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IMDbPro

Sandakan hachiban shôkan: Bôkyô

  • 1974
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
831
YOUR RATING
Sandakan hachiban shôkan: Bôkyô (1974)
DramaHistoryWar

A journalist interviews an old woman who was forced into prostitution, just like many other Japanese women working in Asia outside of Japan during the first half of the 20th century. She wor... Read allA journalist interviews an old woman who was forced into prostitution, just like many other Japanese women working in Asia outside of Japan during the first half of the 20th century. She worked in a Malaysian brothel called Sandakan 8.A journalist interviews an old woman who was forced into prostitution, just like many other Japanese women working in Asia outside of Japan during the first half of the 20th century. She worked in a Malaysian brothel called Sandakan 8.

  • Director
    • Kei Kumai
  • Writers
    • Tomoko Yamazaki
    • Sakae Hirosawa
    • Kei Kumai
  • Stars
    • Komaki Kurihara
    • Yôko Takahashi
    • Kinuyo Tanaka
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    831
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kei Kumai
    • Writers
      • Tomoko Yamazaki
      • Sakae Hirosawa
      • Kei Kumai
    • Stars
      • Komaki Kurihara
      • Yôko Takahashi
      • Kinuyo Tanaka
    • 9User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 7 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast35

    Edit
    Komaki Kurihara
    Komaki Kurihara
    • Keiko Mitani
    Yôko Takahashi
    • Young Saki Kitagawa
    Kinuyo Tanaka
    Kinuyo Tanaka
    • Osaki Yamakawa, as an old woman
    Takiko Mizunoe
    • Okiku
    Eiko Mizuhara
    • Ofumi
    Yoko Todo
    • Oyae
    Yukiko Yanagawa
    • Otake
    Yoko Nakagawa
    • Ohana
    Masayo Umezawa
    • Yukiyo
    Ken Tanaka
    • Hideo Takeuchi
    Eitarô Ozawa
    Eitarô Ozawa
    • Tarozo
    Tomoko Jinbo
    • Moto
    Hideo Sunazuka
    • Yajima
    Mitsuo Hamada
    • Yasukichi
    Kaneko Iwasaki
    Kaneko Iwasaki
    • Sato
    Yoshiko Maki
    Siti Tanjung Perak
    • Local people
    Udo Omar
    • Local people
    • Director
      • Kei Kumai
    • Writers
      • Tomoko Yamazaki
      • Sakae Hirosawa
      • Kei Kumai
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    7.5831
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    Featured reviews

    10Peegee-3

    A visual masterpiece, both feminist and humanist

    I originally saw this film in 1975 when it was released and later on VHS...and for many years it was my favorite, bar none. Why? It combines the best that movies have to offer....visual grammar, incredibly moving, skillful performances, good directing and a powerful story of the relationship between a young modern Japanese woman and an older more traditional one, who tells of her experiences, being sold into prostitution at age 13, relating it (through flashbacks) to the younger woman. Those are the bare bones of the film...It doesn't begin to evoke the emotion and beauty of what human relationship can mean, as well as the heartless practices that society can inflict on its helpless inhabitants.
    9samxxxul

    It is dark, it is human and it is vivid.

    "Sandakan 8" is a very important film about a (mostly forgotten) shared history between Japan and Malaysia which is based on Tomoko Yamazaki's novel. Kei Kumai will remain an immortal filmmaker through the work he put into this film to portray the patriarchal exploitation. It makes you feel ashamed to be a human. From the beginning it is such a powerful and moving film, yet it is still a compulsive, involving, and utterly heart-wrenching. The screenplay is one of the best ever written: it captures the stories of the Sandakan brothels, the plight of the girls with so much amount of detail, and thus ensures that we don't easily forget what they were put through without distracting from the main story at hand. The film is graceful, breath-taking, and powerful and the parallels are enhanced by details.

