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Fires on the Plain

Nobi

Japan

1959

104 Min
Black and White
Japanese
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Kon Ichikawa

PROD Masaichi Nagata

SCR Natto Wada

DP Setsuo Kobayashi

CAST Eiji Funakoshi, Osamu Takizawa, Mickey Curtis

ED Tatsuji Nakashizu

PROD DES Tokuji Shibata

MUSIC Yasushi Akutagawa

Synopsis

An agonizing portrait of desperate Japanese soldiers stranded in a strange land during World War II, Kon Ichikawa’s Fires on the Plain (_Nobi_) is a compelling descent into psychological and physical oblivion. Denied hospital treatment for tuberculosis and cast off into the unknown, Private Tamura treks across an unfamiliar Philippine landscape, encountering an increasingly debased cross section of Imperial Army soldiers, who eventually give in to the most terrifying craving of all. Grisly yet poetic, Fires on the Plain is one of the most powerful works from one of Japanese cinema’s most versatile filmmakers. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Kon_ichikawa

Kon Ichikawa

Kon Ichikawa was considered one of the masters of the immediate postwar generation of Japanese filmmakers, a generation often overshadowed by the titanic presence of Akira Kurosawa. Unlike Kurosawa, Ichikawa imbued his films with a sense of irony that swings from the sardonic to the compassionate. Born in 1915 in southern Mie Prefecture, Ichikawa grew up a sickly child and spent much of his childhood drawing. Like Kurosawa, he aspired to be a painter. He also grew to be an enthusiastic movie fan, seeing most of the early samurai epics by Daisuke Ito and Masahiro Makino while marveling at Charles Chaplin films. Yet it was Walt Disney’s Silly Symphonies series that proved to be a revelation for Ichikawa, as he realized that animation could combine his passions for art and for movies. After finishing technical school in Osaka in the 1930s, he got a job at the animation department of J.O. studios just as it was expanding from a rental film house to a full-fledged production company. As… read more

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John "The K man" Smith

29Jul09

More of a survival, and what Humans do to survive than a war film. Great film, and makes me not want to go camping.  
Picture of M.G. Wood

M.G. Wood

30Apr09

The scene with the black flies swarming from the soldier's lap is one of the more striking images I've seen: http://asian-films.suite101.com/article.cfm/fires_on_the_plain_1959  
Picture of thisguyoverhere

thisguyoverhere

26Jan09

Here it is folks, the original flesh-eating-zombie film. This is such an profound portrait of the effects of war unlike anything else that has ever been told. I cannot recall a film that made me as thirsty as I was while watching this. Truly and bitterly effective.  

Kumar

28Nov08

A shattering, relentless examination of the true horrors of war. 9/10  

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Untitled

By Musidor​a on June 17, 2009

I had the amazing experience of watching Fires on the Plain in the beautiful Castro Theatre in San Francisco with only maybe… five to ten others in the audience. I wept with such a gut-wrenching feeling…  read review

Untitled

By Ilivein​fear on January 2, 2009

There are war films and anti-war films, and then there is Fires on the Plain. This is a disturbing, thrilling, heartbreaking, macabre, and profound work of art. It not only shows us the hell on earth…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.