Cinema of Actuality by Yuriko Furuhata
Cinema of Actuality by Yuriko Furuhata
Cinema of Actuality by Yuriko Furuhata
JA PA N E S E AVA N T- G A R D E F I L M M A K I N G
yuriko furuhata
asia- p
acifi c : c ul t ur e, po l i t i c s, and s o c i e ty
J a pa n e s e Ava n t- G a r d e F i l m m a k i n g
yuriko furuhata
D u k e U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s | D u r h a m a n d L o n d o n | 2 0 1 3
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i n t r od u ct i on | 1
con cl u s i on | 183
n ot e s | 203
b i b l i og r a p h y | 239
i n d e x | 257
acknowledgments
viii acknowledgments
riko Hinata, Franz Hofer, Ōko Ippōshi, Tomoko Komatsuzaki, Takashi
Makino, Asako Miyoshi, Pooja Rangan, Julie Levin Russo, Braxton
Soderman, Wen Lee Soo, Yuki Tanikawa, Jacob Weiss, and Michael
Zryd.
I would also like to extend heartfelt thanks to my late grandmother,
who steadfastly supported my decision to leave Japan to go to the
United States, and to my fabulous mother, who inspired me to pursue
my dreams without forgetting those who made them possible. From
her I have inherited openness to the unknown and willingness to tread
new territories. Equal thanks go to the rest of my family: my lovely sis-
ter and nephews for reminding me that academia is just one part of life,
my father for passing on his love of books despite our disagreement
over politics, and my amazing in-laws for making Montreal truly my
second home.
The person who deserves my final thanks is Marc Steinberg. With-
out his patience to engage in countless hours of conversation over
many breakfasts and his willingness to read numerous drafts, I am
not sure I could have completed this book. In addition to appreciating
Marc’s intellectual support, I am grateful for the other times we spend
together, forgetting our work and embracing moments of wonder. With-
out his presence, life would be lusterless.
Sections of chapter 1 appeared as my article “Audio-Visual Redun-
dancy and Remediation in Ninja bugeichō,” Mechademia 7 (2012): 249–
62. Chapter 4 is a reworked and extended version of my article “Return-
ing to Actuality: Fūkeiron and the Landscape Film,” Screen 48.3 (autumn
2007): 345–62.
All translations from Japanese sources are mine unless otherwise
noted.
acknowledgments ix
introduction
In January 1968, the popular film magazine Eiga Geijutsu (Film art) pub-
lished a dialogue—sensationally titled “Fascist or Revolutionary?”—
between Oshima Nagisa, an acclaimed cinéaste and critic-representative
of Japanese New Wave cinema, and Mishima Yukio, a renowned nov-
elist who was to stage a failed coup d’état and ritual suicide as a spec-
tacular media event two years later. The dialogue is intriguing not so
much because it suggests a rare point of agreement between Oshima
and Mishima, who are considered to stand at opposing ends of the spec-
trum of political activism (the antinationalist Left and the ultranation-
alist Right). Rather, the dialogue is fascinating because it highlights
their shared interest in television and, more broadly, in the political
effects of televisually induced media events. Oshima and Mishima con-
cur that the New Left generation of Japanese student protesters are the
children of television whose political actions are deeply conditioned by
the ubiquitous presence of the news camera. Oshima calls this media-
conscious form of student protest an “expressive act” akin to an artistic
performance. Mishima criticizes this view by noting that the substitu-
tion of political action by the expressive act attests to the bleakness of
the television age in which they all live. Oshima, in contrast, regards
this blurring of the boundary between artistic performance and politi-
cal action in a positive light, suggesting that the very meaning of politics
and art should be rethought in light of this situation.1
Oshima and Mishima were not alone in remarking on the media con-
sciousness of student protesters during the so-called season of politics
(seiji no kisetsu) that erupted in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Various
factions of student protesters allegedly chose the colors of their ubiq-
uitous construction helmets (worn during protests) based on how they
would look on color television.2 Both the dialogue and this anecdote
point to the increasing imbrication of politics and media in Japan, to
which the rise and consolidation of television greatly contributed. The
season of politics, which coincided with the golden era of leftist inde-
pendent and avant-garde filmmaking practices, was, in effect, the sea-
son of image politics.
