0
78 min
A leading postwar Japanese film critic and theorist who co-founded the seminal film magazine Eiga Hihyo (Film Criticism) in 1957, Eizo Yamagiwa made his directorial debut with this independent feature—long thought lost until a negative was recently discovered—about a group of idle bourgeois students known as the “Roppongi Tribe” (Roppongi zoku). Depicting the resignation and nihilism of the postwar generation in the years following the Anpo Treaty conflicts through a coming-of-age narrative, Yamagiwa offers sharp criticism of the prevalent characterizations of Japan's new youth offered by Nikkatsu's taiyozoku (“Sun Tribe”) films and the New Wave at large.
Name | Character | Team | |
---|---|---|---|
Kōji Matsubara | Kenji Nomura | Unowned | |
Mitsuko Sawamura | Yuri | Unowned | |
Terumi Hoshi | Michi Makino | Unowned | |
Takashi Fujiki | Yoji Nakaoka | Unowned | |
Yūko Kashiwagi | Akemi | Unowned | |
Namiji Namiura | Noriko | Unowned | |
Harue Tone | Michi's mother | Unowned | |
Fumiko Miyata | Nurse | Unowned | |
Masami Akimoto | Akiko | Unowned | |
Akira Nakamura | Michi's father | Unowned | |
Yoji Naruto | Unowned | ||
Hiroshi Inoue | Singer | Unowned | |
Akemi Nara | Makiko Kawamura | Unowned | |
Yūji Hori | Unowned |