This is your life, and it’s a photograph of a memory you’re currently hallucinating.
You’re watching Shūji Terayama’s Pastoral: To Die in the Country (1974), and the reality you walked into the room with is already leaking out of the floorboards. Forget the plot. There is no plot. There is only a circus of freaks, a pile of discarded childhood snapshots, and a director who is actively trying to kill his own past so he can build a house out of the wreckage.
The Setup
A man—the “I” of the film—is looking back at his younger self. It’s a trick. He’s peering into a mirror that’s been shattered and glued back together by a lunatic. He’s trying to kill his mother—metaphorically, in the script; literally, in the dream logic of the film.
There’s a traveling carnival of circus performers, a troupe of ghosts, and a recurring motif of clocks that don’t tell time because, in Terayama’s world, time is just a rope used to hang you.
The Experience
You are being force-fed a collage. One minute you’re in a quiet, rural Japanese village that smells like mulch and ancestral regret; the next, you’re in a psychedelic, neon-drenched fever dream where the masks are wearing the people.
Terayama treats the screen like a collage of stolen skin. He stitches together black-and-white documentary footage, vibrant, oversaturated colors, and stage-play theatricality. It’s a movie that knows it’s a movie, and it hates itself for it. It’s a freak show where the bearded lady is your own suppressed trauma and the ringmaster is a boy who refuses to grow up.
Why You’ll Watch
You’ll watch because you’re addicted to the feeling of being unmoored. You want to see the stitches. You want to see the director dissect his own history with a pair of rusty craft scissors.
It’s messy. It’s loud. It’s a sensory assault that feels like being trapped in a closet full of your family’s old, unwashed clothes. By the time it ends, you won’t know if you’re the one watching the film, or if the film is the one remembering you. It’s the ultimate exorcism for anyone who has ever tried to escape the gravity of their own hometown.
Rating: 5 out of 5 broken pocket watches.