Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Masahiro Shinoda

 
Director: Masahiro Shinoda
  • Born: Mar 09, 1931 in Gifu Prefecture, Japan
  • Occupation: Director, Writer, Actor
  • Active: '60s-'70s, '90s
  • Major Genres: Drama
  • Career Highlights: Double Suicide, With Beauty and Sorrow, Pale Flower
  • First Major Screen Credit: Youth in Fury (1960)

Biography

Masahiro Shinoda is one of the most prominent filmmakers of the Japanese New Wave, along with Nagisa Oshima and Shohei Imamura. While Oshima's films were often a venue for political provocation and Imamura's work seemed to be a bawdy refutation of Yasujiro Ozu's refined passivity, Shinoda's movies detail the spiritual emptiness of post-war Japanese life and search for some essence of the Japanese character.

Shinoda was born into one of the most illustrious families in central Gifu Prefecture in 1931. His ancestors were large landowners and village leaders of a small town that is now part of Gifu City. They also had a long literary and cultural heritage. His great uncle was the model for the main character in one of Toson Shimazaki's novels, and Shinoda's cousin is one of Japan's leading abstract calligraphers. As a child, Shinoda was studious, applying himself to mathematics and physics; but by the end of World War II, he experienced the same sort of bitter disillusionment as many of his generation. Shinoda came to view the cold rationality of science as instrumental in Japan's ability to wage the war. Later, Shinoda entered Waseda University and was one of only three students enrolled in its theatre history program. There he studied under some of the most renowned experts in such traditional Japanese forms of drama as Noh, Kabuki, and Bunraku (puppet theatre). As he continued to study, he felt a passionate need to understand what quirk in the Japanese character lead to the disaster of the Second World War.

In 1953, Shinoda was forced to withdraw from university after his mother died. Though his family had a distinguished lineage, its financial status was depleted after the war, and he had to find work. In desperation, he took and passed the Shochiku studios entrance exam and soon became an assistant director. After the financial success of Oshima's Town of Love and Hope (1959), Shinoda was given permission to write and direct his first film. The result was One Way Ticket for Love (1960), which proved to be a box office failure, and Shinoda soon found himself in the assistant director's chair again; this did not last long, though. The critical and commercial success of Oshima's shockingly bleak Cruel Story of Youth (1960) both strengthened Shochiku's willingness to take risks on young directors and heralded the beginning of the Japanese New Wave. Shinoda's first success occurred not long afterwards, when he teamed up with poet (and later, filmmaker) Shuji Terayama to create Youth in Fury (1960). Shinoda's films are populated with people who passionately, irrationally sacrifice themselves for love and beauty, be it the nihilist gangster who risks jail for a beautiful young thrill-seeker in Pale Flower (1963), the jealous apprentice consumed with love for her painting teacher in With Beauty and Sorrow (1965), or the lovers who choose death over separation in Double Suicide. In a manner akin to the films of Kenji Mizoguchi, Shinoda presents this self-destruction with a sense of unavoidable fate; his protagonists are unwilling or unable to break themselves from the spiral towards the abyss, their respective journeys accentuated by the filmmaker's bold experimentation with narrative and visuals. This fusion of traditional plot elements with a challenging formal style is best exemplified in his masterpiece Double Suicide, which reworked a classic Bunraku play into a modernist work of art. The black-clothed stagehands that animate the dolls in traditional Puppet Theatre are recast here as agents of fate manipulating the film's characters towards their inevitable bloody end. Since then, Shinoda has made a number of well-received films including Himiko (1974), MacArthur's Children (1984), and Sharaku (1995). Shinoda's wife, actress Shima Iwashita, appears in many of his films. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Masahiro Shinoda
Top
Masahiro Shinoda
Born March 9, 1931 (1931-03-09) (age 78)
Gifu, Gifu, Japan
Occupation Film director and screenwriter.

Masahiro Shinoda (篠田 正浩 Shinoda Masahiro?, born March 9, 1931 in Gifu, Gifu, Japan) is a Japanese film director, married to the actress Shima Iwashita. He retired from directing after making the historical epic Spy Sorge.

