Английская Википедия:Gohatto
Шаблон:Cleanup rewriteШаблон:Infobox film
Шаблон:Nihongo, also known as Taboo, is a 1999 Japanese film directed by Nagisa Ōshima. Its subject is homosexuality in the Shinsengumi during the bakumatsu period, the end of the samurai era in the mid-19th century. The production was Õshima's final film before his death, thirteen years after Gohatto's premiere.[1]
Plot
At the start of the movie, the young and handsome Kanō Sōzaburō (Ryuhei Matsuda) is admitted to the Shinsengumi, an elite samurai group led by Kondō Isami (Yoichi Sai) that seeks to defend the Tokugawa shogunate against reformist forces. He is a very skilled swordsman, but it is his appearance that makes many of the others in the (strictly male) group, both students and superiors, attracted to him, creating tension within the group of people vying for Kanō's affections.
Cast
- Takeshi Kitano as Vice-Commander Hijikata Toshizō
- Ryuhei Matsuda as Kanō Sōzaburō
- Shinji Takeda as Captain Okita Sōji
- Tadanobu Asano as Hyōzō Tashiro
- Yoichi Sai as Commander Kondō Isami
- Koji Matoba as Sugano Heibei
- Masa Tomiizu as Inspector Yamazaki Susumu
- Masato Ibu as Military Advisor Itō Koshitarō
- Jirō Sakagami as Inoue Genzaburō
- Yoshiaki Fujiwara as Samurai
- Tomorowo Taguchi as Samurai Tojiro Yuzawa
- Kei Satō as Narrator (voice)
Production
The original title of the film, Gohatto, is an old-fashioned term that can be translated as "against the law". Nowadays, "gohatto" can be translated as "strictly forbidden" or "taboo" ("tabu").Шаблон:Citation needed
During the filming of Taboo, actor Ryuhei Matsuda was sixteen years old.Шаблон:Citation needed
It was Nagisa Ōshima's final directorial effort.
Reception
Roger Ebert wrote that "Taboo is not an entirely successful film, but it isn't boring."[2] Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian said that it was "a film which for some will be dismayingly impenetrable, but it is unmistakably the work of a master film-maker and a work of enormous strangeness and charm."[3] Шаблон:Rotten Tomatoes prose[4]
The film was a financial success in Japan, grossing ¥1.01 billion and becoming one of the highest-grossing films of the year.[5] The film was also given a limited theatrical release in North America where it grossed $114,425.[6]
Home video
From July 2020 through June 2021, the Criterion Channel streamed the film as part of the feature collection "Scores by Ryuichi Sakamoto".[7] Criterion's description for the film was;
Accolades
It was nominated for the Palme d'Or at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival,[9] losing out to Dancer in the Dark.
The film won four awards at the 2000 Blue Ribbon Awards: Best Director for Nagisa Ōshima, Best Film, Best New Actor for Ryuhei Matsuda, and Best Supporting Actor for Shinji Takeda.
Ryuhei Matsuda won the 2000 Japan Academy Prize for Newcomer of the Year; the film was nominated in nine other categories. Matsuda also won the Best New Actor category of the 2001 Kinema Junpo Awards, as well as the 2001 Yokohama Film Festival prize for Best New Talent.
Tadanobu Asano won the Best Supporting Actor category at the 2000 Hochi Film Awards.
Notes
References
External links
Шаблон:Nagisa Ōshima Шаблон:Navboxes
- Английская Википедия
- 1999 films
- 1999 drama films
- Japanese LGBT-related films
- Gay-related films
- Jidaigeki films
- Samurai films
- Films directed by Nagisa Ōshima
- Films scored by Ryuichi Sakamoto
- Films set in Bakumatsu
- Shochiku films
- 19th century in LGBT history
- 1999 LGBT-related films
- 1990s Japanese films
- Boshin War films
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