Seijun Suzuki's TAISHŌ TRILOGY: ZIGEUNERWEISEN (1980)

Sunday, March 15, 2026 at 6:00 PM

Philosophical Research Society, Los Angeles

"Overview Suzuki's dreamlike and hypnotic meditation on fascination, fixation, and memory! SEIJUN SUZUKI’S TAISHŌ TRILOGY (Series Pass Available) 3/15 — ZIGEUNERWEISEN (1980) 3/22 — KAGERO-ZA (1981) 3/29 — YUMEJI (1991) 7th House is proud to present maverick cinematic alchemist Seijun Suzuki’s extraordinary TAISHŌ TRILOGY across three consecutive Sundays this March—a trio of radically surreal late-career masterworks from one of Japanese cinema’s most singular, shape-shifting figures. Rising through the Nikkatsu studio system in the 1960s, Suzuki became a subversive force within genre filmmaking, transforming crime pictures into detonations of color, rhythm, and avant-garde invention. His now-legendary Branded to Kill (1967) proved so formally audacious that it led to his dismissal from the studio and a decade-long exile. When he returned in 1980, it was with something altogether stranger: three lavish, visually unbound works set during Japan’s Taishō era (1912–1926), a period of cultural collision and modern awakening. Across ZIGEUNERWEISEN (1980), KAGERO-ZA (1981), and YUMEJI (1991), Suzuki abandons conventional storytelling for a cinema of atmosphere, sensation, and unstable memory. Scenes unfold like moving paintings; time loops and fractures; sliding doors reveal impossible landscapes; characters drift through dreamlike tableaux where identity and desire blur into apparition. Drawing from silent cinema, theater, Western modernism, and the avant-garde, the trilogy erupts in bold color, theatrical artifice, and sudden ruptures of logic—at once ravishingly composed and gleefully disorienting. Rarely screened in the United States and widely regarded in Japan as the summit of Suzuki’s artistry, these films mark a triumphant rebirth: a lush, sensuous, and experimentally explosive triptych that drifts between dream, memory, and hallucination. ZIGEUERWEISEN Suzuki’s triumphant return begins with the uncanny and intoxicating ZIGEUNERWEISEN (1980), a film that drifts between intellectual rivalry, conjugal tension, and mounting delirium. Two former military academy colleagues—now professors—reunite by chance, their lives gradually entangling in a shifting web of fascination, jealousy, and carnal obsession. What begins as a reunion of minds slowly dissolves into a mesmeric and disquieting study of unstable perception and mounting fixation. Named for the haunting Sarasate violin piece that threads through its atmosphere like a phantom refrain, the film unfolds in extended, hypnotic passages where time stretches and memory folds in on itself. Rooms seem to breathe; faces linger beyond their logic; desire and dread coexist in charged stillness. Winner of multiple major Japanese film awards and rarely screened outside Japan for decades, the film announced Suzuki’s rebirth not as a provocateur of genre, but as an architect of mood—crafting a lush, sensuous meditation on doubling, decay, and the fragility of perception. Dir. Seijun Suzuki, 1980, 144 mins, Japan, Japanese w/ English subtitles, Unrated (Adults Only), Digital. Special thanks to American Genre Film Archive and Arrow Films.