Yamamoto Satsuo’s poetic and socially aware lens shines bright in this compassionate chronicle of working-class life across turbulent decades of Japanese history, and Ballad of the Cart assures his place as a master of the medium.
Japan held a particular place at the Afro-Asian Film Festival. Having not attended the Bandung Conference, the country also did not send official delegations to Tashkent, Cairo or Jakarta – while the cinema industry proper always participated on its own account, with choice films as well as creatives. Ballad of the Cart, directed by card-carrying Communist Yamamoto Satsuo, was a perfect fit for the festival’s ideals and aims: the story of a peasant couple’s life through tumultuous decades of Japanese modern history was as much an emotionally moving crowd pleaser, as a perfect example of the socially conscious poetic realism deemed desirable by the Left-wing establishment. Half a century later, Yamamoto’s masterpiece has only grown in depth, as today we almost never get to see working class life told with such dignity, care and kindness. Those who liked The Great White Tower (1965), which we screened last year as part of Cinema Regained, will surely agree after also watching Ballad of the Cart that Yamamoto Satsuo is a master in dire need of discovery.
– Olaf Möller
Additional Credits
Presented in collaboration with National Film Archive of Japan.
Film details
Country of production
Japan
Year
1959
Festival edition
IFFR 2025
Length
145'
Medium/Format
35mm
Language
Japanese
Premiere status
None
Director
Yamamoto Satsuo
Producer
Saburô Tateno
Screenplay
Yoshikata Yoda, Tomoe Yamashiro
Music
Hayashi Hikaru
Cinematography
Minoru Maeda
Editing
Akikazu Kôno
Production design
Kazuo Kubo
Principal cast
Yûko Mochizuki, Rentarô Mikuni, Sachiko Hidari, Tokie Hidari, Teruko Kishi, Kumeko Urabe