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A Page of Madness

Original title: Kurutta ichipêji
  • 1926
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 10m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
5.1K
YOUR RATING
A Page of Madness (1926)
DramaHorrorThriller

A man takes a job at an asylum with hopes of freeing his imprisoned wife.A man takes a job at an asylum with hopes of freeing his imprisoned wife.A man takes a job at an asylum with hopes of freeing his imprisoned wife.

  • Director
    • Teinosuke Kinugasa
  • Writers
    • Yasunari Kawabata
    • Teinosuke Kinugasa
    • Minoru Inuzuka
  • Stars
    • Masuo Inoue
    • Ayako Iijima
    • Yoshie Nakagawa
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    5.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Teinosuke Kinugasa
    • Writers
      • Yasunari Kawabata
      • Teinosuke Kinugasa
      • Minoru Inuzuka
    • Stars
      • Masuo Inoue
      • Ayako Iijima
      • Yoshie Nakagawa
    • 46User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos30

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    Top cast10

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    Masuo Inoue
    • Servant
    Ayako Iijima
    • Servant's Daughter
    Yoshie Nakagawa
    • Servant's Wife
    Hiroshi Nemoto
    • Young Man
    Misao Seki
    • Doctor
    Minoru Takase
    • Crazy Man A
    Eiko Minami
    • Dancer
    Kyôsuke Takamatsu
    • Crazy Man B
    • (as Kyosuke Takamatsu)
    Tetsu Tsuboi
    • Crazy Man C
    Shintarô Takiguchi
    • Boy
    • Director
      • Teinosuke Kinugasa
    • Writers
      • Yasunari Kawabata
      • Teinosuke Kinugasa
      • Minoru Inuzuka
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    7.35.1K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    10mjneu59

    a rediscovered classic

    Film history has been negligent in recognizing this landmark silent drama, made in 1926 by pioneering Japanese director Teinosuke Kinugasa, but unknown until 1971, when a surviving print was (literally) unearthed in the director's garden shed. The film was produced in an isolated creative environment far removed from any foreign influence, but is nevertheless a masterpiece of imagery and editing, revealing a stunning visual flair and employing montage techniques as skillfully as anyone since Eisenstein. It tells a powerful, hallucinatory story of a janitor in an insane asylum who wants desperately to help his inmate wife after she attempts suicide, and like Murnau's 'The Last Laugh' unfolds without the crutch of intertitles. The film has aged remarkable little after the better part of a century in limbo, but since its belated rediscovery has yet to earn the acclaim and evaluation it deserves.
    7max4movie

    Probably a Shadow of Its Former Self ...

    Kurutta Ippeji offers a view on the distorted perspective of a troubled janitor in a mental asylum. As a proof of concept, it shows that experimental cinematic techniques can affect the way narration is perceived by the viewer - here, the visual elements contribute to how the viewer experiences the characters' mental state. As an experiment, the movie possibly even makes a stronger case than the comparably surreal Hausu (1977), which is partly imbalanced in its style. However, due to the poor visual quality and the lack of functional storytelling, this experimental feature can't be easily recommended to people looking for a more conventional feature. Overall 7/10 Full Review on movie-discouse.blogspot.com
    6adamwarlock

    fascinating but tough going

    I saw the 1 hour version shown on TCM. I'll like to see the 78 minute restoration as this version has no inter titles, no translation of signs and missing a third of the film. Now, back then a benshi would live narrate so there wouldn't be titles but do they have a copy of what the benshi said during the film (if anything)? I would read a synopsis before watching as it makes things clearer. The plot is hard to follow, some of it is from the POV of crazy people or the dream of the protagonist. Well worth watching but more for admiration than enjoyment.
    chaos-rampant

    A page out of order

    This is actually one of the titles of the film, a page out of order. It perfectly reflects the film itself, a narrative fractured, demented, cast in and out of a feverish mind, but ultimately incomplete to us, and the various misconceptions it has spawned in trying to evaluate as though it was the whole thing.

