Woman Of The Dunes [1964]
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Wrong running time
Review date: 2008-02-03 Rating: 6 out of 10
Just to point out that the running time listed above is incorrect. The BFI edition is the full uncut version, at 141 minutes PAL speed.
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Reviews
Very goodReview date: 2007-11-08 Rating: 10 out of 10It's a true gem of Japanese cinema based on the Cobo Abe's novel.The problem is that this DVD shouldn't be so expensive,because this is a much shorter version(only 119 min.) than the new version of Criterion(147 min.)."The nail that stands up, must be hammered down."Review date: 2007-08-27 Rating: 10 out of 10Hiroshi Teshigahara may not rank as highly in the echelons of Japanese directors as Ozu or Kurosawa, nevertheless he has produced a classic in Woman of the Dunes.
A professor in search of rare butterflies (what else when the film is concerned with transformation) on the dune coast of Western Japan, misses his transport home and is offered shelter by the local people in the strange sand pit home of a widow. All is fine until he tries to leave, and finds that the villagers have other ideas, for the widow needs help in shifting the sand from her pit, an endless and thankless task, and he is held captive. At first he rails against his captivity, sometimes violently, until he finds a purpose in this case the need to keep sand out of the water butt, and he no longer thinks of escape.
Filmed in 1964 at a time when Japan was undergoing a period of growing discontent, the student riots were only a few years away. The film serves as an excellent metaphor for the problems a rapidly changing society has with maintaining the belief systems of the past, and the alienation found in progress. The professsor at first views the peasants as inferior and in the way of his work, he is the face of the self centred modern Japan. But through his captivity he comes to see the need for conformity and a unity of purpose.
If you are interested in cinema, not just Japanese cinema, then I strongly recommend this film, you will probably read something completely different into the film than I did, therein lies its beauty.A dark study of societyReview date: 2006-12-05 Rating: 8 out of 10A rather intense and at first surreal but the more you examine plausible, film. In essence it deals with a Japanese Porfessor who is trapped by rather cruel villagers whilst on a research trip, once there he is thrown to a woman who lives trapped in a pit.
Thats the bare bones of the plot, but the plot serves to show the cruelty of society and the grotesque lies required by groups to avoid culpability.
Hope that makes sense.
Product Details/Specifications
Director(s):
Recording label: Bfi Video Manufacturer: Bfi VideoEAN: 5035673006450Binding: DVDNumber of items: 1Format: Black & White, Director's Cut, Full Screen, PAL, Release date: 2006-07-31Aspect ratio: 1.33:1Audience rating: Suitable for 15 years and overRegion code: 2Running time: 119 minutesTheatrical release date: 1964Language: English (Subtitled)
Language: Japanese (Original Language)