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Himiko

  • 1974
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
843
YOUR RATING
Himiko (1974)
DramaFantasyHistory

A freestyle, imagined telling of the life of shaman queen Himiko, who falls in love with her half-brother, making her powers weaken thus putting her position to risk.A freestyle, imagined telling of the life of shaman queen Himiko, who falls in love with her half-brother, making her powers weaken thus putting her position to risk.A freestyle, imagined telling of the life of shaman queen Himiko, who falls in love with her half-brother, making her powers weaken thus putting her position to risk.

  • Director
    • Masahiro Shinoda
  • Writers
    • Masahiro Shinoda
    • Taeko Tomioka
  • Stars
    • Shima Iwashita
    • Masao Kusakari
    • Rie Yokoyama
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    843
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Masahiro Shinoda
    • Writers
      • Masahiro Shinoda
      • Taeko Tomioka
    • Stars
      • Shima Iwashita
      • Masao Kusakari
      • Rie Yokoyama
    • 7User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos3

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    Top cast33

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    Shima Iwashita
    Shima Iwashita
    • Himiko
    Masao Kusakari
    • Takehiko
    Rie Yokoyama
    Rie Yokoyama
    • Adahime
    Chôichirô Kawarasaki
    • Mimaki
    Kenzô Kawarasaki
    • Ikume
    Yoshi Katô
    Yoshi Katô
    • Ohkimi
    Jun Hamamura
    Jun Hamamura
    • Narrator
    Tsuchimi Kurata
    Teishiro Nishijima
    Mitsugu Fujita
    Tadashi Yoshizumi
    Mayumi Kyô
    Akio Marubayashi
    Akemi Harada
    Yôko Shibata
    Mamoru Shiraishi
    Hikaru Akasaki
    Tomoko Takano
    • Director
      • Masahiro Shinoda
    • Writers
      • Masahiro Shinoda
      • Taeko Tomioka
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    7.0843
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    Featured reviews

    8kurtralske

    The distant past, seen through a Modernist lens

    Really excellent film. There's a very rare subgenre of historical films: ones that aim to bring to life ancient times...but not by an "authentic" recreation of the past -- instead, the director uses experimental/modernist cinematic techniques to bring traditional folklore and beliefs firmly into relation with the present. Examples include "Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors" (1965, Paradjanov), "Marketa Lazerova" (1967, Vlacil), "The Night of Counting the Years" (1969, Chadi Abdel Salam). Like these, "Himoko" powerfully reanimates dormant cultural world-views, and is particularly successful at connecting them to our era.

    "Himoko" retells an ancient Japanese legend of a shaman-queen. The story is timeless and "universal", yet the world of "Himoko" is a particular Shinto animist world, in which gods of the sun and the land directly control people's lives. The viewer is pulled into the past, by the beautiful unspoiled forest and mountain landscapes, the peoples' costumes and rituals, and most powerfully by the intensity of the performances -- especially Shima Iwashita as Himoko, whose extraordinary performance conveys the fervid complete conviction of shamanistic beliefs. (My new favorite Japanese actress!)

    But the viewer is also pushed into the present. The director Shinoda does not try to fool the viewer with an "authentic" past: the indoor scenes are staged in a space resembling a theatrical set or art gallery, with clearly unnatural (but beautifully dramatic) lighting. A troupe of five Butoh dancers perform stunning, horrifying, evocative dance-rituals throughout, acting sometimes as a Greek chorus outside the story-space, at other times directly involved in the action. And the film's coda breaks the fourth wall, making it plain that Shinoda is less interested in the distant past, than the way that ancient things still live within the present.
    10I_Ailurophile

    Dazzling and vibrant, a fantasy art film with stunning visuals that bolster an absorbing narrative

