IMDb RATING
6.8/10
288
YOUR RATING
The story of the 1964 Japanese Olympic volleyball team, the "Oriental Witches."The story of the 1964 Japanese Olympic volleyball team, the "Oriental Witches."The story of the 1964 Japanese Olympic volleyball team, the "Oriental Witches."
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
Hirofumi Daimatsu
- Self - Japanese Volleyball Coach
- (archive footage)
Yuko Fujimoto
- Self - Japanese Volleyball Player
- (archive footage)
Anton Geesink
- Self - Olympic judo champion
- (archive footage)
Sata Isobe
- Self - Japanese Volleyball Player
- (archive footage)
Lyndon B. Johnson
- Self - US president
- (archive footage)
Akio Kaminaga
- Self - Olympic judo finalist
- (archive footage)
Masae Kasai
- Self - Japanese Volleyball Player
- (archive footage)
Maseko Kondo
- Self - Japanese Volleyball Player
- (archive footage)
Emiko Miyamoto
- Self - Japanese Volleyball Player
- (archive footage)
Yoshinori Sakai
- Self - Olympic cauldron lighter
- (archive footage)
Setsuko Sasaki
- Self - Japanese Volleyball Player
- (archive footage)
Ayano Shibuki
- Self - Japanese Volleyball Player
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film includes extracts from 1935 short animated film 'Ban Danemon Bakemono Taiji no Maki' directed by Yoshitaro Kataoka, and extracts from 1960s animated series 'Atakku no. 1'.
Featured review
Spoiler alert, it turns out there was no witchcraft or sorcery involved at all - just incredibly hard work and training.
The story of the Japanese women's volleyball team that rattled off 258 consecutive wins, including winning gold at the 1964 summer Olympics in Tokyo, is inspiring, and it was a treat to see many of the surviving members still going strong when they met up in their 70's (and perhaps early 80's) for the making of this film. The rigorous regimen coach Daimatsu put them through, starting practice after getting off work from their factory jobs at 5pm and then going to midnight or often later, 1am or 2am, as well as footage of him rapidly firing balls at sprawling team members trying to dig them off the ground at a rate no human could possibly react to, certainly gave a pretty good understanding for how they had been toughened mentally and physically.
It was inspiring to see them endure that, win gold in their home country, comment on how it had made them much stronger in real life afterwords, and then still appear quite youthful in older age. While some had passed away, like captain Kasai Masae (who at 31 in 1964 was older than the rest), we see elderly Katsumi Matsumura biking to the gym in the rain and then pumping iron.
Unfortunately, however, director Julien Faraut just couldn't get out of his own wall in making this documentary. There are several segments inserted into the story that had no real business being here, including the opening animation, footage of devastated Tokyo shortly after the end of the war, and a long sequence of random manufacturing work showing Japan's rebuilding. His decision to mix in anime of volleyball action with the 1962 world championship match in Moscow, where the team earned its nickname by upsetting the powerful Soviet team, was unconscionable. I mean ffs you've literally got footage of the match and even during a point, like when a player is about to spike the ball, you cut away to an anime of a stylized power spike. It was very irritating.
The footage two years later at the Olympics is handled slightly better, but even here we get cut aways to an anime of fans cheering, and after many points, bizarre cut aways to a clock showing the time. The video was also tiled horizontally to fill out the wider aspect ratio, meaning portions of it were repeated on the edges, which was distracting. Meanwhile, not even effort to describe other matches on their path to getting to that game, before or during the Olympics. It really kind of felt like this was not really a sports fan trying to tell a sports story, and doing a mediocre job. It's a compelling bit of history I'd never heard of though, so I'm glad he made this film.
The story of the Japanese women's volleyball team that rattled off 258 consecutive wins, including winning gold at the 1964 summer Olympics in Tokyo, is inspiring, and it was a treat to see many of the surviving members still going strong when they met up in their 70's (and perhaps early 80's) for the making of this film. The rigorous regimen coach Daimatsu put them through, starting practice after getting off work from their factory jobs at 5pm and then going to midnight or often later, 1am or 2am, as well as footage of him rapidly firing balls at sprawling team members trying to dig them off the ground at a rate no human could possibly react to, certainly gave a pretty good understanding for how they had been toughened mentally and physically.
It was inspiring to see them endure that, win gold in their home country, comment on how it had made them much stronger in real life afterwords, and then still appear quite youthful in older age. While some had passed away, like captain Kasai Masae (who at 31 in 1964 was older than the rest), we see elderly Katsumi Matsumura biking to the gym in the rain and then pumping iron.
Unfortunately, however, director Julien Faraut just couldn't get out of his own wall in making this documentary. There are several segments inserted into the story that had no real business being here, including the opening animation, footage of devastated Tokyo shortly after the end of the war, and a long sequence of random manufacturing work showing Japan's rebuilding. His decision to mix in anime of volleyball action with the 1962 world championship match in Moscow, where the team earned its nickname by upsetting the powerful Soviet team, was unconscionable. I mean ffs you've literally got footage of the match and even during a point, like when a player is about to spike the ball, you cut away to an anime of a stylized power spike. It was very irritating.
The footage two years later at the Olympics is handled slightly better, but even here we get cut aways to an anime of fans cheering, and after many points, bizarre cut aways to a clock showing the time. The video was also tiled horizontally to fill out the wider aspect ratio, meaning portions of it were repeated on the edges, which was distracting. Meanwhile, not even effort to describe other matches on their path to getting to that game, before or during the Olympics. It really kind of felt like this was not really a sports fan trying to tell a sports story, and doing a mediocre job. It's a compelling bit of history I'd never heard of though, so I'm glad he made this film.
- gbill-74877
- Sep 6, 2024
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Восточные ведьмы
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $1,967
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was The Witches of the Orient (2021) officially released in India in English?
Answer