair for epic sweep and stylistic innovation undimmed at age 75. “What I asked of him [Nakadai] — and which he accomplished successfully — was the passage from folly to reason. One of the most difficult scenes was where he begins to go mad as burning arrows fly behind him. No other actor could have done that. You’d need to have great mastery of yourself to act as he acted.” – Kurosawa. Approx. 161 min.
1:30, 4:30, 7:30

View Trailer1: High | Low
Trailer2: High | Low
REQUIRES QUICKTIME- DOWNLOAD HERE

"If you haven't never seen this movie on a big screen, prepare yourself for a refresher course on the meaning of majesty.
An experience of beauty. Nakadai's performance is a stunner."

– Time Out New York

"Nakadai's eyes are as big as Bette Davis and about as expressive, and no one who has seen him as Hidetora [in Ran]
will soon forget what they look like, huge with horror, as the mad lord descends the steps of his burning castle."

– Terrence Rafferty, The New York Times

“Nakadai’s greater fragility and good looks fit the sense of tenuousness and impermanence that the film everywhere projects.”
– Michael Wilmington

“Almost a religious experience - an epiphany. Ran stands above all other movies with implacable presence of force of nature…a masterpiece, it stands outside time.”
– Vincent Canby, The New York Times

“A Lear for our age, and for all time. The shift and sway of a nation divided is vast, the chaos terrible, the battle scenes the most ghastly ever filmed, and the outcome is even bleaker than Shakespeare's. Indeed the only note of optimism resides in the nobility of the film itself: a huge, tormented canvas, in which Kurosawa even contrives to command the elements to obey his vision. The results are all that one could possibly dream of.”
Time Out (London)

“Has its own ornery splendor—perhaps the biggest piece of conceptual art ever made.”
– Pauline Kael

“Brisk and vital, elegiac and contemplative, intimate and epic, tragic yet shot through with humor. It combines the energy of youth with the perspective of maturity..."
– Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 13 SUN

KWAIDAN

KWAIDAN © TOHO CO., LTD.(1964, MASAKI KOBAYASHI) Rentaro Mikuni finds a skeleton at the feast when he adds a second wife; woodcutter Nakadai meets a strange woman in the snow, but he’s got to keep it a secret; a blind biwa player must give a command performance for a ghost; Kanemon Nakamura sees an apparition in a cup of tea: four ghost stories by expatriate Lafcadio Hearn. Kobayashi’s first, practically hand-crafted, color film (he painted the sets himself), with eerie Toru Takemitsu electronic score and the totally studio-created naval battle of Dannoura particular highlights. Approx. 164 min.
1:20, 4:30, 7:45

View the trailer High | Low
REQUIRES QUICKTIME- DOWNLOAD HERE

"The Rosetta stone of Japanese horror: four supernatural tales, each one creepier than the last." – Time Out New York

“A horror picture with an extraordinarily delicate and sensuous quality. A symphony of sound that is truly past compare.”
– Bosley Crowther, The New York Times

“Four stories transcribed for all their aesthetic worth. Gorgeous pageant-like entertainment.” – Donald Richie

“The poetic expressiveness of Kwaidan is said to be unmatched in all of Japanese cinema; breathtakingly photographed on handpainted sets, the film is at once a Japanese miniature writ large, and an abstract wash of luminescent colors that seem to come from another world.”
– Pacific Film Archive

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 14 MON

ODD OBSESSION.© KADOKAWA-DAIEI PICTURES, INC.ODD OBSESSION

NEW 35mm PRINT!(1959, KON ICHIKAWA) A bad case of E.D. for antiquity maven Ganjiro Nakamura — bad enough, but then he’s married to traditional but super-sensual Machiko Kyo (Rashomon). Maybe if he can get his handsome doctor Nakadai (who opens the film with a smug direct-to-the-audience lecture on the problems of aging) to make love to her while he spectates, jealousy will get the old fires burning. Black comic adaptation of Junichiro Tanizaki’s scandalous classic Kagi (The Key). Approx. 107 min.
1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40

“Perverse in the best sense of the word. . . I don’t think I’ve ever seen a movie that gave such a feeling of flesh.”
– Pauline Kael
“Erotic obsession is presented with such near-claustrophobic intensity that one longs for outdoor scenes,
anything to get away from that dark and keyholed and magnificently photographed house.”

– Donald Richie

“An ironic, claustrophobic, and intensely beautiful study of erotic obsession.”World Film Directors

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 15/16 TUE/WED

KILL! © TOHO CO., LTD.KILL!