    I was increasingly suspicious of this while watching, that I was basically confronted with an incomplete film and so a film impenetrable not wholly by design but only because the keys have been lost to us, or are not attached to the film we are watching and we have to apprehend elsewhere. Doing a little research afterwards only confirmed my doubts. So a little context:

    -the film is not the tip of the iceberg of an advanced cinema whose main body is lamentably lost to us; it was saved exactly because it was an exception, a low-budget oddity the filmmaker himself re-discovered in his garden shed. The majority of silent Japanese cinema - whose final traces were eclipsed in the aftermath of WWII - were generic studio reworkings of popular material.

    -it is not the product of an 'isolated cinematic environment free of influence', rather a studied attempt to recreate what the French avant-garde was pioneering at the time; so yes, the superimpositions, the haze of motions and details, the rapid-fire montage, all of them tools in the attempt to offer us a glimpse of the fractured, elusive reality of the mind, available tools at the time that Kinugasa knew from other films.

    -so even though the idea of a janitor coming to work in a mental hospital may carry hues of Caligari, the film itself is from the line of what in France was called impressionism; the films of Epstein, L'Herbier, Gance.

    -most importantly, even though the closest parable I can think of is Menilmontant, another French film from the same year that in place of story tried to paint with only images a state of mind from inside the mirror, that film was directly structured around images. It was intended to be seen as we have it. Watching Page it becomes increasingly obvious that a story deeply pertains to what we see; as was customary in Japan at the time, that story was meant to be narrated to the audience by a benshi, a narrator supplied by each theater. We may cobble together a view of that story from other sources, but the intended effect is lost to us.

    -there is still the problem that in the version we have approximately one third of the film is missing. Most of it in the end from what I can tell, where the girl is supposed to marry her fiancé (which echoes and wonderfully annotates the scene where the janitor imagines himself reunited with his wife.

    Oh, what we have of the film is more than fine, it's actually one of the most captivating visions of the mind in disarray from the time. But it was just not meant to be seen as merely a tone poem. The dreamy flow is clearly flowing somewhere. What we have instead is only what was salvaged from it but at the same time near complete enough, making barely enough sense to stand on its own, that we may be inclined to accept as the full vision.

    We can still accept this itself as a fragment of madness and interpret from where our imagination takes us. That is fine, I encourage this.

    Rumors have been circulating about a new restored version, hopefully one that - next to a better print - somehow includes the narration, preferably by a benshi, or intertitles at the very least. Until then, no rating from me.
    7crossbow0106

    Harrowing, Disturbing, Uncompromising

    If you do not think you can take graphic scenes of mentally unstable people, this film is not for you.This story is about a man who takes a job at a local mental institution so he can be near his wife, who has gone mad. Throughout this long thought lost film you see clearly harrowing images of people at the institution. The soundtrack only adds to the foreboding. There are people lying catatonic and there is a dancer who doesn't stop dancing until she drops to the floor, exhausted. The film is 59 minutes long, I think it was originally longer but this was all that was found. There are no inter titles, its a silent film. In Japan, I am certain the benshi narrated the story in theaters, but your imagination has to follow this story. So, why a 7? It is daring, unflinching, brave and both ugly and not at the same time. As a point of reference only, Guy Maddin's work approaches this. Just know going in there is no happiness here. You won't soon forget this film. Best idea: Don't watch it before bedtime, it will stay with you.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film was deemed lost for more than forty years, but it was rediscovered by its director, Teinosuke Kinugasa, in a rice cans in 1971.
    • Alternate versions
      Reissued in Japan in 1973 with musical score replacing original benshi.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Story of Film: An Odyssey: The Golden Age of World Cinema (2011)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 1975 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • None
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • The Forgotten Pages
    • Filming locations
      • Kyoto, Japan(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Kinugasa Productions
      • National Film Art
      • Shin Kankaku-ha Eiga Renmei Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • ¥20,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 10m(70 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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