Echigo Tsutsuishi Oyashirazu (1964) Poster

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10/10
A Story From Echigo
manfromplanetx22 December 2017
What an excellent dramatic story it is. Surprisingly little known, considering director Tadashi Imai was one of Japan's most prolific, interesting and controversial of 20th-century film directors. He infused staunch left-wing political views into almost all his films, succeeding in combining masterful art with topical social criticism,. Drawing on works from postwar modern authors this meticulously made literary adaptation is from a novel by Tsutomu Minakami. The story tells of Gonsuke , a native of Echigo who is working far from home at the sake brewery in Fushimi .He is called back to his hometown when his mother falls seriously ill, as she lays dying, Gonsuke on his way home, is side tracked. Tormented by inner demons, jealousy & lust he crosses paths with Oshin the beautiful wife of a fellow sake worker also from Echigo... The compelling crime drama highlights Imai's distinctive lyrical and humanistic style, which gives tremendous dimension and depth to the absorbing film. Incredibly beautiful location shooting and stunning cinematography outstanding performances, A Story From Echigo is exceptional Classic Japanese Cinema. Highly Recommended

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10/10
Echigo Sake.
morrison-dylan-fan23 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Last week viewing the eerie Horror The Ghost Cat of Otama Pond,I decided this week to check one of the other works from Asia recommended from fellow IMDber ManFromPlanetX. In the mood for another rare Japanese title,the description of the film led to me excitingly turning the first page of the Echigo story.

View on the film:

Sipping the sake from Echigo, director Tadashi Imai & cinematographer Shunichirô Nakao pour a documentary-level of intimacy across the film,via beautifully composed black and white shots following each stage of the sake production process. Traveling away from the plant to meet Oshin,Imai makes her world a cold, merciless place,with the snowy mountains reflecting the cold heart treatment Oshin receives from Gonsuke. Masterfully unleashing a brutal 30 min sprint to the ending, Imai confronts the difficulties Oshin and all those close to her face with elegantly stylised overlapping being neatly contrasted with extended stilted shots covered in the rotting stench of death.

Ruining O-Shin and his co-worker Tomekichi Segami lives, Rentarô Mikuni gives a deeply unsettling performance as Gonsuke Sabu,who dissects Segami and O-Shin's marriage with a casualness Mikuni fuels with lust and jealousy. Caught in the middle unaware of what has taken place between his wife and Sabu, Shôichi Ozawa gives an excellent performance as Segami,who is given a compassionate side by Ozawa that highlights the humanist mood of the film,which becomes covered with flies as the passion between the couple grinds down into the mud. Striking the title on a highly lyrical note, Yoshiko Sakuma gives an incredibly enchanting performance as O-Shin, thanks to Sakuma keeping flame to survive alight in the wilderness of the Echigo story.
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