Date: 2021 August 18 20:43
Posted by Joe
The good folks from the BFI have just sent us details of the upcoming Japan 2021 Cinema Season. Celebrating 100 Years of Japanese Cinema, coming to cinemas UK-wide from October to December 2021. The season will show case an amazing selection films from Japan.
The screenings mark a continuation of the Japan 2020 season from last year, which was more of a home screening event due to the UK's COVID-19 lockdown situation.
As well as the often imitated Akira Kurosawa re-release of Seven Samurai cinemas UK Wide, there'll be a major two part season of Japanese cinema at BFI Southbank from 18 October - 30 December 2021. Plus screenings and special events at cinemas UK-wide. Along with BFI Japan collection on BFI Player.
Full Story
Press release as follows:
BFI JAPAN COMES TO BIG SCREENS UK-WIDE THIS AUTUMN
Following an online launch on BFI Player in 2020, the BFI's major celebration of Japanese cinema arrives on big screens UK-wide, with highlights including:
· A BFI re-release of Akira Kurosawa's SEVEN SAMURAI in cinemas UK-wide from 29 October
· Major two-part season of Japanese cinema at BFI Southbank from 18 October - 30 December
· Screenings and special events at cinemas UK-wide
· New additions to the BFI Japan collection on BFI Player
Wednesday 18 August 2021, London.
The BFI today announces the return of BFI JAPAN 2021: 100 YEARS OF JAPANESE CINEMA, coming to cinemas UK-wide from October - December 2021. Highlights of the celebration will include a BFI re-release of Akira Kurosawa's SEVEN SAMURAI (1954); a two-part season at BFI Southbank focusing on the Golden Age of the studio system and the rise of the radical New Wave and independent filmmakers of the later 20th century; special events and screenings of great Japanese films at cinemas UK-wide; and a film programme on BFI Player.
Originally scheduled to run in venues across the UK from May - September 2020, the BFI moved the season online by programming an unprecedented number of Japanese films on BFI Player while cinemas across the country remained closed, resulting in films in the BFI JAPAN collection being streamed on BFI Player in excess of 400,000 times since then. After the Olympic and Paralympic Games in Tokyo come to a close this summer, the BFI picks up the torch to shine a light on 100 years of Japanese cinema this autumn, as well as into 2022, when BFI Southbank will programme a two-month season to celebrate the art of Anime (April - May 2022), with more details to be announced soon.
BFI JAPAN will spotlight one of the world's greatest cinematic traditions, one that has long inspired admiration and fascination among audiences and creatives the world over. Classic films by Akira Kurosawa, Yasujirō Ozu and Kenji Mizoguchi regularly rank at the very top of critics' all-time lists; Studio Ghibli leads the animated world in visionary imagination; while waves of innovators from the cinematic rebels of the 60s to today's audio-visual live artists and video game auteurs take the moving image to thrilling new places. The influence of Japanese cinema cannot be overstated - Kurosawa in particular influenced Sergio Leone's A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS - an often shot-for-shot remake of YOJIMBO (1961) and SEVEN SAMURAI (1954) was adapted into John Sturges' THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN and influenced films including Quentin Tarantino's KILL BILL and George Miller's MAD MAX: FURY ROAD. George Lucas has long acknowledged Kurosawa's influence on STAR WARS, from the narrative and thematic elements to costumes and names and, more recently, video game GHOST OF TSUSHIMA, in which players can adopt 'Kurosawa mode', pays loving homage to the master filmmaker.
BFI JAPAN will feature:
· A BFI UK-wide re-release of Akira Kurosawa's seminal masterpiece SEVEN SAMURAI (1954), back in cinemas UK-wide from 29 October. Genuinely epic in scale and tone, Kurosawa's hugely influential samurai movie is a towering achievement which has to be experienced on the big screen.
· A two-part season at BFI Southbank from 18 October - 30 December, featuring screenings, contextual introductions and events:
o Part one of the season (18 October - 30 November) surveys the great Japanese studio era from the 1930s to the early 1960s. The season will celebrate the work of Kenji Mizoguchi, Yasujirō Ozu, Mikio Naruse and Akira Kurosawa , whose films rank among the supreme masterpieces of world cinema - their visions embodied through the performances of great actors such as Kinuyo Tanaka, Setsuko Hara, Hideko Takamine and Toshiro Mifune.