    One of the most powerful stories ever put on celluloid, mainly because it's based on fact. Needless to say, the end is bittersweet and rather perfect. And the whole troubling two hours getting there will leave you moved in the graveyard scene, for sure, but also enlightened. All in all, I applaud Kei Kumai for not exploiting the script for emotional reasons and cash in on the festival audience.
    10moviescorner

    A movie unforgotten

    This is my first movie which made me weeping. The first time I watched it in cinema was in eighties last century, as a very young man, I maybe could not understand everything in the story,or the history, but I wept,could not help, when I had seen old Osaki crying with Keiko's towel in her hand. This scene has been stayed in my mind forever since that moment.From this film, I have understood that a movie could make you cry! More than twenty years after I watched it,now, as a forty-four years old man, when I had watched the DVD again, it still makes me cry! That is pain in your heart when you see the old woman, now I understand everything in the story, I understand that's the pain of life, pain of the fate. This is not only a movie,but a lesson which teaches us something about humanity, so emotionally. In my heart,Kinuyo Tanaka was the one of greatest actress in the world,I love her,because of "Sandakan No. 8 ",because of her skillful performance,because she has impressed me so much,so long time,because she also made me call her: mum!
    7DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Sandakan No. 8

    Sandakan No. 8 is set in Borneo, East Malaysia in the 1970s, where a writer arrives in the hopes of doing research on the karayuki-san (juvenile prostitute) who thrive in the Japanese colonies in Southeast Asia in the early twentieth century. She finds her mark in aged Osaki, and like most documentarians, spend significant time trying to gain and win over trust using sincerity, and the audience have to bear with about a quarter of the movie dwelling on that building of the trust factor, before we can get transported back to the 1900s, following the life of Osaki as it gets recounted in a series of flashbacks.

    I suppose the nature of the subject of the Karayuki-san makes it both controversial and sensitive, and not something to be proud of. In fact, human trafficking to fuel the sex trade is nothing new (and being made into movies such as My Name is Justine, or Lilya 4ever are nothing new too), but perhaps a shameful blip on the Japanese history to have done that to their own. Based on a non-fiction book by author Yamazaki Tomoko and an interview with a former Karayuki-san, you cannot help but see some parallels between some aspects of the story here, and that in Memoirs of a Geisha, though of course this movie came first since it was done in the 70s, and that one happened overseas, while the latter chronicles the life of a fictional geisha in Japan itself.

    A common thread would be that they all stemmed from a very pathetic family decision for survival, to have the young daughters sold away first as child labourers, before the passage of time makes them suitable to be pimped in order to repay quickly a lifetime of debt in which their families only get a fraction of. You can't help but be moved by Osaki's inability to better her lot, and you'll find yourself hard pressed not to be sympathetic towards her when she has to resign to her fate, being caught faraway from home, and doing things which are against her wishes. Then of course comes the cursory romance of her "true love" which naturally comes to naught, especially after performing some national service to visiting compatriots of the military. You'll feel for Osaki especially when she disregards good advice, and heads home to Japan only to be faced with discrimination from her own kin, the same ones whom she was sold away to help.

    The title referred to the brothel where Osaki was based in, with Sandakan being one of the towns in Borneo at the time, and the Japanese brothels were easily labelled from One to Ten. The film captures a snapshot of history of Borneo in the 70s, where the earlier Sandakan days seemed to have been recreated from man made sets. The movie might seem dated in its presentation and style, with little going on in the present day it is set with attempts to verify the facts that Osaki recounted, but the flashback scenes are nothing short of riveting even though the story might have already been told a couple of times in other forms. But in truth, the payload comes toward the end where the two lead characters finally connect at an emotional level, and at the very last scene, which was extremely poignant in its revelation.
    10goster

    One of my ten favorites

    Never overacted, yet powerfully moving. I've watched it many times, and it never loses its impact. No one I've watched it with have left unshaken. It's impact is in the same class as "Sophie's Choice"; can there be higher praise? If this movie can leave you unmoved, you have a heart of stone.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Official submission of Japan for the 'Best Foreign Language Film' category of the 48th Academy Awards in 1976.
    • Goofs
      Osaki was born and raised in Kumamoto. But she speaks the dialect of Oita, the neighbouring prefecture.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Sneak Previews: The Top Ten Films of 1976 (1977)

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    FAQ12

    • How long is Sandakan No. 8?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 23, 1977 (Hungary)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • Malay
    • Also known as
      • Sandakan No. 8
    • Filming locations
      • Sandakan, Sandakan Division, Sabah, Malaysia
    • Production companies
      • Haiyu-za Film Production Company Ltd.
      • O&R Productions
      • Toho
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h(120 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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