Oshima’s call to redefine politics and art in light of the media-
conscious student protesters also sheds light on a little-studied aspect
of Japanese political avant-garde filmmaking in the 1960s: the tension
between journalistic media and cinema that became visible against the
backdrop of intensifying image politics. During the 1960s, the prox-
imity between cinema and journalism gained wide attention from
critics and filmmakers. Political avant-garde filmmakers started to ap-
proximate—or, more precisely, to appropriate—television and other
journalistic media forms. This avant-gardist appropriation of journal-
ism marks an important but overlooked tendency within postwar Japa-
nese cinema. The timely appropriation of sensational news, high-profile
media events, and other topical images widely circulating in the press
by filmmakers such as Oshima Nagisa, Matsumoto Toshio, Wakamatsu
Kōji, and Adachi Masao in the 1960s and early 1970s points to a collec-
tively shared concern with journalistic actuality. For the sake of clarity,
I will call this body of films the “cinema of actuality.” The spectacular
terrain of sensational newsmaking and media events in particular at-
tracted these avant-garde filmmakers, but their appropriation of jour-
nalism was not a simple reversion back to cinema’s early social function
as a “visual newspaper.”3 Instead, the journalistic production of spec-
tacular and sensational news became a complex site of calculated ap-
propriations and critical experimentations in the 1960s, as these Japa-
nese avant-garde filmmakers grappled with the intertwined questions
of how to radicalize cinema in light of the escalating mediatization of
politics and how to situate cinema within a rapidly changing media en-
vironment.4 The appearance of the cinema of actuality was hence an
extremely timely response to profound changes occurring in the Japa-
nese media sphere.
Although these filmmakers belong to the generation of cinéastes
who have been subsumed under the category of New Wave, not all of
2 introduction
the so-called New Wave filmmakers contributed to the cinema of actu-
ality.5 Likewise, the filmmakers whose works I analyze in this book
have affinities with underground and lesser-known experimental film-
makers, such as Jōnouchi Motoharu, Okabe Michio, and Kanai Katsu,
who do not appear in most studies of the Japanese New Wave. I hence
eschew the clichéd label New Wave in favor of the term political avant-
garde in describing the filmmakers whose works form the cinema of
actuality. The term political avant-garde acknowledges the permeability
between commercial and underground forms of filmmaking—a perme-
ability that is erased by the term New Wave.6 Their common strategies of
appropriating and recycling current, topical, and often sensational ma-
terials culled from the realm of journalism should also be read against
the historical situation of the 1960s, a decade marked by a seemingly
endless series of televised assassinations, hijackings, hostage crises, and
mass street protests. My argument is that cinema—itself an appara-
tus of spectacle—became a testing ground for the reflexive critique
of media spectacle precisely at this moment in Japan. Central to my
analysis is the changing conception of cinema in relation to television
and other image-based media; this change is registered by the rising
intermedia consciousness among the filmmakers whose works form the
cinema of actuality.
introduction 3
erated strong sensations of actuality. The concurrent proliferation of
discourses on the image and actuality attests to a historical correlation
between these two concepts as well as to the impact of television.
Not surprisingly, these intertwined discourses on the image and
actuality arose when the Japanese film industry itself was undergoing a
significant restructuration. Since the late 1950s, television had steadily
eclipsed cinema as a prime source of entertainment, bringing about
the fast decline of the vertically integrated Japanese film industry. The
disintegration of the industry, as the narrative goes, in turn enabled
small independent production companies to flourish in the 1960s.
This decade thus came to be known as the golden age of independent
cinema, a decade marked by an outburst of experimental and avant-
garde film productions. The establishment in 1961 of the Art Theatre
Guild (atg )—a unique production, distribution, and exhibition com-
pany exclusively dedicated to the dissemination of art cinema—was
emblematic of these institutional changes.7 Almost all the filmmakers
whose works are analyzed in this book exhibited their films at the Art
Theatre Shinjuku Bunka or its underground counterpart, Theatre Scor-
pio (Sasori-za). Named after Kenneth Anger’s experimental film Scorpio
Rising (1964) by none other than Mishima, Theatre Scorpio was an epi-
center of Japan’s underground film culture and a hotspot for avant-garde
theater, experimental music, and intermedia performances. Located
below Shinjuku Bunka in Tokyo, this clandestine basement art space
hosted lively discussions on politics and art, and fostered close collabo-
rations among filmmakers, musicians, photographers, performance art-
ists, and playwrights. A growing number of intermedial experiments
that defied conventional boundaries between different media emerged
directly from this social and cultural milieu.
