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On the Program
This program is an entirely new kind of dramatic presentation.
Instead of dramatizing a novel in the conventional way, viewers
are invited to create their own images while listening to a reading
of the original text. The director has filmed an actor reading in
locations related to the story. Viewers experience the power of
the original text while enjoying images woven in by the director.
Viewers enter a pure world of imagery that transcends simple dramatization.
The actors do not present the story; rather, the work is completed
in the personal imaginations of the viewers.

Nobuhiko Obayashi, one of Japan’s
foremost film directors, chose Tetsuo Miura’s
novel, Shinobugawa (1960), as the
basis for his experiment. The novel, which won the Akutagawa
Prize, depicts a young couple, one a student, the other a
girl working in a small restaurant, who fall in love and marry.
Only two actors appear: the reader and a young woman. The woman
serves two functions: she listens to the reader, and presents an
image of the girl in the novel. This silent character serves as
an intermediary between the reader and the viewer, broadening the
scope of the work.
Director's Notes
One of the devices I used in this program was to have the character
Shino simply listen to the reader. Sitting by the side of the first-person
protagonist who reads the story, she becomes both the apparition
of the ‘I’ who reads, and a character within the story.
The reader simply reads, and Shino simply listens, within a context
that changes from scene to scene. I thought that the use of this
observer would give the audience a greater emotional charge while
giving the reader greater depth as the drama unfolds.
Synopsis
It is the 1950’s, and the protagonist, identified
only as ‘I,’ has come from Tokyo to study, burdened
by the high expectations of his poor family in northeastern Japan.
He meets a young woman named Shino who works in a small restaurant
in the Komagome area of Tokyo. They fall in love, and he takes her
to his family home through the heavy snow for their wedding. He
introduces Shino to his elderly parents and his sister; they spend
their wedding night together listening to bells ringing on sleighs
gliding past across the moonlit snow. The next morning, wrapped
in their small world of happiness, they go to a hot spring in the
mountains to begin their honeymoon.
For More Information
Contact Marty Gross Film Productions, Inc. 416.536.3355 or
email videos@martygrossfilms.com
for more information about purchasing or licensing this film for
broadcast.
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