In the article I will focus on Taiyō o nusunda otoko (The Man who Stole the Sun, 1979) by Hasegawa Kazuhiko to analyze how it exploits blockbuster tropes to critique the growing mediatization of the Japanese society and its progressive distancing from politics in order to embrace consumerism. Referencing several scenes from the movie, I will draw some comparison with the 1960s and its political activism, to highlight the sense of unease for the mass consumer society the main character lives in and his impossible quest for an ‘outside’. My final point will be how the movie constitutes a self-reflexive example of ‘counter-narratives of masculinity’ in the post-high-growth period, symbolically marking the end of post-war Japan.
Shadows of the Sun: Hasegawa and the End of Post-War Japan in 1970s Japanese Cinema
Eugenio De Angelis
2024
Abstract
In the article I will focus on Taiyō o nusunda otoko (The Man who Stole the Sun, 1979) by Hasegawa Kazuhiko to analyze how it exploits blockbuster tropes to critique the growing mediatization of the Japanese society and its progressive distancing from politics in order to embrace consumerism. Referencing several scenes from the movie, I will draw some comparison with the 1960s and its political activism, to highlight the sense of unease for the mass consumer society the main character lives in and his impossible quest for an ‘outside’. My final point will be how the movie constitutes a self-reflexive example of ‘counter-narratives of masculinity’ in the post-high-growth period, symbolically marking the end of post-war Japan.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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Shadows of the Sun. Hasegawa and the End of Post-War Japan in 1970s Japanese Cinema.pdf
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