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A PAGE OF MADNESS

1926

Teinosuke Kinugasa

A Page of Madness

SYNOPSIS

A retired sailor takes a job as a janitor in a mental asylum to care for his wife, who has been institutionalized after drowning their child. Devoid of intertitles, the narrative depends completely on striking visual metaphors to depict the chaotic inner worlds of the patients. Teinosuke Kinugasa’s avant-garde masterpiece utilizes rapid editing and superimpositions to create a disorienting, hallucinatory experience, remaining a landmark of Japanese cinema.

CRITIQUE

Teinosuke Kinugasa’s masterpiece is a stunning example of the Shinkankaku (New Sensationist) movement. Lost for decades, it rejects intertitles to tell its story purely through visual metaphor, rapid montage, and superimposition. It depicts the chaotic subjective reality of a mental asylum with an intensity that rivals European contemporaries. The film uses the camera to simulate madness, creating a disorienting, rhythmic experience. It stands as a testament to the sophistication of early Japanese cinema and its willingness to embrace radical abstraction.

SCREENING AVAILABILITY

  • Theatrical screenings

  • Non-theatrical screenings

  • Festivals and cinematheques

  • Educational screenings

  • Television broadcasting

  • Digital platforms and streaming

  • Promotional and editorial use

  • Licensing of graphic and visual materials

AVAILABLE FORMATS

  • DCP

  • DCP with subtitles

  • Apple ProRes

  • MP4 Screening File

  • MP4 Rehearsal Copy for Musicians (silent films)

  • Blu-ray

  • High-resolution archival masters

PROMOTIONAL MATERIALS

  • Posters

  • Press stills

  • Promotional assets

  • Screening support materials

AVAILABLE SUBTITLES

  • English

  • Spanish

  • French

  • Portuguese

  • Italian

  • German

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