DVD Review: The Ballad of Narayama (1958) - The Criterion Collection

Writer-director Keisuke Kinoshita’s The Ballad of Narayama is a deeply unsettling, unpleasant, and uncompromising film about how the younger members of families deal with their elders. This Japanese production was released in 1958 and while the practice of ubasute—“abandoning an old woman”—is apparently now regarded as antiquated, the issue of how to handle the burden of the aged remains forever relevant. The Criterion Collection has restored this surreal literary adaptation (the source novel, by Shichiro Fukazawa, is called Men of Tohoku), releasing it on DVD and Blu-ray.

Set during an unspecified time (but obviously prior to the 20th century) in a small village, the plot centers on a woman named Orin (Kinuyo Tanaka). At 69 years of age, she is mentally preparing herself to make the requisite journey to Mount Narayama. Despite the pomp and circumstance surrounding this journey, its true purpose is no secret: this is how the elderly are disposed of in order for families to conserve resources. The inhabitants of the village appear to be living practically on a purely instinctive level. They grow rice and beans, but food is far from plentiful. The villagers appear to be doing nothing more than existing. As such, sympathy for the abandoned seniors is a luxury that these people do not have.

Orin’s son Tatsuhei (Teiji Takahashi) is absolutely heartbroken over his mother’s impending journey to Narayama. He obsesses over what will essentially be the act of discarding his mother like a piece of trash. But his son, Orin’s grandson, Kesakichi (Danko Ichikawa) is almost gleeful over the prospect of being rid of the woman with “33 devil teeth.” He even sings a little ditty, leading the family in sing-along, about Orin’s unusual (for her age) amount of remaining teeth, which allow her to consume a robust amount of food. She claims to have only 28—even less after she knocks some out to appear older and eat less.

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Article Author: The Other Chad

My name is Chaz. A former co-worker (Dave) always misheard my name as "Chad." Complicating matters was a third co-worker, who was in fact named Chad. So Dave habitually called me the "other Chad."

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