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Nobi (1959) Fires On The Plain [DVD9] + [DivX with extras]

Posted By : LezDawson | Date : 17 Oct 2009 02:35:04 | Comments : 16 |
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Nobi (1959) Fires On The Plain [DVD9] + [DivX with extras]
DVD9 iso | 2.35:1 | B+W | Japanese Dolby Digital mono | English Subtitles | HQ Scans | 1hr 45 min | 6.71 GB
XviD/AVI | 192kbps AC3 | 720 x 304 | Japanese | Subs: ENG srt | 1hr 45 min | 1.45 GB
Classic / War

Few films have captured the horror and futility of war with the bleak power of Kon Ichikawa's Fires on the Plain. Near the end of World War II, as Japanese soldiers attempt to flee the Philippines before the arrival of invading American troops, soldier Tamura (Eiji Funakoshi) is perhaps the most damned of all men. Suffering from a severe case of tuberculosis, Tamura is unfit for duty, but the Japanese field hospitals have no beds for a man destined to die soon of consumption, so he is doomed to wander the jungles as his fellow soldiers sink deeper into hunger, disease, and madness. His journey reaches a shocking conclusion when he encounters a band of soldiers who have resorted to cannibalism in order to survive. While it's hard to imagine a film presenting a more unrelentingly grim portrait of war, Fires on the Plain does not concern itself with shock for its own sake. Ichikawa (with the help of cinematographer Setsuo Kobayashi) wrings a dark poetry from this story, as the soldiers struggle to hold on to the last threads of their dignity and humanity, until they finally submerge into insanity at its most beastly. There is a terrible desperation as the men cling to such precious commodities as potatoes and salt, but also a flash of human compassion as they share their meager treasures. And Funakoshi delivers an unforgettable, profoundly moving performance as Tamura; from the first time his deep, haunted eyes meet the camera, we sense that we are visiting a ghost sent to give us a vision of hell, and, as we follow him through the Philippine jungles, that is exactly what he presents to us.

All screens are from DivX version

Tamura (Eiji Funakoshi), the hero of Kon Ichikawa’s overwhelming Fires on the Plain, may be the loneliest man in the history of the movies—lonelier than the spiritual pilgrims of Bergman, Bresson, and Dreyer. He is a soldier in an army that, in defeat, has turned its back on him.


It’s 1954, on Leyte island in the Phillippines: Japan’s forces are so decisively beaten that they have abandoned all pretense of solidarity, of camaraderie—of the basic responsibility of men at war to protect each other. In the movie’s first scene, the tubercular Tamura—who has been discharged, still sick, from a field hospital, because there isn’t enough room for the patients and the staff—is told by his angry squad leader that he must return to the hospital; His own unit won’t accept the burden of sustaining him in a debilitated state. The officer sends him on his way with six miserable-looking potatoes and one bleak piece of advice: If the hospital won’t take him back, he should kill himself.


After this grim scene, Tamura sets off on a journey through an unimaginably hostile landscape. The U.S. Army controls the roads. The Filipinos hate the Japanese for having turned their farmlands into battlegrounds. And Tamura’s fellow soldiers are so desperate and hungry that some, in full retreat from their humanity, fall back too far, to the terrible refuge beyond the line that finally seperates civilization from savagery: They will kill other men for food.


In the 1952 novel by Shohei O-oka on which this film is based, Tamura reflects: “For people like us, living day and night on the brink of danger, the normal instinct of survival seems to strike inward, like a disease, distorting the personality and removing all motives other than those of sheer self interest.” Tamura—consumptive, starved and often delirious--wanders in a kind of moral daze. He’s in hell, but he’s not quite ready to enlist in the army of the damned; while he fights off the swarming enemies without, he continues to battle the ravenous enemy within.


Fires on the Plain is, of course, an antiwar film—maybe the most persuasive and powerful ever. But it’s more than that: not merely a relentless series of vivid, shocking tableaux, but also a lucid and eerily pure inquiry into the mysterious workings of the human will. At every stage of Tamura’s episodic trek across Leyte, the nature of his choices changes. As, one by one, elements of what we take to be normal life abruptly disappear, the hero has to figure out how to act within this constantly narrowing set of possibilities, and, in the end, whether it’s worth acting at all.


