Hadaka No Tenshi %281981%29 Official
Upon release, the film was slapped with an R18+ rating in Japan for realistic violence and a sexual assault scene that still feels harrowing. Some cuts were made for VHS. The 2003 DVD reissue restored 4 minutes, but a true HD remaster remains elusive.
The title itself, "Hadaka no Tenshi," caused a stir upon release. The word "Hadaka" (naked) carried connotations of vulnerability and, in some contexts, indecency. However, within the context of the lyrics, it serves as a powerful metaphor for emotional truth. hadaka no tenshi %281981%29
The song does not speak of physical nudity, but rather the stripping away of societal masks, pretenses, and defenses. The protagonist presents himself as a "naked angel"—a being stripped of all power and artifice, left with nothing but an overwhelming, pure love. This juxtaposition of the divine ("Tenshi") and the exposed ("Hadaka") creates a tension that drives the song’s emotional weight. Upon release, the film was slapped with an
The late Tatsuya Fuji (legendary star of Nagisa Oshima’s In the Realm of the Senses) gives one of the finest performances of his late career. His Tetsuya is a coiled spring of rage and guilt. In one unforgettable scene, he forces Keiko to dance naked for a gangster, only to break down in tears afterward, ashamed of his own cruelty. Fuji manages to make this monster sympathetic—a man who has forgotten how to be human until an "angel" reminds him. The title itself, "Hadaka no Tenshi," caused a
Opposite him, Yuki Ninagawa delivers a career-defining turn. Keiko is not a passive victim. Despite being beaten, kidnapped, and terrorized, she needles Tetsuya’s conscience with sharp questions and unexpected acts of kindness. Her "nakedness" is not physical (though the film contains adult situations) but spiritual. She is stripped of all pretense. In a climactic rooftop scene, Ninagawa’s face—streaked with rain and tears—holds a smile that is both heartbreaking and defiant. It is the face of a true naked angel.