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Pîtâ | Eddie | |
Osamu Ogasawara | Leda | |
Yoshimi Jô | Jimi | |
Koichi Nakamura | Juju | |
Flamenco Umeji | Greco | |
Saako Oota | Mari | |
Tarô Manji | Nora | |
Toyosaburo Uchiyama | Guevara | |
Mikio Shibayama | Philosopher | |
Wataru Hikonagi | Sabu | |
Fuchisumi Gomi | Piro | |
Chieko Kobayashi | Okei | |
Yô Satô | Radon | |
Keiichi Takenaga | Humpback | |
Mamoru Hirata | ||
Nagatoshi Sakamoto | ||
Kazuhiko Kura | ||
Akira Hanaue | ||
Takashi Tabata | ||
Yutaka Oyama | ||
Kenji Kodama | ||
Yukimasa Natori | ||
Yukio Ninagawa | Himself | |
Yoshihiro Nakadai | ||
Haruhiko Saitô |
Director |
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Producer |
Sumiko Fujisawa
Mitsuru Kudo |
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Writer |
Toshio Matsumoto
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Cinematography |
Tatsuo Suzuki
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Music |
Jôji Yuasa
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A feverish collision of avant-garde aesthetics and grind-house shocks, Funeral Parade of Roses takes us on an electrifying journey into the nether-regions of the late-’60s Tokyo underworld. In Toshio Matsumoto’s controversial debut feature, seemingly nothing is taboo: neither the incorporation of visual flourishes straight from the worlds of contemporary graphic-design, painting, comic-books, and animation; nor the unflinching depiction of nudity, sex, drug-use, and public-toilets. But of all the “transgressions” here on display, perhaps one in particular stands out the most: the film’s groundbreaking and unapologetic portrayal of Japanese gay subculture. |
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