(1968, KIHACHI OKAMOTO) “Kill all samurai!” Corrupt officials square off against idealistic young retainers, dropout samurai pacifist Nakadai keeps it cool, and the ensuing mass fights, nonstop scheming, mountain sieges, last-minute rescues, and final showdown — here a duel with darts in a closet-sized room — proceed at machine-gun tempo. An obstacle course for the logically minded until a single incident near the halfway point, where everything almost magically falls into place; but that’s part of Okamoto’s skillful combination of violence and hilarity — amidst all the carnage, it begins and ends with Nakadai hungrily pursuing a chicken. Adapted from the same novel as Sanjuro (see July 17). Approx. 115 min.
TUE 1:00, 3:15, 5:30, 7:45, 10:00
WED 1:00, 3:15, 5:30

View the trailer High | Low
REQUIRES QUICKTIME- DOWNLOAD HERE

“An anarchically exhilarating and archly self-skewering 1968 swordplay classic. Nakadai evinces alternately scurvied insouciance and Silver Surfer-like existential interiority."
– Chuck Stephens, The Village Voice
“Bluntly absurdist and starring the sloe-eyed genre favorite, Tatsuya Nakadai.” – Dave Kehr, The New York Times

“Kerouac meets Kurosawa in this joyfully anarchic samurai send-up, filled with the usual narrative flourishes but flavored with a delightfully sixties-style counterculture cool. Sullying that impeccably samurai ideal with some much-needed grime and a couple of spits in the eye, Kill! Is unbridled, utterly improper fun.”
– Jason Sanders, Pacific Film Archive

RETURN TO TOP.

JULY 16 WED (SEPARATE ADMISSION)

CONFLAGRATION - © KADOKAWA-DAIEI PICTURESCONFLAGRATION

(1958, KON ICHIKAWA) Buddhist acolyte Raizo Ichikawa (Japan’s James Dean in a change of pace character part), afflicted with a stutter and obsessed with beauty, is continually repelled by the corruption of the world — exemplified by his cynical club-footed friend Nakadai (“a bravura performance” – Dennis Washburn) — until he is finally impelled to destroy the thing he loves best. Adaptation of Yukio Mishima’s novel Temple of the Golden Pavillion, based on a real incident. Striking b&w Scope photography by the great Kazuo Miyagawa (Rashomon, Yojimbo) makes it a visual feast. Aka Enjo and Flame of Torment (!). Approx. 99 min.
7:45, 9:45

"Ichikawa's mature style emerged with this brilliant adaptation of Mishima's novel. A visual tour de force, the picture's widescreen cinematography by Kazuo Miyagawa, Japan's greatest cameraman, is miraculous."
– Elliott Stein, Village Voice

"A mournful masterpiece. A nightmare of wounded adolescence but Ichikawa splashes the sombre tale with knowing satire and erotic humor."
– Michael Sragow, The New Yorker. Click here to read the entire review

“This dignified, purposeful film is often touching as a case history of doomed innocence at bay. But its coils of compromise and corruption are even more credible and haunting…in his exceptionally well-written role, Tatsuya Nakadai is splendid.”
– Howard Thompson, The New York Times

“Leaves the audience dangling exquisitely between understanding and outright horror.”
Time Out (London)
“Ichikawa's use of theatrical lighting changes to mark the shifts in time is masterful, and the powerful yet delicately composed black-and-white 'Scope cinematography by Kazuo Miyagawa (who also shot Sansho the Bailiff) is reason enough to see this film.”
– Jonathan Rosenbaum

RETURN TO TOP.


JULY 17 THU

SANJUROSANJURO

(1962, AKIRA KUROSAWA) In a secluded temple, a group of painfully sincere young samurai meet in secret to plan how to save the day in their clan’s power struggle — then they hear this yawn. It’s Toshiro Mifune, repeating his role (with variations) as Sanjuro, grudgingly proceeding to straighten out, bail out, and shock the straight arrows. Nakadai, resurrected from Yojimbo (it’s a different character), is an even more formidable antagonist; his showdown with Mifune comes to a conclusion startling even to the actor: Kurosawa had a never-before-used special effect up his sleeve. Approx. 96 min.
1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30


ARTICLE BY BRUCE BENNETT IN NEW YORK SUN ABOUT LEGENDARY FINAL SCENE OF SANJURO
(NOTE: CONTAINS MAJOR SPOILER!)

Click here to listen to TATSUYA NAKADAI DISCUSSING SANJURO NOTE: MAY CONTAIN SPOILER! (in onstage interview at Film Forum, 6/24/08; moderator: Michael Jeck; interpreter: Catherine Cadou)

"Nakadai's steely efficiency and ossified air of authority render him entirely unrecognizable from the earlier role (Yojimbo)...
his demise remains the single greatest money shot that sexually inexplicit cinema has ever seen."

– Chuck Stephens

“Uproarious… Kurosawa plays most of it for laughs by expertly parodying the conventions of Japanese period action movies, but the tone switches to a magnificent vehemence in the heart-stopping finale.”
Time Out (London)

“A kind of sequel to Yojimbo, and just as good. There are many funny parodies of the ordinary period film and a most impressive blood-letting finale.”
– Donald Richie

RETURN TO TOP.

RETURNING APRIL 8 to April 16, 2009!

THE HUMAN CONDITION

Click here for full details and schedule

RETURN TO TOP.