This rough sketch of the sociocultural context of the 1960s that gave
rise to the cinema of actuality, however, is perhaps not complete with-
out a few additional remarks. One such element is the transfer of the
principal production site of visual news from the film industry to the
television industry. During the 1930s, newsreel theaters specializing
in newsreels, short animations, and documentary films flourished in
Japan. Major national newspaper companies, such as Asahi, Yomiuri,
and Mainichi used to dominate the production of newsreels, with each
running its own film production company regularly supplying newsreel
theaters with their products. Major studios such as Shōchiku also began
producing and marketing newsreels or visual newspapers (me no shin-
4 introduction
bun) as early as 1930.8 In the 1950s and throughout the 1960s, the same
newspaper companies shifted their focus and investment from film to
television, while continuing to exert control over the journalistic sphere
of news production.9 Television gradually replaced newsreel theaters as
the principal channel of disseminating visual news. The cinematic en-
gagement with the sensation of actuality that emerged in the 1960s was,
arguably, a response to this shift. Before the rise of television, cinema
was a privileged medium for capturing the moment: it was the visual
medium of actuality. Yet the rapid development of news shows on tele-
vision, along with the postwar restructuring of the film industry with
its emphasis on program pictures based on the star system, significantly
weakened cinema’s association with actuality. The journalistic turn of
political avant-garde filmmaking during the 1960s came after this rup-
ture, which severed cinema’s affinity with news journalism. In this re-
gard this journalistic turn was, partly, a gesture of return to the original
fascination with the sensation of actuality that cinema used to impart
in the early days.
A number of seminal theoretical texts on the mass media and tele-
vision were also translated into Japanese during the 1960s. For instance,
Daniel J. Boorstin’s influential text, The Image: Or What Happened to the
American Dream? (1962), appeared in translation in 1964, the year of the
Tokyo Olympics, which boosted the nationwide sale of television sets.
The following year the first translation of Walter Benjamin’s texts ap-
peared, including his essay “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical
Reproduction,” which came out in print three years prior to its English
translation. Marshall McLuhan’s 1964 bestseller, Understanding Media:
The Extension of Man, was translated in 1967, accelerating the so-called
McLuhan boom in Japan, and stirring passionate debates on the rela-
tion between contemporary art and mass media.10 But if these newly
translated texts found enthusiastic receptions from critics and artists
in Japan, it is because these readers already were familiar with many
of the theoretical issues articulated in these texts. Among my aims in
this book is to present the theoretical and discursive context of debates
around the image that preceded and accompanied the translations of
such texts, and that prepared the way for their wide reception.
The focus on the discursive context points to another intervention
I hope to make: to shed light on the important relationship between
theory and practice among political avant-garde filmmakers of the time.
There is an enduring misconception of Japanese film culture, namely
introduction 5
the assumption that “the very notion of theory is alien to Japan; it is
considered a property of Europe and the West,” to invoke Noël Burch’s
memorable statement.11 Even today, the term theory within film studies
predominantly—and almost exclusively—refers to theoretical writ-
ings penned by European and North American critics and scholars,
as is evident in the focus of numerous anthologies bearing the words
“Film Theory” in their title. Yet there is irony in this exclusivity. For
one, Japanese cinema played a significant role in the development of
the film theory that emerged in the 1960s and the 1970s (also called
70s film theory or screen theory). Japanese cinema, as Mitsuhiro Yoshi-
moto notes, was instrumental at this formative stage of film studies
as a discipline in North America. Some of the canonical texts of this
film theory drew heavily on the work of Japanese filmmakers such as
Ozu and Oshima.12 The critical role Oshima’s work played is especially
visible in influential texts such as Stephen Heath’s “Narrative Space”
(1976).13 In spite of such accrued interests in Japanese cinema in the
1970s, however, rich theoretical discussions on the cinema that Oshima
and his contemporaries generated have not received due attention.14
Disproving Burch’s claim before the fact, many of the avant-garde
filmmakers at the time also thought of themselves as theorists. And
their writings, published in numerous film journals (Kiroku Eiga, Eiga
Hyōron, Eiga Hihyō, Eizō Geijutsu, and so on), were in close conversation
