Cape of the North
| Cape of the North | |
|---|---|
Film poster | |
| Directed by | Kei Kumai |
| Written by |
|
| Produced by |
|
| Starring | |
| Narrated by | Kaneko Iwasaki |
| Cinematography | Mitsuji Kanau |
| Edited by | Keiichi Uraoka |
| Music by | Teizo Matsumura |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 113 minutes |
| Country | Japan |
| Language | Japanese |
Cape of the North (Japanese: 北の岬, Hepburn: Kita no misaki), also known as Le Cap du Nord, is a 1976 Japanese drama film directed by Kei Kumai. The film, based on a novel by Kunio Tsuji, deals with the relationship between rich countries and the Third World. In the center of the story, Marie-Therese (Claude Jade), a Swiss religious missionary, meets the Japanese engineer Mitsuo (Go Kato) aboard a ship connecting Marseille to Yokohama. Theirs is a story of impossible love.
When French star Claude Jade arrived to play the role of the nun Marie-Therese, she was accompanied for the second part of shooting by her husband Bernard Coste. For journalists, it was agreed that officially he was the private secretary. Claude Jade said: I had to hide the existence of my husband and that I was pregnant [...] My pregnancy also prevents me from returning to Japan for the first release of the movie! Production is estimated that this condition is incompatible with the role of a nun, especially as the press believes me single.
The film has yet to see an NTSC release, nor one with an English translation.