The Catch
- 1983
- Japan
- 140 min
- Japanese with english subtitles
In a tuna-fishing village on the Shimokita peninsula, an old fisherman, his daughter and her boyfriend, who also wants to become a fisherman, have a difficult and turbulent relationship.
Widely admired (and much imitated) by Japanese filmmakers for his depictions of adolescence in all its messy awkwardness and absurdity, Shinji Somai died prematurely at 53 and has yet to find the international acclaim he so richly deserves. The Catch is Somai’s first work focusing on heated tensions between the generations. A stubborn old tuna fisherman in an isolated fishing town looks unkindly upon his only daughter’s boyfriend, especially when the boyfriend begs to learn the secrets of the trade. Amid tuna fishing sequences to rival that of Rossellini’s Stromboli, including a famous scene in which the legendary actor Ken Ogata (Ballad of Narayama) actually managed to haul a massive tuna out of the sea, Somai creates tension through his signature use of mesmerizingly and sensuously long takes.
(MoMA.org)
- Production : Shochiku Co. Ltd.
- Production : Fuji Company
- Photography : Mutsuo Naganuma
- Sound : Minoru Nobuoka
- Editing : Sachiko Yamaji
- Original music : Shigeaki Saegusa
- Copy contact : Schochiku Co. Ltd. / shoko_nakajima@shochiku.co.jp