About this Event
Lost for 45 years until it was rediscovered by Kinugasa in his storehouse in 1971, the film is the product of an avant-garde group of artists in Japan known as the Shinkankakuha (School of New Perceptions) who tried to overcome naturalistic representation.
The film is set in a mental institution in contemporary Japan.
Yasunari Kawabata, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1968, was credited on the film with the original story. He is often cited as the screenwriter and a version of the scenario is printed in his complete works, but the scenario is now considered a collaboration between him, Kinugasa, Banko Sawada, and Minoru Inuzuka. Eiji Tsuburaya is credited as an assistant cameraman.
Read the article "A Page of Madness: The Lost, Avant Garde Masterpiece from Early Japanese Cinema (1926)"
Learn more about "A Page of Madness" .
Q&A with host Jeff M. Giordano will be Live streamed on our
Parking tip:
$6 all-day parking at St. Mary’s Square Garage.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Clarion Performing Arts Center, 2 Waverly Place, San Francisco, United States
USD 0.00