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Street of Shame  (Japan, 1956)

Akasen Chitai

Director Kenji Mizoguchi’s final film is nothing less than a summation of his art.  The Japanese National Diet’s debate over illegalizing prostitution is in the air, but it’s business as usual in Tokyo’s red-light district at the Dreamland salon (Hiroshi Miutani’s fantastic closed-world set).  Street concerns five working girls living double-lives as daughters, mothers, wives, loan sharks and dreamers when they are not waylaying potential clients in a terrifying pull-and-tug clamor.  Machiko Kyo is a standout as Hollywood-brainwashed “Mickey” in this unusual late-period contemporary drama.  Shortly after it premiered, Mizoguchi was dead of leukemia at 58, and prostitution was outlawed in Japan.

Daiei.  Producer: Masaichi Nagata.  Director: Kenji Mizoguchi.  Screenwriter: Masashige Narusawa.  Based on a novel by Yoshiko Shibaki.  Cinematographer: Kazuo Miyagawa.  Editor: Kanji Sugawara.  Cast: Machiko Kyo, Aiko Mimasu, Ayako Wakao, Michiyo Kogure, Kenji Sugarwara.  35mm, b/w, in Japanese with English subtitles, 87 min.