1979 Japanese film
Demon Pond (Japanese: 夜叉ヶ池, Hepburn: Yasha-ga-ike) is a 1979 Japanese romantic fantasy film directed by Masahiro Shinoda. It is an adaptation of the 1913 play of the same name by Izumi Kyōka, with an adapted screenplay written by Haruhiko Mimura and Tsutomu Tamura. The film stars Tsutomu Yamazaki, Go Kato, and Kabuki actor Tamasaburo Bando.
Synopsis
Wandering through the countryside, a schoolteacher arrives at a village suffering from severe drought. There, he discovers his long-lost friend, Akira, who is now married to Yuri, a potential sorceress whose fate is intertwined with a bell that must be rung to appease a nearby lake's dragon god—otherwise, an apocalyptic flood will be unleashed upon the region. Desperate for water, the foolish villagers are planning to sacrifice Yuri to the dragon; meanwhile, a host of pond spirits, led by the love-smitten Princess Shirayuki, debate whether they should save these humans from their deserved doom.[1]
Cast
Release
Shochiku released Demon Pond in theaters on October 20, 1979. However, besides one television broadcast on TV Asahi, the film was not re-released in 42 years. It would eventually be restored on 2021 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Shochiku as a film distributor. Director Shinoda and actor Bando supervised a 4K restoration of the film, which aired on the Shochiku-operated channel Satellite Theater in March of that year. It was re-released theatrically in the following summer.[2]
Janus Films handled the American distribution of the film. The restored version made its premiere at MoMA as the opener of its Beyond Ozu: Hidden Gems of Shochiku Studios series on June 10, 2022.[3] The Criterion Collection released the film on 4K, Blu-ray, and DVD on October of 2024, its first ever home video release in North America.[4]
References