Skip to content

Akio Jissôji: The Buddhist Trilogy

Barcode 5027035023106
Blu-ray

Sold out
Original price £20.81
Original price £20.81 - Original price £20.81
Original price £20.81
Current price £20.02
£20.02 - £20.02
Current price £20.02

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 05/04/2021

Edition: Box Set
Genre: World Cinema
Sub-Genre: World Cinema
Region Code: Region B
Certificate: 18
Label: Arrow Academy
Actors: Kin Sugai, Kotobuki Hananomoto, Hiroko Sakurai, Kôji Shimizu, Saburô Shinoda, Ryô Tamura, Eiko Yanami, Eiji Okada, Akiji Kobayashi, Shin Kishida
Director: Akio Jissôji
Number of Discs: 3
Duration: 415 minutes
Audio Languages: Japanese, English, Japanese
Subtitle Languages: English

Akio Jissôji created a rich and diverse body of work during his five decades in Japan's film and television industries. For some, he is best-known for his science fiction: the 1960s TV series Ultraman and 1988's box-office success Tokyo: The Last Megalopolis. For others, it is his 1990s adaptations of horror and mystery novelist Edogawa Rampo, such as Watcher in the Attic and Murder on D Street. And then there are his New Wave films for the Art Theatre Guild, three of which - This Transient Life, Mandala and Poem, forming The Buddhist Trilogy - are collected here. Winner of the Golden Leopard award at the 1970 Locarno Film Festival, This Transient Life is among the Art Theatre Guild's most successful - and most controversial - productions. The film concerns a brother and sister from a rich family who defy the expectations placed on them: he has little interest in further education or his father's business, instead obsessing over Buddhist statues; she continually refuses a string of suitors and the prospect of marriage. Their closeness, and isolation, gives way to an incestuous relationship which, in turn, breeds disaster. Mandala, Jissôji's first colour feature, maintained the controversial subject matter, focussing on a cult who recruit through rape and hope to achieve true ecstasy through sexual release. Shot, as with all of Jissôji's Art Theatre Guild works, in a radically stylised manner, the film sits somewhere between the pinku genre and the fiercely experimental approach of his Japanese New Wave contemporaries. The final entry in the trilogy, Poem, returns to black and white and is centred on the austere existence of a young houseboy who becomes helplessly embroiled in the schemes of two brothers. Written by Toshirô Ishidô (screenwriter of Nagisa Oshima's The Sun's Burial and Shôhei Imamura's Black Rain), who also penned This Transient Life and Mandala, Poem continues the trilogy's exploration of faith in a post-industrial world.

Special Features: Bonus Footage, Trailers