Year of Release: 1962
Director: Yasujiro Ozu
Screenplay: Kogo Noda and Yasujiro Ozu
Starring: Shima Iwashita, Chishu Ryu, Keiji Sada, Mariko Okada, Teruo Yoshida, Noriko Maki
Running Time: 113 minutes
Genre: Drama
Tokyo, 1962: Shuhei Hirayama (Ryu) is a widowed businessman in his late 50s with three adult children. The eldest son, Koishi (Sada), is married and lives away from home, but his 24 year old daughter, Michiko (Iwashita) and youngest son, Kazuo (Shin'ichiro Mikami) still live at home with him. Under pressure from his friends, Hirayama realises that it is his duty to arrange a marriage for Michiko, even though she is in no hurry to get married at all.
This was Yasujiro Ozu's final film, completed a year before his death on his 60th birthday, and deals with many of his familiar themes: the ebb and flow of life, accepting change, the tension between youth and age, tradition and modernity, and the changing face of Japanese society, as well as the impermanence of all things. It's a very quiet, gentle film, composed of long static shots, elegantly composed and usually shot form low angles, with the action seen in medium close-up or framed in doorways and hallways. The main plot often plays out almost in the background, with many important events taking place off-screen, being more concerned with the small details of everyday life. This is a calm, understated film, graceful, slow, gentle and wise. It's the kind of film that makes the world seem a better and kinder place.
Shima Iwashita and Chishu Ryu in An Autumn Afternoon
Showing posts with label Kogo Noda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kogo Noda. Show all posts
Friday, 11 January 2019
An Autumn Afternoon
Labels:
An Autumn Afternoon,
Chishu Ryu,
drama,
Keiji Sada,
Kogo Noda,
Mariko Okada,
movies,
Noriko Maki,
reviews,
Shima Iwashita,
Shin'chiro Mikami,
Teruo Yoshida,
Yasujiro Ozu
Saturday, 8 July 2017
Late Spring
Year of Release: 1949
Director: Yasujiro Ozu
Screenplay: Kogo Noda and Yasujiro Ozu, based on the novel Father and Daughter by Kazuo Hirotsu
Starring: Chishu Ryu, Setsuko Hara, Haruko Sugimura
Running Time: 108 minutes
Genre: Drama
Twenty seven year old Noriko (Hara) lives happily with her widowed father, Professor Shukichi Somaya (Ryu). Until, that is, a meddling aunt (Sugimura) convinces the Professor that it is high time that Noriko got married. However, Noriko does not want to get married, particularly as it would mean leaving her father alone.
This is one of the great works of Japanese director Yasujiro Ozu, and, like many of his films, it deals with themes of tradition versus modernity, family life and conflict between the generations, as well as the philosophy of mono no aware (the pathos of things), an awareness of the impermanence of all things. Nowhere is it better exemplified than in the film's powerful closing scene. The film also comments on occupied Japan (the film was made at a time when Japan was occupied by the Americans following World War II), contrasting images of Coca-Cola advertising with traditional Japanese pursuits such as a noh play and a rock garden. It's not a plot driven film, and it moves at a slow, meditative pace. There is also the theme of duty to others versus the individual needs, Noriko wants to stay and look after her father, her father, while he values Noriko's kindness and companionship, knows that she must set out and lead an independent life, even though it means him being alone. It demands a lot of patience from the viewer, being largely filmed, like many Ozu films, by static cameras, with beautifully composed shots and characters often seen at a remove from the audience, framed in corridors and doorways. If you have the patience to go along with the film's gentle rhythms than you will be richly rewarded.
Setsuko Hara and Chishu Ryu in Late Spring
Director: Yasujiro Ozu
Screenplay: Kogo Noda and Yasujiro Ozu, based on the novel Father and Daughter by Kazuo Hirotsu
Starring: Chishu Ryu, Setsuko Hara, Haruko Sugimura
Running Time: 108 minutes
Genre: Drama
Twenty seven year old Noriko (Hara) lives happily with her widowed father, Professor Shukichi Somaya (Ryu). Until, that is, a meddling aunt (Sugimura) convinces the Professor that it is high time that Noriko got married. However, Noriko does not want to get married, particularly as it would mean leaving her father alone.
This is one of the great works of Japanese director Yasujiro Ozu, and, like many of his films, it deals with themes of tradition versus modernity, family life and conflict between the generations, as well as the philosophy of mono no aware (the pathos of things), an awareness of the impermanence of all things. Nowhere is it better exemplified than in the film's powerful closing scene. The film also comments on occupied Japan (the film was made at a time when Japan was occupied by the Americans following World War II), contrasting images of Coca-Cola advertising with traditional Japanese pursuits such as a noh play and a rock garden. It's not a plot driven film, and it moves at a slow, meditative pace. There is also the theme of duty to others versus the individual needs, Noriko wants to stay and look after her father, her father, while he values Noriko's kindness and companionship, knows that she must set out and lead an independent life, even though it means him being alone. It demands a lot of patience from the viewer, being largely filmed, like many Ozu films, by static cameras, with beautifully composed shots and characters often seen at a remove from the audience, framed in corridors and doorways. If you have the patience to go along with the film's gentle rhythms than you will be richly rewarded.
Setsuko Hara and Chishu Ryu in Late Spring
Labels:
Chishu Ryu,
drama,
Haruko Sugimura,
Kazuo Hirotsu,
Kogo Noda,
movies,
reviews,
Setsuko Hara,
Yasujiro Ozu
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