Eejanaika / Why Not? | |
Director: | Shohei Imamura |
Producer: | Shohei Imamura Shoichi Ozawa Shigemi Sugisaki Jiro Tomoda |
Starring: | Kaori Momoi Shigeru Izumiya Ken Ogata Shigeru Tsuyuguchi Masao Kusakari Yūko Tanaka Mitsuko Baisho Shōhei Hino |
Music: | Shin’ichirō Ikebe |
Cinematography: | Shinsaku Himeda (as Masahisa Himeda) |
Editing: | Keiichi Uraoka |
Distributor: | Imamura Productions, Shochiku Films Ltd., Beverly Pictures (USA) |
Runtime: | 151 minutes |
Country: | Japan |
Language: | Japanese |
is a 1981 Japanese film by director Shohei Imamura.[1] It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival.[2]
The film depicts carnivalesque atmosphere summed up by the cry "Ee ja nai ka" ("Why not?") in Japan in 1867 and 1868 in the days leading to the Meiji Restoration. It examines the effects of the political and social upheaval of the time, and culminates in a revelrous march on the Tokyo Imperial Palace, which turns into a massacre. Characteristically, Imamura focuses not on the leaders of the country, but on characters in the lower classes and on the fringes of society.[3] [4]
In a contemporary review for The New York Times, Vincent Canby wrote, "Eijanaika is a handsome, kaleidoscopic Japanese historical film about the years (1866-67) immediately preceding the restoration of the imperial Meiji family, which marked the triumph of the recently awakened, pro-Western movement in Japan. (It) is also an extremely difficult film to follow without extensive program notes. Even then, it's sometimes so obscure you suspect that essential scenes have been cut or that key lines of Japanese dialogue have not been translated by the English subtitles."[5]