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Violence at Noon

  • Film
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Time Out says

As in several other films, Oshima takes the story of a real-life criminal (here, a rapist and murderer) and uses it as the key to a sweeping analysis of the ills of post-war Japanese society. Very little time is wasted on the nuts-and-bolts of the police manhunt; the focus is on two women who know the criminal, and - through them - on the history of the village in Shinshu where the wretched man was born and raised. Oshima reveals his real subject gradually, piecing it together like a mosaic. It is an account of the decay of post-war idealism, the collapse of brave ventures like a collectively run farm, the inexorable restoration of old inequalities and injustices. The visual approach, too, is like a mosaic: there are incessant changes of camera angle, as if to stress that no one point of view is 'true'.
Written by TR

Release Details

  • Duration:99 mins

Cast and crew

  • Director:Nagisa Oshima
  • Screenwriter:Tsutomu Tamura
  • Cast:
    • Saeda Kawaguchi
    • Akiko Koyama
    • Kei Sato
    • Matsuhiro Toura
    • Fumio Watanabe
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