Momotaro no umiwashi

thomas.lamarre@mcgill.ca thomas.lamarre
Sat Jul 30 10:06:55 EDT 2005


Although it is not as extensive as these other two DVD collections, the "Sh?wa
manga eiga" collection has some interesting films, including early Momotaro
national policy cartoons.  It was available on VHS a couple years ago.  I don't
know if it is still available, but McGill Library has it.

Tom

> From: "Eija Margit Niskanen" <emniskanen at wisc.edu>
> > Hi! Does anybody know if the 1943 animation Momotaro no umiwashi is
> > available on video or DVD?
>
> It's included on disc 5 of Kinokuniya's "Nihon Art Animation" 12 DVD set.
>
> http://www.kinokuniya.co.jp/02f/d12/2_12000n_9.htm
> http://www.style.fm/log/02_topics/top031218a.html
>
> Earlier this month I was able to spend a couple of afternoons with this
> 378,000 yen, 1,334 minute collection of rare animation, and I was very
> impressed. It covers everything from early Ofuji Noburo and prewar shorts to
> wartime propaganda films, postwar shorts (incredible stuff like "Maho no
> pen" and Toei's great "Koneko" films), Masaoka Kenzo, Seo Mitsuyo, Yokoyama
> Ryuichi/Otogi Pro, puppet animation by Mochinaga and Kawamoto, Sannin no Kai
> and much more. . . Kinokuniya says that 95% of this material has never been
> on video before. I don't think they're exaggerating when they advertise the
> box as a once-in-a-lifetime dream collection.
>
> I have only one complaint--for some reason Kinokuniya decided to use 1 layer
> DVDs for almost the entire set. (The Ofuji disc and one or two others were 2
> layer.) Most of the discs have two hours worth of material and many of the
> film sources are old and scratchy, so the result is less than optimal video
> quality. The DVDs are perfectly watchable on a TV screen, but when I
> borrowed the Masaoka disc from a friend a few months ago and watched it on
> my PC, I spotted a number of DVD compression artifacts. I'd much rather see
> flawed copies than none at all, but at about $300 per disc I wish they had
> put just a little more effort into it.
>
> I was surprised to discover that Meiji Gakuin has the set in their video
> library. A few people here mentioned Meigaku when answering Wei Ting's
> questions about locating videos and films, so when I watched the DVDs I
> asked the person in charge of the library if it's possible for non-Meigaku
> students to view their collection. Unfortunately she told me that the
> official answer is "no". I don't know if there's any way to get around that.
> If you know any Geijutsu faculty you may try asking them for information,
> but I was told the video library is only for people at Meigaku.
>
> Does anyone here know of other libraries that have this set? I was prepared
> to go searching around Tokyo until I found it right under my nose. I won't
> be in Tokyo forever though. Is Kinokuniya selling to universities overseas
> too?
>
> Michael Arnold
>






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