Endless Desire

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Endless Desire
Directed byShōhei Imamura
Written by
  • Shōhei Imamura
  • Hisashi Yamanouchi
  • Shinji Fujiwara (novel)
Starring
CinematographyShinsaku Himeda
Edited byMutsuo Tanji
Music byToshiro Mayuzumi
Production
company
Distributed byNikkatsu
Release date
  • 18 November 1958 (1958-11-18) (Japan)[1]
Running time
101 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Endless Desire (果しなき欲望, Hateshinaki yokubō) is a 1958 Japanese black comedy[2] and crime film by Shōhei Imamura.[1][3]

In the film, war veterans of the Pacific War conspire to uncover a hidden morphine supply. The area of the hiding place is about to be demolished, and they have to hurry. The conspirators soon turn on each other, as they try to claim sole ownership over their loot.

Plot[edit]

Ten years after the end of the Pacific War, a group of ex-soldiers meets to dig up a supply of morphine which had been hidden in an air-raid shelter: Onuma, pharmacist Nakata, professional criminal Yamamoto, and teacher Sawai. As the men had once been informed by their superior, Lieutenant Hashimoto, that only three men knew of the morphine, not four, they are at first suspicious of Sawai to be an intruder. They are joined by a woman, Shima, who declares that she is the younger sister of the Lieutenant who has died in the meantime.

The area around the shelter has been turned into a shopping district, while the shelter itself now lies in the basement of a butcher shop. The group rents an empty store from corrupt local landlord Kinzō and starts digging a tunnel to the butcher shop. Shima announces that she will sleep with the man who digs up the most during their venture. Later, she seduces Kinzō's son Satoru, although Satoru tries to court the butcher's daughter Ryūko. Yamamoto is arrested for a burglary, but escapes and returns to the group. He tries to rape Shima, but is stopped by Sawai.

When Kinzō announces that the area will be demolished in the next days by a decree of the city's council, the group's plan becomes a race against time. Sawai eventually kills the violent Yamamoto, but is himself buried alive under sand when the group has reached the basement, left behind by the others. With only Onuma, Nakata and Shima left alive, Onuma learns that Shima is actually Lieutenant Hashimoto's widow, and that she and Nakata, who turns out to be the intruder, had been charged for killing her husband but released later for lack of evidence. Shima poisons Onuma and then stabs Nakata to have the morphine all to herself. Satoru calls the police when he stumbles onto the scene. While fleeing through a heavy rain storm, Shima slips on a wet crossing and drowns in the river running underneath.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Endless Desire was the third film Imamura had been assigned to by Nikkatsu studios.[4] In a later interview, Imamura stated that this film foreshadowed his 1961 Pigs and Battleships, one reason being the "formal dynamism" both films have in common.[5] It was also his first collaboration with cinematographer Shinsaku Himeda, who photographed many of the director's films.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "果てしなき欲望 (Endless Desire)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 6 July 2023.
  2. ^ "Endless Desire". Harvard Film Archive. Retrieved 7 August 2021.
  3. ^ "今村昌平 (Shohei Imamura)" (in Japanese). Kotobank. Retrieved 7 August 2021.
  4. ^ Kehr, Dave (1999). "The Last Rising Sun". In Quandt, James (ed.). Shohei Imamura. Toronto International Film Festival Group. p. 72.
  5. ^ Kehr, Dave (1999). "The Last Rising Sun". In Quandt, James (ed.). Shohei Imamura. Toronto International Film Festival Group. p. 58.

External links[edit]