o Part one will also feature a special Halloween J-HORROR WEEKENDER (29 - 31 October), celebrating the phenomenon that was kick-started by directors such as Hideo Nakata, Kiyoshi Kurosawa and Takashi Miike, who all made waves internationally with their innovative and terrifying brand of horror.
o Part two of the season (1 - 30 December) features 20th century Japanese films made after 1964, including the New Wave and genre classics of the 1990s. The season will spotlight directors such as Seijun Suzuki who re-energised genre cinema in exciting, radical ways and independent filmmakers such as Nagisa Ōshima, Kijū Yoshida and Mitsuo Yanagimachi, who crafted films of uncompromising individuality and political engagement that commented forcefully on issues such as racism, gender and modernisation. We go on to explore the Renaissance of both popular and art house cinema in Japan in the 1990s through the work of directors such as Shunji Iwai, Hirokazu Kore-eda and Naomi Kawase.
o A two-month celebration of a century of Anime will take place at BFI Southbank throughout April and May 2022; further details of this season will be announced soon.
· BFI JAPAN will draw on the BFI National Archive's collection of early films of Japan dating back to 1901, offering audiences a rare chance to see how western filmmakers captured scenes of the landscapes and people of Japan in the early 20th century. More details will be announced soon.
· The BFI is working closely with the National Lottery funded BFI Film Audience Network (FAN) to enable cinemas across the UK to host special screenings and events as part of BFI JAPAN. Seasons and events will include Japan '70: Cinema on the Edge at HOME, Manchester (Oct-Dec); selected screenings at the Japanese Avant-Garde and Experimental Film Festival at Barbican, London (Sept); Kotatsu Japanese Animation Festival 2021 at Cardiff Chapter and Aberystwyth Arts Centre (Sept-Oct); Matchbox Cineclub Presents: Kaleidoscope Realms (date TBC) at Centre for Contemporary Arts, Glasgow; and screenings at the Yorkshire Silent Film Festival (Oct) at Abbeydale Picture House, Sheffield. Full details of all UK-wide screenings will be announced soon.
· The BFI has also curated a BFI JAPAN TOUR, featuring classics from Yasujirō Ozu and Akira Kurosawa, alongside titles like Kon Ichikawa's wildly melodramatic AN ACTOR'S REVENGE (1963) and Toshio Matsumoto's kaleidoscopic masterpiece FUNERAL PARADE OF ROSES (1969). The tour will visit cinemas across the UK and will feature many new 4K restorations - venues will be confirmed soon.
· The existing BFI JAPAN collection available to subscribers of BFI Player, including major focuses on Akira Kurosawa and Yasujirō Ozu, will be updated with new classic and contemporary titles.
· The BFI Southbank Mediatheque - which gives audiences free access to over 90,000 film and TV titles from the BFI National Archive - will feature a new collection to coincide with BFI JAPAN. LOST IN JAPAN (available from 18 October) will explore depictions of Japan, its culture and relationship with the UK across the past five decades.
With the kind support of
Janus Films/The Criterion Collection, Kadokawa Corporation, Kawakita Memorial Film Institute, Kokusai Hoei Co. Ltd, Nikkatsu Corporation, Toei Co. Ltd
#BFIJapan
https://www.bfi.org.uk/japan-2021
About the BFI
The BFI is the UK's lead organisation for film, television and the moving image. It is a cultural charity that:
· Curates and presents the greatest international public programme of World Cinema for audiences; in cinemas, at festivals and online
· Cares for the BFI National Archive - the most significant film and television archive in the world
· Actively seeks out and supports the next generation of filmmakers
· Works with Government and industry to make the UK the most creatively exciting and prosperous place to make film internationally
Founded in 1933, the BFI is a registered charity governed by Royal Charter. The BFI Board of Governors is chaired by Josh Berger CBE.
About the BFI Film Audience Network
Supported by National Lottery funding, the BFI Film Audience Network (FAN), is central to the BFI's aim to ensure the greatest choice of film is available for everyone. Established in 2012 to build wider and more diverse UK cinema audiences for British and international film, FAN is a unique, UK-wide collaboration made up of eight Hubs managed by leading film organisations and venues strategically placed around the country. FAN also supports talent development with BFI NETWORK Talent Executives in each of the English Hubs, with a mission to discover and support talented writers, directors and producers at the start of their careers.
BFI JAPAN is a celebration of more than a century of Japanese cinema, led by BFI and Film Hub Midlands on behalf of the BFI Film Audience network, supported by funds from the National Lottery, and presented in partnership with the Japan Foundation, Japan's principal agency of the promotion of Japanese culture.