Hamaguchi Ryūsuke’s Wheel of Fortune and Japanese Cinema
https://doi.org/10.55105/2687-1440-2023-52-229-250
Abstract
Japan Yearbook 2022 featured an article which reflected on the award-winning Japanese film Drive My Car (Doraibu mai-ka), directed by Hamaguchi Ryūsuke. It received the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film. The movie is an authentic and original work, unlike anything being filmed in Japan today. Russian audience is very interested in this particular work, since it seamlessly and unexpectedly combines the work of two completely different writers: A. P. Chekhov and Haruki Murakami.
What is curious about this work is that Hamaguchi is known to be a great admirer of director Andrei Tarkovsky and started his creative career with his own remake of Solaris, later receiving many prestigious awards at international film festivals. Among his works are Happy Hour, Asako I & II, Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy, etc. This article presents the analysis of these movies and the main stages of Hamaguchi Ryūsuke’s creative biography.
About the Author
E. L. KatasonovaRussian Federation
Katasonova Elena Leonidovna, Doctor of Sciences (History), Head of the Center of Japanese Studies
12, Rozhdesnvenka Street, Moscow, 103031
References
1. References Katasonova, E. L. (2020). Novoe yaponskoe kino. V spore s klassikoi ekrana [New Japanese Film. In Dispute With the Classics of the Screen]. Moscow: Izdatel’skiye Resheniya. (In Russian).
2. Richie, D. (2014). Odzu [Ozu]. Moscow: Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie. (In Russian).
3. Terakopyan, M. L. (2015). Sovremennye rezhissery Yaponii [Contemporary Film Directors of Japan]. Moscow: VGIK. (In Russian).
Review
For citations:
Katasonova E.L. Hamaguchi Ryūsuke’s Wheel of Fortune and Japanese Cinema. Yearbook Japan. 2023;52(1):229-250. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.55105/2687-1440-2023-52-229-250