A kabuki theatre-inflected story about a poor village whose people have to be carried to a nearby mountain to die once they get old.A kabuki theatre-inflected story about a poor village whose people have to be carried to a nearby mountain to die once they get old.A kabuki theatre-inflected story about a poor village whose people have to be carried to a nearby mountain to die once they get old.
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This is the story of an old woman who according to customary tradition of the remote Japanese village where she lives, must be carried by his son to the top of the neighbouring Narayama mountain to meet the gods and die since she has reached 70 years of age. Behind this tradition who seems awful to our western minds, lies the fact that the community is too poor to be able to support its old people. But tradition doesn't always subjugate human feelings and if the old woman shows herself as resigned to her fate and even displays some joy in fulfilling the tradition rules, his son feels a deep sorrow in accomplishing that terrible duty and while doing it he must fight in his heart and mind to subdue those loving and compassionate feelings. The scene at the top of the mountain when he is carrying his mother and ends up by laying her on the ground where soon snow begins to fall is intensely tragic in its silence interrupted now and then by the outbursts of the powerless and extremely emotional son's revolt. All along the film we hear to the voice off of a commentator who narrates the story accompanied by a beautiful traditional Japanese music. This commentator's performance reminds us of the role of the chorus present in ancient Greek tragedies. The images make us think of the traditional Japanese paintings with their patches of neat colours making a somewhat theatrical scenery. This movie gives way to deep emotions although not exposed with our kind of western reactions but with Japanese type ones which doesn't make them appear less human.
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Did you know
- TriviaThis was the final film to be added to Roger Ebert's list of "Great Movies" before his death on April 4, 2013 at the age of 70.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Tvennesnack: Varför kan vi inte komma ihåg den här jävla filmen? (2022)
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By what name was The Ballad of Narayama (1958) officially released in Canada in English?
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