J-Sei Movie Night: Japanese Classic Movie
Friday, August 18, 2022 – 6:30 pm (on Zoom)
J-Sei Movie Night continues its summer program featuring meetings with scholars and professionals to educate us about the movies we love to watch.
For our next special program, on Friday, August 18, J-Sei Goes to the Movies to learn and talk about a groundbreaking work in Japanese film history. Our special guest, film scholar and programmer Rob Buscher, will introduce us to the classic Japanese film Crazed Fruit (狂った果実 in Japanese), which debuted in 1956 and launched an entirely new and radical film genre called taiyozoku (“Sun Tribe”) to the post-WWII generation of young filmgoers.
In this seminal Sun Tribe (taiyozoku) film from director Nakahira Kō, two brothers compete for the amorous favors of a young woman during a seaside summer of gambling, boating, and drinking. Adapted from the controversial novel by Ishihara Shintarō (who later became a very conservative mayor of Tokyo), and critically savaged for its lurid portrayal of the postwar sexual revolution among Japan’s young and privileged, Crazed Fruit is an anarchic outcry against tradition and the older generation.
The format for this month’s movie program is for each of us to watch the movie Crazed Fruit on our own (on streaming services or dvd rental—we’ll tell you how) beforehand. Then, on August 18, we’ll get together on Zoom to hear Prof. Buscher’s presentation about the movie and bring our own questions and comments to the group discussion that will follow.
This is an exciting opportunity to learn more about classic Japanese cinema from the experts. Please join us for a fun and enlightening evening!
RSVP with “August Movie Night” in the subject line.
We’ll send info to watch the movie and the Zoom link prior to the Aug 18 event.
Meet Our Speaker
Rob Buscher is a film and media specialist, educator, curator, and published author who has held leadership positions in non-profit organizations for over a decade. As a person of mixed-race Japanese American heritage who is deeply involved in his community, Rob also has an expertise in cultural sensitivity training, community organizing, and advocacy issues related to the Asian American & Pacific Islander (AAPI) community. Rob serves as Philadelphia Chapter President of the civil rights group Japanese American Citizens League and lectures part-time at University of Pennsylvania’s Asian American Studies Program.