
Traditional Puppet Theater: Bound by Spirits
人形浄瑠璃 -魂を宿す舞-
202214min日本文化
-
特辑
-
音频
English, Japanese
-
字幕
русский язык, Türkçe, English, Japanese, Magyar, Bahasa Indonesia, 简体中文, Español, ไทย, 繁体中文, Tiếng Việt
影像信息
-
特辑
-
音频
English, Japanese
-
字幕
русский язык, Türkçe, English, Japanese, Magyar, Bahasa Indonesia, 简体中文, Español, ไทย, 繁体中文, Tiếng Việt

故事
In a small mountain village in Ishikawa Prefecture, a traditional form of puppet theater has been handed down by local people for over 350 years. The art is called Bunya Ningyo Joruri Puppet Theater, and the puppeteers bring the puppets of simple construction to life by controling them all alone.
The stage is enlivened by the evocative recitation called “Bunya-bushi” and powerful foot stomping, stage techniques that have been preserved since ancient times. Why and how has this unique art form been so carefully passed down over the centuries? Through excerpts from a popular program in their repertoire titled “Taishokukan” (The Stolen Crystal Jewel), we explore the passionate feelings that the local people put into their puppet manipulation.
评论
还没有评论
成为第一个对此作品发表评论的人吧!
登录后
发表评论吧
评论
您填写的评论将在处理后,被反映在网站上。处理可能需要几天时间。但是,如果评论内容被认为不恰当,则不在此限。日本国际交流基金会保留删除评论的权利,但并非定期确认发布的评论。发布评论时,请确认使用条款 第5条。