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Bakushû (1951)
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Overview
Note des utilisateurs:
Release Date:
2 août 1972 (USA) suitePlot:
A family chooses a match for their 28-year-old daughter Noriko, but she surprisingly has her own plans. full summary | add synopsisPlot Keywords:
suiteAwards:
7 wins suiteAvis des utilisateurs:
And apart from "Tokyo Story"..... suiteEnsemble
(Interprètes principaux)| Setsuko Hara | ... | Noriko Mamiya | |
| Chishu Ryu | ... | Koichi Mamiya | |
| Chikage Awashima | ... | Aya Tamura | |
| Kuniko Miyake | ... | Fumiko Mamiya | |
| Ichirô Sugai | ... | Shukichi Mamiya | |
| Chieko Higashiyama | ... | Shige Mamiya | |
| Haruko Sugimura | ... | Tami Yabe | |
| Kuniko Ikawa | ... | Takako | |
| Hiroshi Nihon'yanagi | ... | Kenkichi Yabe | |
| Shûji Sano | ... | Sotaro Satake | |
| Toyo Takahashi | ... | Nobu Tamura (as Toyoko Takahashi) | |
| Seiji Miyaguchi | ... | Nishiwaki | |
| reste de la distribution par ordre alphabétique: | |||
| Ito Kazuyo | ... | Mitsuko Yabe | |
| Kokuten Kodo | ... | Old Uncle | |
| Zen Murase | ... | Minoru Mamiya | |
| Tomiko Nishiwaki | ... | Tami Yamamoto | |
| Matsuko Shiga | ... | Mari Takanashi | |
| Isao Shirosawa | ... | Isamu Mamiya | |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsDurée:
124 minPays:
JapanLangue:
JaponaisCouleur:
Noir et BlancAspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 suiteSon:
MonoClassification:
Australia:GCuriosités
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Building the Inferno: Nobuo Nakagawa and the Making of 'Jigoku' (2006) (V) suitefoire aux questions
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There are few lovers of serious cinema who do not consider "Tokyo "Story" a masterpiece. I, for one, would be prepared to place it among the "top ten" of all time. When I first saw it on British TV many years ago I was excited by the discovery of a form of cinema unlike any other. In the months that followed I began to experience frustration that no other of Ozu's fairly large output was available. At long last "Ohayu" turned up. I remember thinking it very inconsequential beside "Tokyo Story" but pleasing nonetheless, possibly Ozu not so much having an off-day as a day off. What I found remarkable however was its stylistic affinity fo "Tokyo", the absence of camera movement, the prefacing of each dramatic sequence, generally taking place in a domestic interior shot from near-ground level, with two or three shots, often still-life exteriors with background music carried over into the next dialogue scene; in other words a director who is completely true to his own way of seeing things, as instantly recognisable from a single shot as are composers as diverse as Martinu, Rawsthorne and Roy Harris from one bar of their music. It is only recently that I have managed to catch up with five other Ozu films, each a gem in its own way but small in scale. "Early Summer" is a typical example. It deals with the same situation as "Late Spring", that of the pressures on a young woman by her family to get married. Ozu generally explores family relationships which, although hardly disfunctional, abound in tensions. Here we have an elderly couple living with their doctor son and their unmarried daughter, the son's wife and their two small sons completing the household. An elderly uncle visits early on and neighbours and friends, particularly those of the unmarried daughter make up the rest of the cast played by a company of stock actors that appear in many of Ozu's films. Each generation responds to life in its own way. The elderly couple are disappointed particularly with the younger members of the family. They sit on park benches or in the privacy of their bedroom and sigh that, in spite of everything, things could be much worse and they should be happy with their lot. The middle generation get on with the business of living, often in a blinkered way so that we wonder whether they are aware of the tensions they so often generate. The children are completely selfish little monsters who cut up rough if they don't get their own way, as when they mistake a wrapped loaf of bread that their father brings home, for the model railway accessories they are hoping to receive. There is little in the way of plot other than that of the "Will she? Won't she?" variety. But for the enormous expectaions raised by "Tokyo Story", I might well have passed "Early Summer" by. And yet there is a uniqueness and purity of style that somehow draws ne back to these simple vignettes of Japanese domestic life again and again. Ozu has often been compared to Jane Austen, but would not a more appropriate analogy be the novels of Ivy Compton-Burnett. Both are the unique minimalists of their respective arts.