    It is accurate to describe this as a fantasy-drama, for that is the genre space that this plays in. It's also helpful to describe it as an experimental art film, for this very much rings true and surely helps one to gain a sense of what to expect of it. Indeed, while some of Shinoda Masahiro's countrymen come to mind as points of comparison, including Oshima Nagisa, the wild visual style and storytelling ethos also remind to varying degrees of Indian director Tarsem; contemporary fare out of Europe like 'The other side of the underneath,' 'Glissements progressifs du plaisir,' 'Out 1,' and various horror erotica; or, in a more recent semblance, Joel Coen's 'The tragedy of Macbeth.' Only a very small number of actors are ever on-screen at the same time; their movements and speech are typically measured and deliberate, and the dialogue fairly forthright but poetic. Beyond vast, empty outdoor spaces, the sets are beautiful but spartan, with only a select few colors and set pieces, and heavy contrast between shadow and particularly arranged lighting. With no room in between costume design is either similarly austere, or elaborate and garish. Takemitsu Toru's score is sparing and atmospheric in its dispensation, but also unconventional and jolting (recalling Ito Teiji's 'Watermill,' to my pleasure); minimal audio is heard beyond what is absolutely necessary; shot composition is foremost; the tone is deeply understated amidst an imaginative, somewhat far-out narrative. All of this paints 'Himiko' as the type of picture that a certain kind of stereotypical U. S. viewer may summarily dismiss as a "weird foreign movie." We know that is a sad mistake, though, and for those who are open to all the wide possibilities of the medium, what this is instead is beautiful, haunting, wonderfully creative, dramatic, fascinating, and altogether exquisite. From the outset I didn't know what to anticipate, but this is far, far better than I could have ever hoped.

    The pacing is patient as every shot and scene is carefully, tightly calculated, bent toward transfixing otherworldly aesthetics but also painstaking, captivating plot development and ambience. Even as the gorgeous outdoor filming locations are of this Earth they are made to seem far more distant and fanciful through Shinoda's incredible eye and delicate hand as a director, and Suzuki Tatsuo's stark yet vibrant cinematography, let alone the production design, art direction, and other contributions from behind the scenes. By the nature of the presentation, being so fastidiously arranged and overall low-key, strictly speaking the cast are arguably restricted to some extent in terms of what they are able to do with their characters. By the same token, however, as the narrative advances with discrete, emphatic scene writing, the actors take the opportunity to inject each sequence with stunning yet nuanced vitality that evokes not just dark fantasy but even outright horror as events escalate with harrowing, unsettling energy; where a beat allows the players to fully let loose and embrace the feral spirit of the proceedings, the result is unfailingly invigorating. Dazzling complexity characterizes every choreographed scene, the design and placement of every prop, set piece, light, and detail, and the fundamental look and feel of the feature, further amplifying the intoxicating fantastical splendor. There isn't one frame in these one hundred minutes that would look out of place hung on a wall, or immortalized in a coffee table art book, for the brilliant artistry herein is that much of a priority - and through that ingenuity, the story becomes all the more rich and spellbinding.

    Teased apart bit by bit the writing is relatively simple, albeit outwardly abstruse and whimsical. The tale is one of a diverse kingdom ruled by the jealous hubris of those who zealously believe in the infallible exceptionalism of their country and their sun-god, and the empty pretense of symbols; the false superficiality of peace and order is shattered as natural human passions and inevitable clashes disrupt the status quo and predominant superstitions. That narrative of the fragility of empire and human endeavors - with subtle yet evident themes that are all too relevant fifty years on - is phenomenally flavorful as it is fleshed out, above all with strong, exemplary, grandiose scenes that provide the fuel for all the adornments. Shinoda and screenwriter Tomioka Taeko have conjured a stupendously absorbing saga at once transporting us far from the world we know, and keeping us firmly and humbly planted on it. What seems curious and strange at first increasingly entrances with the bounty of wondrous sights and sounds, all shaped with utmost skill, intelligence, and care, and as those aesthetics dovetail into the developing plot we are kept fully locked in for the rest of the ride. I sat to watch with no foreknowledge and I'm blown away by just how superb it is. It calls other titles to mind in one fashion or another, yet it is indisputably a creation all its own, and in that it is a marvelously enthralling viewing experience. I can definitely understand how this won't appeal to all comers, yet for anyone who is receptive to all that cinema has to offer, 'Himiko' is an outstanding treasure that deserves more recognition. Enter with an open mind and get ready to go on a terrific journey.
    8XxEthanHuntxX

    Perfection

    The sheer perfection, through out the whole movie, of aesthetical elememts, such as: costumes, sets, makeup and theatrical physical performances - is absolutely astounding. The story is very much worthy its scenery but less audacious and abstract then other japanese new wave movie and thus, for me personally, makes for a great single watch but tedious at a second.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film is set in the 3rd century during the late Japanese Yayoi period (1,000 BC - 300) when the legend of Queen Himiko is recorded to have happened. When Takehiko describes a horse to Himiko it is at least a century before horses are believed to have been imported to Japan from China and became common in Japan. Although evidence of horses dating back to the earlier Jomon period (14,000 - 1,000 BC) and the pre-historic Japanese Paleolithic period have been found.

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Himiko?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 9, 1974 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Химико
    • Production companies
      • Toho
      • Art Theatre Guild (ATG)
      • Hyôgen-sha
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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