
Sunday, September 16, 2007
| 3:00 p.m. | Policeman Tomu Uchida (Japan, 1933) |
Judith Rosenberg on Piano
Introduced by Sharon Hayashi
Introduced by Sharon Hayashi
Sharon Hayashi is assistant professor of cinema and media studies at York University, Toronto. She is currently finishing a manuscript on the travel films of Hiroshi Shimizu.
(Keisatsukan). The only Uchida silent to survive complete, Policeman created immense excitement at the Pordenone and Tokyo FILMeX festivals with its visual flourishes and pell-mell energy, its combination of street realism, stylistic expressionism, and tropes of the Hollywood crime film. Foreshadowing Kurosawa's sweaty Stray Dog, Policeman opens as a rookie policeman performs a random road check and discovers an old high school buddy. The cop learns that his old/new friend is now a golf fanatic and man of leisure who is strangely elusive about his source of income. The policeman soon suspects his pal of criminal activity, and so begins a gripping tale of pursuit, with thrilling chase scenes, nocturnal gun battles, and tense sequences of cat-and-mouse trailing. At times wildly expressionistic, Policeman plays its modernist visuals off old-fashioned calls to duty and self-sacrifice. "The homoerotic undertones of the central relationship are subversive compensation for the government-sanctioned use of a gang of Communists as the villains" (Alexander Jacoby).
—James Quandt
• Written by Eizo Yamauchi. Photographed by Soichi Aisaka. With Isamu Kosugi, Eiji Nakano, Taisuke Matsumoto, Shizuko Mori. (108 mins, Silent with Japanese intertitles and English subtitles)
Preceded by short:
History of Crab Temple (Kanimanji engi) (Tomu Uchida, Hakuzan Kimura, Hidehiko Okuda, Japan, 1924). An animated short. (c. 13 mins, Silent)
• (Total running time: c. 121 mins, B&W, 35mm, From National Film Center, Tokyo.) Sharon Hayashi's presentation is cosponsored by the Center for Japanese Studies (CJS) at UC Berkeley.