The story, written for the screen by Natto Wada (the director’s wife), unfolds with the cruel logic of a nightmare, pushing Tamura further and further from his men until finally, without solace or sustenance, he turns away from the camera and walks off, receding into the immense distance towards an uncertain fate. It’s tempting to call the movie an existential fable—but that label would diminish it, too. Fires on the Plain is unique and irreducible: It takes us through unspeakable horrors to arrive at an unnamable beauty.


The only movie that remotely resembles Fires on the Plain is John Huston’s 1951 Stephen Crane adaptation, The Red Badge of Courage, which like Ichikawa’s film, evokes the inferno of war with such sensual immediacy that the scarred landscapes and the ragged, exhausted soldiers have a feverish kind of vitality. In a way, Ichikawa is the Japanese Huston. He is a brilliant interpreter of literary texts, and he has been so prolific and versatile in his nearly 50-year film career that film scholars and auteur-ish critics tend to give him short shrift. Of his dozens of movies, only a handful have been released in the U.S., and even those few are remarkable diverse.



The claustrophobic, perverse erotic comedy Odd Obsession (1959), adapted from a Tanazaki adaptation, The Makioka Sisters (1983), which is lyrical and expansive. Enjo (1958), from Mashima, is a formally austere study of spiritual torment. An Actor’s Revenge (1963) is a reckless, invigorating melange of styles, as flamboyant and bloody as a Jacobean tragedy. And Tokyo Olympiad (1965) is a virtuosic documentary essay on the pleasures and rigors of athletic competition. Most tellingly, his other antiwar film, The Burmese Harp (1956), is entirely different from Fires on the Plain: The earlier movie is dreamier, more contemplative, and infinitely more optimistic—the defeated Japanese soldiers remain bound by their love for each other.


In Fires on the Plain, there’s no such comfort. Here all men are islands, and Ichikawa’s stark widescreen compositions make the distances between them look impossibly vast. The Everyman hero winds up alone with himself; his only consolation is that he has, at least, managed to salvage from war’s devastation a self that he still recognizes as human. When he walks away from us, towards the last of the movie’s many unreachable-seeming horizons, he appears to be heading not for some ultimate frontier of defeat but into a harsh radiance whose source only he can see. And when the screen goes dark, the blackness looks absolute, and terrifying; it strikes inward, with a suddenness of grace. Fires on the Plain is a great movie: an intimate and blindingly clear vision of apocalypse.


An agonizing portrait of desperate Japanese soldiers stranded in a strange land during World War II, Kon Ichikawa’s Fires on the Plain is a compelling descent into psychological and physical oblivion. Denied hospital treatment for tuberculosis and cast off into the unknown, Private Tamura treks across an unfamiliar Philippine landscape, encountering an increasingly debased cross section of Imperial Army soldiers, who eventually give in to the most terrifying craving of all. Grisly yet poetic, Fires on the Plain is one of the most powerful works from one of Japanese cinema’s most versatile filmmakers.


DVD9 Disc Features
New, restored high-definition digital transfer
New video introduction by Japanese-film scholar Donald Richie
New video interviews with director Kon Ichikawa and actor Mickey Curtis
New and improved English subtitle translation


XviD/AVI version includes:
Main feature: 1.45 GB
New video introduction by Japanese-film scholar Donald Richie: 150 MB
New video interviews with director Kon Ichikawa and actor Mickey Curtis: 300 MB
English srt and idx/sub subtitles
jpg screenshots of all DVD menus

