Chikara to Onna no Yo no Naka
6 /10 1 Votes6
Genre Animation, Short Language Japanese | Director Kenzo Masaoka Music director Masanori Imasawa Country Japan | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Release date 13 April 1933 (1933-04-13) Cast Roppa Furukawa, Akio Isono, Ranko Sawa, Koji Mitsui, Yoko Fujita, Yoko Murashima, Fusako Fujita Screenplay Kenzo Masaoka, Tadao Ikeda Similar movies Imokawa Mukuzo Genkanban no Maki (1917), Momotaro no Umiwashi (1943), Momotaro: Umi no Shinpei (1945), Katsudo Shashin, Three Tales (1960) |
Chikara to Onna no Yo no Naka (力と女の世の中, lit. Within the World of Power and Women or The World of Power and Women) is a 1933 anime short film by Kenzō Masaoka and the first Japanese anime of any type to feature voiceovers. The film was released in black and white. There are no known prints of this film available, and it is considered a lost film.
Contents
Chikara was listed as one of the "Best of Best" by the 12th Japan Media Arts Festival.
Plot
The protagonist is a father of four children. His wife is 180 centimetres (5.9 ft) tall, and weighs 120 kilograms (260 lb) due to her incredibly large physique. Because he is constantly being henpecked at home, he becomes involved in an affair with a cute typist at his company and accidentally tells his wife about it while talking in his sleep. After obtaining additional evidence of the affair, she goes to confront both her husband and the typist at her husband's office.
Production
In 1927, the The Jazz Singer was released in the United States as the first talkie film, and Japanese film companies began working on creating them as well. Shochiku released Madame and the Courtesan (マダムと女房, Madamu to Nyōbō) in 1931, the first Japanese talkie. Due to the success of this film, the president of Shochiku, Shirō Kido, commissioned Masaoka to make the first anime talkie, and he began working on it immediately.
Masaoka worked on the film for a little over a year and finally completed it in October 1932. The film was released in theaters the following year on 13 April 1933. At this time, the job of voice actor did not exist, so Shochiku used regular actors for the voice parts. Casting well-known stars, such as Roppa Furukawa and Ranko Sawa (of the Takarazuka Revue), helped make the film a success.
Staff
Sources:
Cast
Sources:
References
Chikara to Onna no Yo no Naka WikipediaChikara to Onna no Yo no Naka IMDb