On the Road
1964/ B&W / 35mm / 54 min
Production Company: Toyo Cinema
Producers: Makino Masammi, Kurahashi Kiyoshi, Marumo Takashi
Director: Tsuchimoto Noriaki
Script: Kusunoki Tokuo
Photography: Suzuki Tatsuo
Music: Miki Minoru
Screen
03/26 19 :30 1 hall
03/23 21: 20 2 hall
Tokyo in 1963 during the middle of high economic growth, when city maintenance construction was proceeding at a fast pitch. This is a record of the city and its troubles according to a taxi driver on the road. While the realism of Kamei Fumio played the lead in the 1950s, this film became the detonator for a decisive revolution opening up new horizons for documentary film in the 1960s. The magnificence of Suzuki Tatsuo’s 35mm photography surprised everyone, becoming the standard for later cameramen.
TSUCHIMOTO Noriaki
Born in 1928 in Gifu Prefecture and moved to Tokyo in his third year of grade school. In 1946, he entered Waseda University and joined the Communist Party. In 1952, aiming bring about armed revolt, he went as a member of Mountain Village Underground Activists to Mt. Ogawa but got arrested. He joined the Japan/China Friendship Society in 1954. Through the introduction of his neighbor, Yoshino Seiji, a member of the board at Iwanami Productions, he entered the company in 1956, but turned freelance in 1957 and worked mainly on Hani Susumu’s films. In 1961, he helped establish the “Ao no Kai” with members of the production and technical staff. Initially producing television documentaries, his maiden effort as a director was An Engineer’s Assistant (“Aru kikan joshi”, 1962). After that he did Document: On the Road (“Dokyumento rojo”, 1963) and Chua Swee Lin, Exchange Student (“Ryugakusei Chua Sui Riwn”, 1965), opening up his own documentary world. His Pre-Partisan (“Paruchizan zenshi”, 1969) for Ogawa Productions faced the end of the student movement, and with Minamata: The Victims and Their World (“Minamata: Kanjasan to sono sekai”, 1971), he made the first in a long series of films dealing with Minamata. Works like his Afghan Spring (“Yomigaeru karezu”, 1989 screened at YIDFF '89) continued to make statements on behalf of the weak. For an exhibition called the “Minamata-Tokyo Exhibition”, he spent a year in Minamata collecting the photographs of deceased victims, which record was compiled in his most recent video, Minamata Diary -- Visiting Resurrected Souls (2004). He has also self-produced videos Traces -- The Kabul Museum 1988 (2003), a precious record of the Afghanistan museum that was later destroyed in the war. Another Afghanistan -- Kabul Diary 1985 (2003) also is recompiled from his footage from 1985. His recent publications include Nevertheless, Okhotsk Sea of Fate (Kage Shobo). |