Zigeunerweisen (Tsigoineruwaizen)
Directer: Seijun Suzuki
Starring: Akaji Maro, Michiyo Ohkusu, Naoko Otani, Toshiya Fujita, Yoshio Harada
Countries: Japan
Genre: Drama
Year: 1980
Type: Color
Language: Japanese w/English subt.
Length: 148 mins.
Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1

 

 

 

 

 

 

Information

Synopsis
Maverick filmmaker Seijun Suzuki spent the 1960s concocting cockeyed masterpieces of yakuza psychedelia. With the ambitiously stunning Zigeunerweisen, Suzuki inaugurated his legendary Taisho Trilogy and reincarnated himself as the auteur of modern Japanese art cinema.

Set in a 1920s Japan saturated with decadence and nihilism, Zigeunerweisen is the tale of a disparate quartet drawn together by unseen strings of fate - and nearly driven mad by their own fears and desires. Aochi, a Japanese professor of German, vacations in a seaside town and discovers Nakasago, a former classmate, full-time vagabond -- and suspected serial killer. During their reunion, they both fall hard for the beautiful local geisha Koine. But when Nakasago marries -- and abandons -- eerie Koine-lookalike Sono, the men's mutual obsession for Koine escalates into paranoia and treachery spiked with undercurrents of witchcraft and the sinister presence of supernatural denizens.

Titled after a Pablo Sarasate violin composition that haunts the film both narratively and aurally, Zigeunerweisen was a smash hit on its native soil. The film snagged the 1981 Japanese Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Director, and was instantly established as both an essential work of the national cinema and the twisted magnum opus of the inimitable, go-go groundbreaker Suzuki.

Critical Acclaim
“Playful, sensuous and performed and shot with élan.” - Time Out Film Guide

Awards
Best Picture, Best Director prizes at the 1981 Japanese Academy Awards
Extras on DVD
Suzuki Discusses the making of the Taisho Trilogy
Suzuki Bio/Filmography
Original Theatrical Trailer
Original Key Art/Press Images
Print Essay on Suzuki and the Taisho Trilogy