Filmography

  1. One-Way Ticket for Love (恋の片道切符) (1960)
  2. Kawaita mizûmi (乾いた湖) (Dry Lake) (1960)
  3. My Face Red in the Sunset (夕陽に赤い俺の顔) (1961)
  4. わが恋の旅路 (The Path of Young Love(??)) (1961)
  5. Shamisen and Motorcycle (三味線とオートバイ) (1961)
  6. Our Marriage (私たちの結婚) (1961)
  7. Epitaph to My Love (山の讃歌 燃ゆる若者たち) (1961)
  8. Tears on the Lion's Mane (涙を、獅子のたて髪に) (1962)
  9. Glory on the Summit (1962)
  10. Kawaita hana (乾いた花) (Withered Flower, a.k.a. Pale Flower) (1964)
  11. Ansatsu (暗殺) (Assassination) (1964)
  12. With Beauty and Sorrow (美しさと哀しみと) (1965)
  13. Ibun Sarutobi Sasuke (異聞猿飛佐助) (The Strange Story of Sarutobi Sasuke, a.k.a. Samurai Spy) (1965)
  14. Captive's Island (処刑の島) (1966)
  15. Clouds at Sunset (あかね雲) (1967)
  16. Shinjû-ten Amijima (心中天網島) (Amijima Effaced to Heaven by Lovers' Suicide, a.k.a. Double Suicide) (1969)
  17. Outlaws (無頼漢) (1970)
  18. Chinmoku / Silence (沈黙 / Silence) (1971)
  19. Sapporo Winter Olympics (札幌オリンピック) (1972)
  20. The Petrified Forest (化石の森) (1973)
  21. Himiko (卑弥呼) (1974)
  22. Under the Blossoming Cherry Trees (桜の森の満開の下) (1975)
  23. Ballad of Orin (はなれ瞽女おりん) (1977)
  24. Demon Pond (夜叉ケ池) (1979)
  25. Akuryo Island (悪霊島) (1981)
  26. MacArthur's Children (瀬戸内少年野球団) (1984)
  27. ALLUSION~ 転生譚 (1985)
  28. Gonza the Spearman (近松門左衛門 鑓の権三) (1986)
  29. The Dancer (舞姫) (1989)
  30. Childhood Days (少年時代) (1990)
  31. Sharaku (写楽 Sharaku) (1995)
  32. Setouchi Moonlight Serenade (1997)
  33. Owls' Castle (1999)
  34. Spy Sorge (2003)

Film availability

  • Kawaita hana (乾いた花) (Withered Flower, a.k.a. Pale Flower) (1964)
    • DVD: Region 1 NTSC: Home Vision Entertainment (US)
  • Ansatsu (暗殺) (Assassination) (1964)
    • DVD: Region 2 NTSC: The Masters of Cinema Series (UK)
  • Ibun Sarutobi Sasuke (異聞猿飛佐助) (The Strange Story of Sarutobi Sasuke, a.k.a. Samurai Spy) (1965)
    • DVD: Region 0 NTSC: The Criterion Collection (US)
  • Shinjû-ten Amijima (心中天網島) (Amijima Effaced to Heaven by Lovers' Suicide, a.k.a. Double Suicide) (1969)
    • DVD: Region 0 NTSC: The Criterion Collection (US)
  • Chinmoku / Silence (沈黙 / Silence) (1971)
    • DVD: Region 2 NTSC: The Masters of Cinema Series (UK)

External links


 
 
Learn More
Shima Iwashita (Actor, Drama)
Namida o Shishi no Tategami (1962 Film)
Ansatsu (1964 Historical Film)

Does Mike Shinoda sing? Read answer...
When was Mike Shinoda Born? Read answer...
Where does mike shinoda live? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Which songs do mike shinoda sing?
Where does mike shinoda reside?
What is mike shinoda religion?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Director. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Masahiro Shinoda" Read more