One of the sixties’ great international art-house sensations, Woman in the Dunes was for many the grand unveiling of the surreal, idiosyncratic worldview of Hiroshi Teshigahara.
Eija Okada plays an amateur entomologist who has left Tokyo to study an unclassified species of beetle that resides in a remote, vast desert;
when he misses his bus back to civilization, he is persuaded to spend the night in the home of a young widow (Kiyoko Kishida) who lives in a hut at the bottom of a sand dune.
What results is one of cinema’s most bristling, unnerving, and palpably erotic battles of the sexes, as well as a nightmarish depiction of everyday Sisyphean struggle, for which Teshigahara received an Academy Award nomination for best director.
Cannes (In Competition): Jury Special Prize, New York
Read about this film
Title: Woman in the Dunes | Suna no onna (1964)
Directed by: Hiroshi Teshigahara
Date of birth: January 28, 1927, Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan
Date of death: April 14, 2001, Tokyo, Japan
Writing credits:
Kôbô Abe, Eiko Yoshida
Music by: Tôru Takemitsu
Country: Japan
Language: Japanese
Color: Black and White
Runtime: 147 min.