TBC

Teinosuke Kinugasa’s silent 1926 avant-garde masterpiece employs dazzling, expressionistic visuals to explore the fractured reality inside a Japanese asylum.


This screening features a live solo viola score by Hugo Max.

Unfortunately no Audio Description track is available for this feature.
Teinosuke Kinugasa
TBC
Drama
Silent Film

Lost for decades until its rediscovery by director Teinosuke Kinugasa in his granary, the 1926 avant-garde milestone A Page of Madness remains one of the most visually radical and influential films of the silent era. Set entirely within a rural psychiatric hospital, the narrative follows a retired sailor who takes a job as a janitor at the asylum to be near his wife, who was committed following a tragic family grievance.

Produced in collaboration with the Shinkankakuha (School of New Perceptions) avant-garde writers’ group, Kinugasa entirely rejects traditional intertitles, choosing instead to convey the subjective psychological states of the patients through pure, kinetic cinema. Utilising dazzling superimpositions, rapid-fire editing, distorting lenses, and expressionistic lighting, the film creates an immersive, hallucinatory portrait of trauma and fractured reality.

This special screening features a live, improvised accompaniment on solo viola by London-based filmmaker, painter, and musician Hugo Max.

Book your tickets

Sat 17 Oct
Audio Description

Audio Description and Boosted Volume headsets are currently unavailable for any screenings due to a technical fault.

We are awaiting delivery of a replacement system and thank you for your patience and understanding.