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Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Posted By: FNB47
Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)
1461.6 MB | 2:49:56 | Japanese with English s/t | XviD, 1040 Kb/s | 576x240

A spectacle of magnificent proportions, Kon Ichikawa's Tokyo Olympiad ranks among the greatest documents of sport ever committed to film. Utilizing glorious widescreen cinematography, Ichikawa examines the beauty and rich drama on display at the 1964 Summer Games in Tokyo, creating a catalogue of extraordinary observations that range from the expansive to the intimate. The glory, despair, passion, and suffering of Olympic competition are rendered with lyricism and technical mastery, culminating in an inspiring testament to the beauty of the human body and the strength of the human spirit. Criterion

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Ichikawa's cameras follow the 1964 Summer Olympics from opening to closing ceremonies. Sometimes he focuses on spectators, as athletes pass in a blur; sometimes he isolates a competitor; other times, it's a closeup of muscles as a hammer is thrown or a barbell lifted; or, we watch a race from start to finish. We see come-from-behind wins in the women's 800 and the men's 10,000 meters. We follow an athlete from Chad from arrival to meals, training, competition, and loss. Throughout, the film celebrates the nobility of athletes pushing themselves to the limit, regardless of victory. (http://imdb.com/title/tt0059817/plotsummary)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

The 1964 Olympics in Tokyo were a milestone as much for the intense athletic competition as the joyous commemoration of Japan's recovery following its defeat in World War II. Director Kon Ichikawa (The Burmese Harp, Fires on the Plain) created an epic film of the event, a documentary that covered the entire athletic competition while also capturing the surrounding atmosphere. Early in the film is a stunning aerial shot of Hiroshima, which first shows the devastated area, where destruction from the atom bomb has been preserved, before focusing on a beautiful park where an Olympic ceremony was being held.

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

The scenes of athletic competition, some of which were shot by cinematographer Kazuo Miyagawa (Rashomon), work beautifully on two levels. The camera frames the extreme effort expended by such athletes as the great American runner Bob Hayes, and thus the film functions as a credible sports documentary, yet the camera also goes in for close-ups, lingering on the athlete's muscled forms to provide images that would look perfectly at home on the wall of a photography gallery. The narration in Japanese is accompanied with English subtitles, and this edition retains the widescreen look of the original theatrical release (in a letterboxed format) as well as the complete 170-minute running time. (–Robert J. McNamara - Editorial Reviews - Amazon.com)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)

Kon Ichikawa-Tôkyô orimpikku (1965)