300 dpi scans uploaded independently

Donald Richie

Kon Ichikawa

Mickey Curtis


Full dual-layer DVD links (RS)
http://rapidshare.com/files/299317463/DVD-Nobi.part01.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299332426/DVD-Nobi.part02.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299335365/DVD-Nobi.part03.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299360701/DVD-Nobi.part04.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299375813/DVD-Nobi.part05.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299465338/DVD-Nobi.part06.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299484210/DVD-Nobi.part07.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299503051/DVD-Nobi.part08.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299522546/DVD-Nobi.part09.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299541054/DVD-Nobi.part10.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299560282/DVD-Nobi.part11.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299580245/DVD-Nobi.part12.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299601650/DVD-Nobi.part13.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299623930/DVD-Nobi.part14.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299708920/DVD-Nobi.part15.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299729724/DVD-Nobi.part16.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299748676/DVD-Nobi.part17.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299762990/DVD-Nobi.part18.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299782199/DVD-Nobi.part19.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299800341/DVD-Nobi.part20.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299927014/DVD-Nobi.part21.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/299947931/DVD-Nobi.part22.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300154133/DVD-Nobi.part23.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300169064/DVD-Nobi.part24.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300184314/DVD-Nobi.part25.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300198107/DVD-Nobi.part26.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300211555/DVD-Nobi.part27.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300227979/DVD-Nobi.part28.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300246121/DVD-Nobi.part29.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300263830/DVD-Nobi.part30.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300285328/DVD-Nobi.part31.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300300044/DVD-Nobi.part32.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300313218/DVD-Nobi.part33.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/300326244/DVD-Nobi.part34.rar

XviD/AVI links (RS)
http://rapidshare.com/files/293706316/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part01.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293712387/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part02.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293723100/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part03.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293728953/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part04.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293739495/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part05.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293745358/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part06.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293756169/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part07.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293762288/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part08.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293774071/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part09.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293781060/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part10.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293793659/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part11.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293801084/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part12.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293814321/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part13.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293821867/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part14.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293834887/Nobi__1959__Fires_On_The_Plain.avi.DaveRip.part15.rar

XviD rip of All DVD Extras (essential viewing)

http://rapidshare.com/files/293841963/Nobi.DVD-Extras.avi.DaveRip.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293895392/Nobi.DVD-Extras.avi.DaveRip.part2.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/293923879/Nobi.DVD-Extras.avi.DaveRip.part3.rar

Scans (RS)

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Posted By: silverzam Date: 17 Oct 2009 02:40:56
Thanks a lot for this great film.
Posted By: sebassie Date: 17 Oct 2009 10:58:47
Thanks for this film! There is however a problem with the dvd archives. Part 5 gives a CRC failure. I downloaded part 5 twice. I cannot say if more parts are corrupt, as my software (Betterzip, UnrarX on a Mac) just stops after testing part 5. I hope you can check the files and upload part 5 again.
Posted By: blah2 Date: 17 Oct 2009 10:59:02
Downloading DVD, file #5 is corrupted.
Posted By: LezDawson Date: 17 Oct 2009 13:10:21
Leave it with me - I'm not home now but I think I can re-up part 5 from where I am as I have my hard drive here. I shall post back shortly.

LD

UPDATE

OK, Part 5 is now re-uploaded.
Thanks for your patience.

LD
Posted By: Firefox-user Date: 17 Oct 2009 15:48:55
Thank you, it works!
Posted By: mxlabs Date: 17 Oct 2009 16:11:20
thanks a lot once again for posting this interesting looking movie LezDawson !
i am going to download it now (:
__________________________
edit:
all files ok ! XviD/AVI version - 1.45 GB

thanks for the share !
Posted By: ali_004 Date: 17 Oct 2009 20:07:51
thanks for sharing criterion Movies.
please keep on this work.
Posted By: itchyy Date: 19 Oct 2009 18:20:37
Thanks, great movie
Posted By: itsartolie Date: 23 Oct 2009 11:41:46
thank you very much
Posted By: LezDawson Date: 24 Oct 2009 21:59:10
Criterion Drunken Angel full DVD9 + DivX:

http://avaxhome.ws/video/drunken_angel_kurosawa_daverip_rapidshare_divx_DVD9.html
Posted By: mariod Date: 25 Oct 2009 03:11:04
Thank You.
Posted By: arrri Date: 27 Oct 2009 20:58:34
Hi, Lez!
I'm trying to download the DVD version and file 23 reports to be removed from server by uploader. Can you help?
Thanks!
Posted By: LezDawson Date: 28 Oct 2009 10:09:43
F@cking 'ell, looks like someone's reported it so part 23 is now lost. I have deleted the rars from my hard drive now. I'll have to re-up the whole thing.
For those that want the XviD version: it is still there.
Posted By: arrri Date: 28 Oct 2009 11:09:50
Thanks for the effort!
Posted By: LezDawson Date: 29 Oct 2009 01:02:09
All parts re-upped.

LD
Posted By: Kel bazar Date: 12 Jan 2011 12:00:10
Thanks a lot !!!
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