Night River | |||
Native Name: |
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Director: | Kōzaburō Yoshimura | ||
Producer: | Masaichi Nagata | ||
Cinematography: | Kazuo Miyagawa | ||
Editing: | Shigeo Nishida | ||
Studio: | Daiei Film | ||
Distributor: | Daiei Film | ||
Runtime: | 104 mins. | ||
Country: | Japan | ||
Language: | Japanese |
, also titled Undercurrent and River of Night, is a 1956 Japanese drama film directed by Kōzaburō Yoshimura.[1] It was Yoshimura's first film photographed in colour.[2] The screenplay by Sumie Tanaka is based on a novel by Hisao Sawano.
Kiwa Funaki is a young successful kimono designer working at her family's Kyoto-based business. While she fends off both the admiration of young painter Goro and the obtrusive advances of business partner Omiya, she eventually falls in love with scientist Takemura, who is writing a paper on the Shojobae fly. After she has started an affair with him, Kiwa learns that Takemura has a wife terminally ill with tuberculosis. When Takemura's wife finally dies, he proposes to her, but Kiwa, criticising him for his egotism, chooses her independence over the prospect of becoming his wife.
Night River was released in Japan on 12 September 1956 and shown under the title Undercurrent at the 1957 New York Japanese Film Festival. It was released on DVD in Japan in 2007.[3]
Night River was screened at a 2012 retrospective on Kaneto Shindō and Kōzaburō Yoshimura in London, organised by the British Film Institute and the Japan Foundation.[4]