Barring the discovery of another film,
Momijigari is the oldest Japanese-made film for which a print still exists. Kabuki actor
Onoe Baiko VI stated in his book
Ume No Shita Kaze that a test movie of the dance drama
Ninjin Dojo-ji, starring himself and fellow actor Ichimura Kakitsu VI (later
Ichimura Uzaemon XV), was shot months before but it probably got lost before 1912. It is also an early example of the kind of "kabuki cinema" that would become prominent in the first decades of the Japanese film industry, in which films were often records of or attempts to reproduce kabuki theater. According to the film historian Hiroshi Komatsu, it is also an example of how the distinction between fiction and non-fiction cinema was not yet an issue at the time, since the film was both a documentary of a stage performance and a presentation of a fictional story. What has specifically received that designation is a dupe negative 35mm celluloid print of the film that is 352 feet in length, which if projected at 16 frames per second would be 3 minutes and 50 seconds long. The film historian
Aaron Gerow, however, has speculated that the film received this designation less because it was an example of the legacy of Japanese film art than because it was a historical document. The print is preserved at the
National Film Center of the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo. ==References==