ションベンライダー Shonben Raidâ
Director: SÔMAI Shinji
1983, 117 minutes, OmeU, DCP
Based on a story by Leonard Schrader, this hard-to-classify film is a mixture of yakuza road movie and youth drama and tells the story of three middle school students who set out in search of their kidnapped classmate. Kawai Michiko and Nagase Masatoshi make their acting debuts here.
Jojo, Jisho and the tomboyish Bruce are friends and are constantly bullied by the overweight class bully Debunaga. But just as they are about to take revenge on him, he is kidnapped by a gang right before their eyes. The trio decide to free him from the clutches of his yakuza tormentors and follow him across the country. Along the way, they meet washed-up gangsters, bizarre policemen and get a taste of adulthood through absurd and tragic misadventures.
Film series
Director Sômai Shinji (1948-2001)
A sensitive master of long takes
Sômai Shinji is considered one of the great poets among Japanese directors. His visually powerful films are characterized by long takes, which he uses to sensitively address life and death, the challenges of growing up, family and friendship, togetherness and loneliness.
Sômai rose to prominence in Japan in the 1980s, when the film industry was struggling to find its feet after the collapse of the traditional studio system. During this transitional phase, he acted as a pioneer in the era of independent directing. In Japan, his work is highly regarded and has won numerous awards; important directors such as Hamaguchi Ryûsuke, Koreeda Hirokazu and Kurosawa Kiyoshi were influenced by him. For a long time, Sômai was little known outside Japan, but his work has been rediscovered and enthusiastically received by critics and audiences, especially in recent years, after Ohikkoshi (Moving) won the Venice Classics Award for Best Restored Film at the Venice International Film Festival in 2023.
Sômai Shinji was born on January 13, 1948 in Morioka, Iwate Prefecture. After dropping out of law school, he began working as an assistant director at the Nikkatsu production company in 1972, where he worked with directors such as Hasegawa Kazuhiko and Terayama Shûji. He worked freelance from 1975 to 1979 and made his directorial debut in 1980 with Tonda kappuru (Dreamy fifteen). In 1982, Sômai founded the production company "Director's Company" together with other young filmmakers, which produced the style-defining film Taifû kurabu (Typhoon Club), among others. The breadth of his work ranges from the box office success Sêrâ fuku to kikanjû (Sailor Suit and Machine Gun) to moving dramas such as Ohikkoshi (Moving) and the melancholy road movie Kazahana (KAZA-HANA).
Between 1980 and 2001, Sômai directed 13 feature films, ten of which are presented here, including digitally restored versions. The series is complemented by the groundbreaking thriller Taiyô o nusunda otoko (The Man Who Stole the Sun) by Hasegawa Kazuhiko, Sômai's great mentor.
On September 9, 2001, Sômai died of cancer at the age of only 53.
Parts of the series will also be shown in Berlin, Hamburg and Munich.
Supported by JTI
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Admission free