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dylanfan-2

Joined Sep 2000
Welcome to the new profile
We're still working on updating some profile features. To see the badges, ratings breakdowns, and polls for this profile, please go to the previous version.

Ratings1.2K

dylanfan-2's rating
Act of Violence
7.49
Act of Violence
No Other Land
8.310
No Other Land
Breakdown
8.09
Breakdown
Rope
7.98
Rope
Double Suicide
7.68
Double Suicide
Gonza the Spearman
7.08
Gonza the Spearman
Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters
7.98
Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters
The Gates of Paris
7.18
The Gates of Paris
Glumov's Diary
5.67
Glumov's Diary
Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat
7.89
Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat
A Complete Unknown
7.48
A Complete Unknown
The Long Good Friday
7.59
The Long Good Friday
The Midnight Sun
8.410
The Midnight Sun
Miyamoto Musashi IV: Duel at Ichijyo-ji Temple
7.28
Miyamoto Musashi IV: Duel at Ichijyo-ji Temple
The Bibi Files
7.510
The Bibi Files
The Strange Monsieur Victor
7.28
The Strange Monsieur Victor
Lady Killer
7.29
Lady Killer
Cabaret
7.89
Cabaret
Il Grido
7.69
Il Grido
13 Assassins
7.48
13 Assassins
The Life and Death of 9413, a Hollywood Extra
7.19
The Life and Death of 9413, a Hollywood Extra
Lancelot of the Lake
6.99
Lancelot of the Lake
Le cercle rouge
7.99
Le cercle rouge
The Leopard
7.99
The Leopard
Chariots of Fire
7.16
Chariots of Fire

Lists1

  • Tonari no Yae-chan (1934)
    The 30 Most Underrated Japanese Movies
    • 30 titles
    • Public
    • Modified Nov 28, 2019

Reviews9

dylanfan-2's rating
Konjiki yasha

Konjiki yasha

6.7
5
  • Sep 15, 2019
  • Lots of great movies were released in Japan in 1954... this ain't one of them

    1954 was, with the possible exception of 1953, the greatest year in the entire history of Japanese cinema. This was the year of, among other extraordinary works: Kurosawa's Seven Samurai; *two* Mizoguchi masterpieces, A Story From Chikamatsu and the great Sansho the Bailiff; two fascinating films by the popular Keisuke Kinoshita, Twenty-Four Eyes and The Garden of Women; the incredibly moving Sound of the Mountain by Mikio Naruse and also his very dark Late Chysanthemums; Heinosuke Gosho's lovely slice-of-life drama An Inn at Osaka... one could go on and on. So why, oh why, did the powers-that-be at the time choose to export to the West this reasonably well-made but otherwise utterly mediocre and lifeless melodrama? This work was reviewed by Bosley Crowther of The New York Times when released in that city in early 1956, and though he praises the film's technical craftsmanship, he rightly called it "emotionally stilted." (He also correctly pointed out that the best thing in it is the performance of Mitsuko Mito, playing a villainous but very human moneylender.) Almost nothing in this film works for me: the over-the-top acting of the "hero," the very limited range of the lead actress, the contrived plotting, the emotional disconnection and, above all, that terrible ending. Eventually, all of the 1954 masterpiece films I mentioned above, and more, made it to Western theaters and computer screens. By all means, check them out, and give Golden Demon a pass.
    Winterfell

    S8.E1Winterfell

    Game of Thrones
    7.6
    8
  • Apr 19, 2019
  • Wherein Arya gets her flirt on, Sansa gets snarky, Jon (finally) gets some knowledge and Bran gets very, very weird

    Himeyuri no tô

    Himeyuri no tô

    7.1
    10
  • Oct 17, 2016
  • A pioneer and heartbreaking antiwar classic

    In the 1950s (in Japan at least), Tadashi Imai was the most honored Japanese film director, winning the coveted annual Kinema Junpo "Best Film" critics award five times. (As far as I know, only the legendary Yasujiro Ozu won it six times; Kurosawa won it only three times.) A Marxist, Imai made socially-conscious films with a strongly humanistic point-of-view, but in no way were his movies (or at least the ones I've seen) "propaganda." In fact, for me, he most strongly resembles the widely beloved Keisuke Kinoshita, with many of the same strengths and faults as that gentleman. Among his virtues are a very strong feeling for story and character and narrative drive, as well as solid pictorial craftsmanship (though this last admittedly is almost a given among Japanese film artists of the period). Among his shortcomings, like Kinoshita, are a tendency towards unrestrained sentimentality, and a related tendency to hammer moral points home.

    Yet, American Japanese film scholars such as Donald Richie and Audie Bock denigrated him (though Richie did admire his 1958 period classic, Night Drum), and even in Japan he is nearly forgotten now. Yet the literary adaptation An Inlet of Muddy Water (1953), the muckraking Darkness at Noon (1956), Night Drum and this film are all first-rate, and highly recommended.

    The tragic poignancy of this war film is that the main "warriors" are all schoolgirls and their teachers, requisitioned by the Japanese State to serve as nurses on the front lines with almost no training. Imai spares us no gruesome detail, including wartime operations (with almost no medical equipment or anesthetic), the constant and often futile search for food and water, children killed in bombings or trapped in avalanches, and the futile courage and self-sacrifice of the girls and most of their elders. Most importantly, this movie has the lovely young Kyoko Kagawa (who's still alive and working today at age 85!) as the leader of the girls. She has an outstanding scene near the end in which she performs a traditional dance on the night before a major battle, which the girls know that most of them will not survive. This antiwar classic is essential! (A version with subtitles is on YouTube under "Himeyuri.")
    See all reviews

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