The Glow of Life

The Glow of Life (生の輝き, Sei no Kagayaki, also known as The Glory of Life) is a Japanese film directed by Norimasa Kaeriyama made in 1918 and released in 1919 by Tenkatsu. It is considered the first in a series of films aimed at reforming and modernizing Japanese cinema.

The Glow of Life
Directed byNorimasa Kaeriyama
Written byNorimasa Kaeriyama
Starring
CinematographyKatsu Ōmori
Distributed byTenkatsu
Release date
  • 1919 (1919)
Running time
4 reels
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Plot

A country girl Teruko falls in love with the aristocrat Yanagisawa. When she once asks him what the meaning of life is, he responds that it is to live freely. Unfortunately, he does that by abandoning her. Teruko tries to commit suicide, but luckily is saved. Yanagisawa returns and apologizes to her.

Cast

Production

Kaeriyama was one of the leaders of the Pure Film Movement, which aimed to reform Japanese cinema by eliminating its theatrical aspects and creating films that obeyed the essence of cinema.[1][2] Kaeriyama was a film critic who worked at the Tenkatsu studio, which allowed him to direct his first film, The Glow of Life, in 1918, but did not release it until 1919.[3] (The same fate befell his second film, The Maid of the Deep Mountain, which was also made in 1918 but not released until 1919 at the same time as The Glow of Life.) He produced The Glow of Life under the rubric of the Motion Picture Art Association and used shingeki actors such as Iyokichi Kondō and Minoru Murata, the latter who later became a prominent film director.[4] The story ended up being rather melodramatic, but its use of a modern script was considered revolutionary.[3] Kaeriyama "attempted to make an integrated use of all the cinematic techniques he knew", but "the result was sometimes derivative and always eclectic".[4] In an era where female roles on screen were still performed by men, Harumi Hanayagi's "was the first billed appearance of a female performer" in Japanese cinema.[5]

Reception

According to the film historian Joanne Bernardi, "reviews and comments were enthusiastic about Kaeriyama's attempt to try something new, but expressed disappointment in the films themselves."[3] The film's potential excited and disappointed young film fans. The director Kajiro Yamamoto wrote that when he first saw it he felt that, "“A film had been made in Japan for the first time. Although there had been moving pictures of shinpa melodramas and ninjutsu pictures, there were as yet no films.… Yet somehow something was missing.… A true film would not be so crude."[3] Still it was an influential film. According to Donald Richie, The Glow of Life "despite its failure to draw a large audience, was considered successful enough that the industry as a whole, scenting future profit, grew more reform-minded."[6]

gollark: <@312031356169224203> <#482370338324348932> is limited to 1 message per 5 minutes, so seriously, what *are* you on about?
gollark: I do wish the internetworking companies would just use some sort of scheme of limited bandwidth with some allowance for short peaks instead of data caps, which would match closer to what the actual constraints are.
gollark: Though over here they're mostly just used on mobile phone connections, not home ones.
gollark: Data caps do kind of work well at getting people to use less *bandwidth* because people don't use their internet connection as much, but they don't actually have some finite amount of internets or something weird like that.
gollark: Though you do need sensible small parties in the first place.

References

  1. Bernardi, Joanne (2001). Writing in Light: The Silent Scenario and the Japanese Pure Film Movement. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-2926-9.
  2. Gerow, Aaron (2010). Visions of Japanese Modernity: Articulations of Cinema, Nation, and Spectatorship, 1895–1925. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-25456-5.
  3. Bernardi, Joanne (1997). "Norimasa Kaeriyama and "The Glory of Life"". Film History. 9 (4): 365–376. JSTOR 3815300.
  4. Anderson, Joseph L.; Richie, Donald (1982). The Japanese Film: Art and Industry. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691007926.
  5. Sharp, Jasper (2011). Historical Dictionary of Japanese Cinema. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810875418.
  6. Richie, Donald (2005). A Hundred Years of Japanese Film: A Concise History, with a Selective Guide to DVDs and Videos. Kodansha International. ISBN 9784770029959.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.