Castle of Sand
Castle of Sand | |
---|---|
Directed by | Yoshitarō Nomura |
Written by | Yoshitarō Nomura Shinobu Hashimoto Yōji Yamada |
Based on | Suna no Utsuwa by Seicho Matsumoto |
Produced by | Shinobu Hashimoto Yoshihara Mishima Masayuki Sato |
Starring | Tetsuro Tamba Go Kato Kensaku Morita Yoko Shimada Karin Yamaguchi Shin Saburi Ken Ogata Kiyoshi Atsumi |
Cinematography | Takashi Kawamata |
Edited by | Kazuo Ôta |
Music by | Yasushi Akutagawa |
Distributed by | Shochiku |
Release date |
|
Running time | 143 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Castle of Sand (砂の器, Suna no utsuwa) is a 1974 Japanese police procedural film directed by Yoshitarō Nomura, based on the novel Suna no Utsuwa by Seicho Matsumoto.[1][2]
Plot
[edit]The film tells the tale of two detectives, Imanishi (Tetsuro Tamba) and Yoshimura (Kensaku Morita), tasked with tracking down the murderer of an old man, found bludgeoned to death in a rail yard. When the identity of the old man can't be determined, the investigation focuses on the only other clue: a scrap of conversation overheard at a bar between the old man and a younger one. A witness recalls the cryptic phrases "Kameda did this" and "Kameda doesn't change."
This sets off a wide-ranging investigation that covers vast swaths of geography, changing social mores, and time. The investigation ends with an emotional and heartbreaking conclusion, all the more shattering because the reason for the crime no longer exists in the world.[3]
Cast
[edit]- Tetsuro Tamba – Detective Eitaro Imanishi
- Go Kato – Eiryo Waga/Hideo Motoura
- Kensaku Morita – Detective Hiroshi Yoshimura
- Yoko Shimada – Rieko Takagi
- Karin Yamaguchi – Sachiko Tadokoro
- Ken Ogata – Kenichi Miki
- Seiji Matsuyama – Shokichi Miki
- Yoshi Katō – Chiyokichi Motoura
- Chishū Ryū – Kojuro Kirihara
- Taketoshi Naito
- Yoshio Inaba
- Shin Saburi – Shigeyoshi Tadokoro
- Kinzō Shin
Awards
[edit]- 1975 Kinema Junpo Award[4]
- Best Screenplay (Shinobu Hashimoto and Yōji Yamada)
- Readers' Choice Award
- Best Japanese Film Director (Yoshitaro Nomura)
- 1975 Mainichi Film Concours
- Best Director (Yoshitaro Nomura)
- Best Film (Yoshitaro Nomura)
- Best Film Score (Kosuke Sugano )
- Best Screenplay (Shinobu Hashimoto and Yōji Yamada)
- 9th Moscow International Film Festival[5]
- Diploma (Yoshitaro Nomura)
- Nominated for Golden Prize (Yoshitaro Nomura).
References
[edit]- ^ "砂の器とは". kotobank デジタル辞書 kotobank. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
- ^ "橋本忍と加藤剛。巨星が語った最高の日本映画!――春日太一の木曜邦画劇場". 週刊文春オンライン. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
- ^ "砂の器". Kinema Junpo. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
- ^ IMDB award listing.
- ^ "9th Moscow International Film Festival (1975)". MIFF. Archived from the original on 2013-01-16. Retrieved 2013-01-06.
External links
[edit]
- 1974 films
- 1970s crime thriller films
- 1970s Japanese films
- 1970s Japanese-language films
- 1970s mystery films
- Films based on Japanese novels
- Films directed by Yoshitaro Nomura
- Films set in 1971
- Films set in Ishikawa Prefecture
- Films set in Tokyo
- Films set in Akita Prefecture
- Films set in Yamanashi Prefecture
- Films set in Osaka
- Films set in Shimane Prefecture
- Films with screenplays by Shinobu Hashimoto
- Films with screenplays by Yôji Yamada
- Procedural films
- Shochiku films
- Works about leprosy
- Works originally published in Japanese newspapers
- Films scored by Yasushi Akutagawa
- 1970s Japanese film stubs
- Crime thriller film stubs