The Eighteen Who Stirred up a Storm   RG-2010 

Too outlandish or ahead of its time? This realistic depiction of a group of young contract labourers at the bottom of society was neglected at the time of its release and only re-evaluated recently.

While The Eighteen Who Stirred Up a Storm was made the year after the success of The Affair at Akitsu, it could hardly be more different. Whether too outlandish or ahead of its time, this film was completely neglected at its release and only re-evaluated recently. Neither a sensationalist gang movie nor a Marxist-humanist outcry over social injustice, Yoshida’s realistic depiction of a group of young contract labourers at the very bottom of society may be closest to Italian neo-realism. The story is simple, the black-and-white widescreen camera work is stark, and the young actors are all amateurs. The young rough labourers are not allowed to become individuals but remain an anonymous group, and human relations are depicted as void of mutual understanding and reconciliation. In this distancing way, however, Yoshida confronts us all the stronger with the absurd reality of human beings used as mere ‘things’ providing labour, without offering any easy explanations.

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Japan 1963
DirectorYoshida Kiju
ProducerAraki Seiya
 Shochiku Co. Ltd.
ScenarioYoshida Kiju
CastHayakawa Tamotsu
 Kayama Yoshiko
 Mihara Yoko
 Ashiya Gannosuke
 Negishi Akemi
PhotographyNarushima Toichiro
EditorOta Kazuo
Production designOsumi Junichi
Sound designOkumura Taizo
MusicHayashi Hikaru
Length108'
Themes
2010 Signals - Regained