with the filmmaking practices of the time. This is particularly true in
the case of someone like Matsumoto, who spearheaded the experimen-
tal film and video art scene of the 1960s and 1970s. Matsumoto’s first
book, Discovery of the Image: Avant-garde and Documentary (Eizō no hak-
ken: Avangyarudo to dokyumentarii, 1963) had a wide-reaching impact
on his contemporaries, including Oshima, his greatest rival, and on the
following generation of experimental filmmakers, such as Adachi, Jō-
nouchi, and others who congregated around the van Film Research
Center (a filmmaking collective formed by former student filmmakers
from Nihon University). Similarly, we cannot overlook the equally in-
fluential role played by an earlier generation of leftist intellectuals like
Hanada Kiyoteru in inspiring the postwar generation of political avant-
garde filmmakers. Matsumoto, Oshima, Adachi, and others took seri-
ously Hanada’s call to synthesize the avant-garde and documentary arts,
and they also consciously inherited the activist notion of the “move-
ment” (undō) that Hanada’s cohort of avant-garde artists advocated in
the 1950s. The activist edge of political avant-garde filmmaking that
6 introduction
arose against the intense mediatization of student movements was fur-
ther sharpened by the participation of activist-theorists like Matsuda
Masao. Furthermore, the discursive attempt to theorize cinema in rela-
tion to politics at this time was paralleled by similar efforts in the adja-
cent field of photography. For instance, the work of the photographer-
critic Nakahira Takuma—a co-founder of the influential photography
group and magazine Provoke—should be read as a part of the dialogue
with filmmakers and critics, such as Adachi and Matsuda. What unites
the writings of these critics, filmmakers, and photographers is their
shared concern with the actuality of the image and the political force of
the mediatized spectacle.
T h e P o l i t i c s o f t h e S p e c ta c l e
12 introduction
mediatized by the exchange value system of abstraction).” Jean Baudrillard,
“Requiem for the Media,” in For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign,
trans. Charles Levin (St. Louis: Telos, 1981), 175–76.
5 David Desser’s seminal work, Eros Plus Massacre: An Introduction to the
Japanese New Wave Cinema (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988),
defines the Japanese New Wave as a body of “films produced and/or re-
leased in the wake of Oshima’s A Town of Love and Hope, films which take
an overtly political stance in a general way or toward a specific issue, uti-
lizing a deliberately disjunctive form compared to previous filmic norms
in Japan” (4). While Desser’s analysis of the New Wave as an “avant-garde
artistic movement” is useful, his definition of the New Wave presupposes
the autonomy of film history and cinema’s independence from other
media forms such as television and photography. His is hence a strictly
film-historical perspective, which locates an internal rupture—formal
and thematic—within the already circumscribed boundary of Japanese
cinema. My approach differs from Desser’s on two points. First, the films
I discuss in this book do not stand in for the general category of the New
Wave cinema. Second, I approach this unique moment in the history of
filmmaking in Japan from the media-historical perspective that takes into
consideration parallel events happening in the adjacent fields of cinema,
photography, and journalism.
6 In using the term political avant-garde, I gesture toward the discursive nexus
between the theorization of cinema as a political form and the practice of
avant-garde filmmaking that we find in D. N. Rodowick’s seminal work on
political modernism, The Crisis of Political Modernism: Criticism and Ideology
in Contemporary Film Theory (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988).
My use of the term political avant-garde also draws on Peter Wollen’s analysis
of the avant-garde tradition that inherits the language of Marxism and oper-
ates on the periphery of the commercial system. See Peter Wollen, “The Two
Avant-Gardes,” in Readings and Writings: Semiotic Counter-Strategies (Lon-
don: Verso, 1982), 92–104.
7 The atg started as an association of ten movie theaters committed to the
distribution and exhibition of “art films” as opposed to commercial program
pictures and Hollywood films. The idea to establish the atg originated in the
activities of a group of cinephiles and cinéastes named Nihon Aato Shiataa
Undō no Kai (Japanese Association for an Art Theatre Movement), which
promoted the establishment of noncommercial theaters exclusively devoted
to the presentation of art films. In addition to distributing and exhibiting art
films—most of which were independently produced foreign films—at atg -
owned movie theaters, the Art Theatre Guild also started to produce films
made by independent Japanese filmmakers, including young directors such
as Imamura Shōhei, Oshima Nagisa, Matsumoto Toshio, Yoshida Kijū, Hani