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Nanami: The Inferno of First Love

Original title: Hatsukoi: Jigoku-hen
  • 1968
  • X
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
988
YOUR RATING
Nanami: The Inferno of First Love (1968)
DramaRomance

A teenage goldsmith with a dark past tragically falls in love with a young nude model.A teenage goldsmith with a dark past tragically falls in love with a young nude model.A teenage goldsmith with a dark past tragically falls in love with a young nude model.

  • Director
    • Susumu Hani
  • Writers
    • Susumu Hani
    • Shûji Terayama
  • Stars
    • Haruo Asanu
    • Kazuko Fukuda
    • Kuniko Ishii
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    988
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Susumu Hani
    • Writers
      • Susumu Hani
      • Shûji Terayama
    • Stars
      • Haruo Asanu
      • Kazuko Fukuda
      • Kuniko Ishii
    • 9User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Photos20

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    Top cast10

    Edit
    Haruo Asanu
    • Algebra
    Kazuko Fukuda
    • Mrs. Otagaki, Shun's stepmother
    Kuniko Ishii
    • Nanami
    Ichirô Kimura
    • Psychiatrist
    Kazuo Kimura
    • Doctor
    Koji Mitsui
    • Mr. Otagaki, Shun's stepfather
    Misako Miyato
    • Mother
    Kimiko Nakamura
    • Ankokuji's wife
    Akio Takahashi
    • Shun
    Minoru Yuasa
    • Ankokuji
    • Director
      • Susumu Hani
    • Writers
      • Susumu Hani
      • Shûji Terayama
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    7.1988
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    Featured reviews

    7Jeremy_Urquhart

    Confronting and (sometimes) confusing.

    In line with a title like Nanami: The Inferno of First Love, this one is pretty grim overall. It's already a far from sunny look at love, but it delves into darker territory when it comes to exploring the histories of its two main characters, and in that sense, I feel this still has the capacity to shock.

    It doesn't compromise and I guess I could call it a gutsy film. It sometimes feels like it's trying to be steamy, for lack of a better word, and that clashes with the more disturbing parts of the film. To what extent that was intentional and, if so, what purpose that was supposed to serve, I'm not sure. I guess that's the main reservation I have about Nanami: The Inferno of First Love.

    It's one that's kind of impossible to recommend unless you like Japanese New Wave films (and that's a whole movement I have kind of mixed feelings about personally), but if you are and don't mind a disturbing and downbeat watch, then sure. Knock yourself out and ruin your day. It's only one day; you get plenty of them anyway. Hopefully.
    6ebiros2

    Director Susumu Hani's best known work

    Director and creator of this movie, Susumu Hani was one of the directors who were known for his avant garde movie making style. There were others in his league such as Nagisa Ooshima, and Kiju Yoshida that formed Japanese New Wave cinema movement. Hani himself had an avant garde lifestyle getting divorced from his wife finding out that he was having an affair with her sister, and Hani later marrying the sister of his ex-wife.

    Hatsukoi Jigokuhen was an experimental movie made in the late '60s when Japan was experiencing new culture movement influenced by the Hippie culture. Most of Japan's avant garde films are from this period.

    This movie was made for the youth of the time. It depicts the difficulties that the youth were experiencing at the time such as college entrance exam, country girl coming to Tokyo and having to work as a nude model to supplement her income, and a boy who's relationship with her is his first love. Both Kuniko Iwai who played Nanami and Akio Takahashi who played Shun were new comers into the movie business. I believe the little girl who played Mami is Hani's own four year old daughter Mio Hani.

    While other directors who were part of the avant garde movement were seriously seeking new forms of liberal expression with various success, I believe that Hani has bona fide insanity about his approach. The movie shows the underground culture that existed in Japan at the time, but there are segments that are not related to the story that borders on child porn, SM element in what goes on inside the underground clubs.

    All of the avant garde movies that came out of Japan are very quiet. Conversations are all quiet and slow, and so is the progress of the story. And all talk about free spirited people, that in many ways live irresponsible lives. In the end the style seemed to have failed to set new direction, and people lost interest in this style of movie. Looking at them 40 years later is interesting in seeing the society of Japan during that time.
    chaos-rampant

    If you peel a cabbage you get the core; but if you peel an onion?

    This is an actual question in the film, something to seriously meditate on. The riddle suggests the answer (that we get nothing), but the answer given challenges our preconceived notion.

    Can we say we get nothing from the peeling of the onion? We still have an onion (peeled away) and the peeling has happened, there is change, movement, progression. This is how I feel the film functions as New Wave. If we peel it to arrive at a core we may be frustrated, but if we come for the peeling instead? For the process of transformation itself?

    So, if you peel life what do you get? In a marvelous hypnosis scene, a young man is called by the doctor to visualize a screen and see what goes there. Do we project ourselves upon the images on screen or does the screen upon us?

    The first love here is awkward, erratic, youthful, perhaps not love at all. The inferno is society and the self, or the self trying to cope with society. I like how the portrait of youth is angsty but loving, how the folly of youth is embraced. In Yoshishige Yoshida's Eros + Massacre from the following year, the two young students living in a modern Japan are aimless, disaffected, they act as though they know. Here the young couple fumbles in the dark, only now getting to know that the world is a dark place.

    And if we peel cinema, what do we get then? If we begin to disassimilate the narrative in the effort to see what exists inside and examine the parts, do they make a whole or do we make it by our presence as viewers; this is why Inferno is valuable to me, because I'm always on the lookout for films the peel away the language of cinema, tweak and contort image to see will it break down at some point to reveal truth.

    Oh, we may get nothing at all eventually, or have a helluva hard time convincing others that nothingness itself is the most valuable, but we are still not at the point where we started. Meaning a journey has taken place that dislocated us, our sense, our sense of image.

    In this sense this is a true New Wave film. As with Godard the breach with traditional narrative is desirable here, unlike Godard though Nanami is not reactionary, it's angsty or unorthodox because it has a reason. Nanami's society hasn't solved its problems yet like the French New Wave's has, or perhaps in having solved some of them, a yawning chasm that goes back in time is revealed.
    6haildevilman

    Nippon New Wave

    Well who says the Japanese can't do French? A long slow-paced drama about a man with a past. A past that screws up his potential romances. Apparently his father was a bad man and now he can only talk to loose chicks.

    The core is about first love in general. Most of us have dealt with it. This is how this one guy tries to.

    The filming is sehr arty and you know the dialogue was deliberate. The pace reminds one of a student film at times and the camera-work was good for the seemingly non-existent budget.

    I saw this on video years ago and saw it again in Tokyo during an art house revival. I wish it were better known.

    This is one you can take your lady to as well.
    8patonamu

    Pure Hypnosis

    An insecure guy falls in love with a young nude model.But his past sexual abuse hinders him of loving inhibitedly. He meets a little girl in the park instead... The story isn't that linear and that's why the freely linked episodes of this film just takes you on a shaky underwater rollercoaster ride. Beautiful camera-shots, excellent editing, great music, great acting...

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Edited into Dusk to Dawn Drive-in Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 9 (2002)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 10, 1969 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • The Inferno of First Love
    • Production companies
      • Art Theatre Guild (ATG)
      • Hani Productions Ltd.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $769
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 27m(87 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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