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[Deathwatch] Kon Ichikawa, director, 92
- Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2008 07:47:39 -0800 (PST)
- From: Deathwatch Central <cdw@slick.org>
- Subject: [Deathwatch] Kon Ichikawa, director, 92
Kon Ichikawa, 92; director was best known for his antiwar films
'ONE OF JAPAN'S GREAT DIRECTORS': Kon Ichikawa, right, instructs Koji
Yakusho during filming for his samurai movie "Dora-Heita" in Kyoto in
1999.
February 18, 2008
Kon Ichikawa, a Japanese film director best known for his antiwar films
"The Burmese Harp" and "Fires on the Plain" as well as "Tokyo
Olympiad," his documentary on the 1964 Summer Olympics, has died. He
was 92.
Ichikawa died of pneumonia Wednesday at a Tokyo hospital, according to
a spokeswoman for Toho Co., the firm that released another of his major
films, "The Makioka Sisters," and many others during his long directing
career.
FOR THE RECORD:
Ichikawa obituary: The obituary of film director Kon Ichikawa in
Monday's California section referred to Japanese director, Keisuke
Miyashita. His correct name is Keisuke Kinoshita. ?
"Ichikawa surely stands alongside Akira Kurosawa and Keisuke Miyashita
as one of Japan's great directors," said Japanese film critic Tadao
Sato. "He made not just art films but also melodramas, documentaries,
mysteries and others . . . and he brought to all of them a technique
and craft that showed he took the works seriously no matter the
subject."
Ichikawa first attracted attention outside Japan with his bleak 1956
epic "The Burmese Harp," based on a novel in which a hapless Japanese
soldier in Burma after the end of World War II fails to convince his
comrades that the war is over and watches them die. He then becomes a
Buddhist monk and stays in Burma, devoting himself to burying his
comrades.
"Humanism was at the core of all of Ichikawa's movies," Sato said. "He
thought it was important to show that there was good in everyone, but
to show that in a war movie, too, made it unique.
Ichikawa also drew wide notice for "Tokyo Olympiad," a documentary on
the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo that was praised for its exquisite
photography as well as criticized for his idiosyncratic cuts from the
action on the playing field to spectators in the stands.
"The athletes are not seen as national symbols but as people enjoying
themselves," Sato said. The athletes "are seen not just as the winners
but the losers, too. It was the opposite of what viewers expected from
a film about the Olympics."
Ichikawa was honored with a jury prize at the Cannes Film Festival in
1960 for "Kagi." He also received a lifetime achievement award in 2001
from the World Film Festival in Montreal.
Born Nov. 25, 1915, in Ise, Japan, Ichikawa was the son of a kimono
merchant. He was interested in art and film as child and at age 18
started working in the animation department of J.O. Studios in Kyoto,
where he was soon placed in charge of the studio's animation
department. He later transferred to feature film production and made
his first film, "A Girl at Dojo Temple," using puppets because of the
World War II manpower shortage.
In 1948, he married screenwriter Natto Wada, who collaborated with him
on many of his films. She retired in the mid-1960s after making "Tokyo
Olympiad," and died in 1983.
Ichikawa is survived by two sons.
Many thanks to Deathwatch Central for posting this obituary