Night School (1956 film) explained

Night School
Director:Ishirō Honda
Screenplay:Yoko Mizuki
Starring:
Studio:Nihon University College of Art
Distributor:Daiei Film
Runtime:44 minutes
Country:Japan

is a 1956 Japanese film directed by Ishirō Honda.[1] [2]

Production

Night School was director Ishirō Honda's only film ever directed outside of Toho. The film was among the first about the topic of night schools. The original idea for developing a film around night schools was from Kanesaku Toda, a Toho staff member who approached Honda and other ex-Nichidai men. The team got the rights to the short story by Teiji Seta titled "Mail Desk" (Yubin zukue) which appeared in the children's magazine Boys and Girls. Among the crew was Yoko Mizuki as the screenwriter, and other Nichidai grads including Keiju Kobayashi and Jukichi Uno who starred as a teacher and a student's father. The film was produced by Nihon University College of Art with a low budget. Most actors on set worked without pay.

Honda and the film's producers submitted Night School to the Japanese government's education department, hoping to secure a seal of approval to get the film approved for families and students. The government advised Honda to change the title due to a stigma surrounding night schools, which Honda declined leading the funding being denied.

Release

Night School was acquired by Daiei Film and distributed as a second feature on April 18, 1956.

The film was not screened for decades. It was revived at the 2009 Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival retrospective titled "The Man Who Shot Godzilla". Following the screening, a panel discussion was held with Shusuke Kaneko and Honda's son Ryuji.

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 夜間中学. Kinema Junpo. 27 December 2020.
  2. Web site: 夜間中学. Agency for Cultural Affairs 映画情報システム. 2 November 2019.