Calendar: May 24

 

A Year: Day to Day Men, 24th of May

At the Mountain’s Summit

May 24, 1923 was the birthdate of Japanese filmmaker, actor and screenwriter, Seijun Suzuki.

In 1954, the Nikkatsu Company lured many assistant directors from the other major film studios with the promise of quick promotion. Among these was Seijun Suzuki, who took an assistant directing position there. His first screenplay to be filmed was the 1955 “Rakujitsu no Ketto (Duel at Sunset)” directed by Hiroshi Noguchi. His directorial debut, credited to his real name, Seitarō Suzuki, was “Victory is Mine”, a kayo eiga, or pop song film, part of a subgenre that functioned as a vehicle for hit pop records and singers.

His third film and first yakuza action movie was “Satan’s Town” which linked him inexorably to the genre. The 1958 film “Underworld Beauty” was the first to be credited to his pseudonym Seijun Suzuki. His style increasingly shirked genre conventions, favoring visual excess and visceral excitement over a coherent plot and injecting madcap humor into a normally solemn genre,

Seijun Suzuki’s increasingly surreal style began to draw the ire of the Nikkatsu Company studio in 1963 and culminated in his ultimate dismissal for what is now regarded as his magnum opus, the 1967 “Branded to Kill”, starring notable collaborator Joe Shishido. Suzuki successfully sued the studio for wrongful dismissal, but he was blacklisted for 10 years after that.

He collaborated with producer Genjiro Arato in 1980 and made the first part of what would become his Taishō trilogy, “Zigeunerweisen”, a psychological, period, ghost story, named after a gramophone record of gypsy violin music featured prominently in the film. When exhibitors declined to show the film, Arato screened it himself in an inflatable mobile dome to great success. It won Honorable Mention at the 31st Berlin International Film Festival, was nominated for nine Japanese Academy Awards and won four, including best director and best film, and was voted the number one Japanese film of the 1980s by Japanese critics. He followed the film with “Kagero-za”, made the following year, and completed the trilogy ten years later with “Yumeji”.

His films remained widely unknown outside Japan until a series of theatrical retrospectives beginning in the mid-1980s and tributes by such acclaimed filmmakers as Jim Jarmusch, Takeshi Kitano, Wong Kar-wai and Quentin Taratino signaled his international discovery. Italy hosted the first partial retrospective of his films outside Japan at the 1984 Pesaro International Film Festival. In celebration of 50th anniversary of his directorial debut, the 2006 “Suzuki Seijun 48 Film Challenge”  showcased all of his films to date at the Tokyo International Film Festival.