Glenda Jackson appears to have given up acting, at least for now, to devote herself to British politics. Dennis Bingham On Sat, 22 Jan 2000, Abe' Mark Nornes wrote: > I have been asking the following question of everyone I know, and so far no > one has been able to come up with any names: > > ****Are there any political filmmakers who have given up their art to > dedicate themselves completely to politics? > > I have two names: Ronald Reagan and Adachi Masao. > > Reagan's no so interesting, since his own filmmaking was 1) as an actor and > 2) rarely overtly political, except for perhaps the war era and his campaign > tv commercials. > > Adachi is a fascinating figure. He to filmmaking through an experimental > film group at a Japanese university, and then got involved in highly > political soft-core pink films with Wakamatsu Koji in the 1960s. As long as > there was amble sex, they could do anything in these films...high school > student guerrillas, Frankenstein gynecologists creating a new humanity, etc. > etc. He lead the movement to get Suzuki Seijun's job reinstated when Suzuki > was fired from Nikkatsu. He wrote scripts for Oshima Nagisa, and appeared as > an actor in Oshima's Death by Hanging. Adachi also wrote some of the more > radical film criticism and theory in the early 1970s, when he became > interested in the Red Army. After making a film with Wakamatsu on the > Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine in Beirut in 1972, and became > increasingly radical. He finally joined the Red Army around 1974 and > disappeared from Japan at the height of his career. He remained a legendary > figure until today, as no one knew his whereabouts until he was arrested > with 4 other Red Army members in Beirut last year, and he sits in a Beirut > prison as the Japanese government presses for extradition. > > Everyone has assumed that Adachi's decision to become a terrorist and give > up filmmaking completely meant that he decided----at that interesting moment > in the early 1970s when so much was changing----art and politics don't mix. > That politically engaged filmmaking does not change the world, so the only > choice is violence. > > Are there any other filmmakers who have left their art for politics, who put > down their camera and picked up a gun? > > (I ask because I'm doing an interview-by-letter with him while he's in > prison...) > > Markus > > A.M. Nornes > University of Michigan > > ---- > To sign off Screen-L, e-mail [log in to unmask] and put SIGNOFF Screen-L > in the message. Problems? Contact [log in to unmask] > ---- To sign off Screen-L, e-mail [log in to unmask] and put SIGNOFF Screen-L in the message. Problems? Contact [log in to unmask]