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Pascal Acquarello's reports from the NYFF 2003 Ozu Retrospective (October 2003) (Pascal curates Strictly Film School.)
Note: All of the prints screened were preceded by a Janus Films and Home Vision Entertainment banner.
The Only Son, 1936
Although the print shows its age, the film is quite watchable (although the
soundtrack is a bit noisy). The Only Son is a quintessential Ozu home drama
on the relationship between a widowed mother (Choko Iida) and her son,
Ryosuke. Encouraged by her son's ambitious elementary school teacher
(Chishu Ryu), the mother slaves at a silk manufacturing factory, sacrificing
personal and financial comfort and security, in order to support Ryosuke's
education so that he may grow up to be a "great man". Thirteen years later,
she travels to Tokyo to visit Ryosuke and finds that that his once seemingly
bright future has become quashed by limited opportunity and personal
obligations. Alternately poignant, comical, and bittersweet, the film is a
thoughtful exposition of Ozu's familiar themes of familiar estrangement and
acceptance of the disappointments of life.
Kagamijishi, 1935
Kagamijishi is a short performance film intended to introduce non-native
viewers to Kabuki theater and also to showcase the skill of Kikugoro IV, a
legendary, multi-generation Kabuki artist. Ozu's repeated fixed position
shots (one on center stage, a second to the side of the stage, and a third
from an upper balcony) are evident throughout the film. Although I'm
unfamiliar with the vernacular of Kabuki theatre, the then middle-aged
Kikugoro's ability to transform himself from delicate maiden to possessed,
ferocious beast by donning a lion mask is remarkable.
What Did the Lady Forget?, 1937
A funny, lighthearted, but nevertheless, astute social satire, What Did the
Lady Forget? centers on a genial college professor who, forced by his stern
and domineering wife to play golf, fabricates an alibi and arranges to spend
the evening at a student's house. However, his plans are compromised when
his assertive and progressive thinking niece decides to accompany him.
Loosely reminiscent of Carl Theodor Dreyer's Master of the House (without
the imposing governess), the film is a highly engaging comedy on the need
for reciprocity and mutual respect in human relationships.
Days of Youth, 1929
As the film opens, a gregarious loafer named Watanabe
(Ichiro Yuki) turns away a young man who has inquired about a sign on the
window for a room for rent, explaining that he had just rented the room
earlier that day. Moments later, an attractive young woman inquires about
the same room and, attempting to get into her good graces, Watanabe remarks
that he is in the process of vacating and that the room is available. With
nowhere to go, he moves into the apartment of his meek, bookish friend
Yamamoto (Tatsuo Saito) who, unbeknownst to him, is enamored with the same
young woman. After completing their final examinations, the two friends
decide to bide time waiting for their final grades by competing for the
affection of the young woman at a ski resort, resulting in a series of
misadventures for the novice skier Yamamoto. The earliest extant film by
Ozu, Days of Youth is a whimsical, amusing, and entertaining fusion of
physical and situational comedy. Most noteworthy in the film is the absence
of Ozu's familiar 'pillow' shots that are functionally replaced by the use a
bookend, long panning panorama shots of the city to convey placement and
scenario.
I Graduated, But..., 1929
A ten minute reconstruction of an otherwise lost
film, I Graduated, But... follows a trajectory of enlightenment towards humble
acceptance as Ozu's similarly titled, I Was Born But... as a recent college
graduate named Tetsuo (Minoru Takada), unable to find employment at a
position that he believes is commensurate with his education level (his only
job offer is as an office receptionist), is visited by his mother after
misrepresenting his financial circumstances to her. While there is little
material presented, the story does unfold linearly. However, Ozu's
development of plot through quietly observed interactions and situations -
the essence of his cinema - is unavoidably compromised.
I Flunked, But..., 1930
A college student's (Tatsuo Saito) underhanded scheme
to cheat on his final examinations backfires when the house matron sends the
shirt on which he has scribbled his notes out for laundry. Now forced to
remain a student for another year and bearing the dubious distinction of
being the only student in the household who did not graduate, he gradually
adjusts to the reality of his deferred professional life, eventually turning
his disappointment to optimism with the support and encouragement of his
friends and a young waitress (Kinuyo Tanaka) who is devoted to him. Similar
to the lighthearted comedy of Days of Youth, I Flunked, But... is a hilarious
and effervescent comedy on a young man's unforeseen delayed passage to
maturity and responsibility.
Walk Cheerfully, 1930
An unusually fast moving, atypically stylized (rather
than composed), and multi-plot Ozu film that bears a hint of noir, Walk
Cheerfully is a humorous and affectionate film that is replete with homages
to classic silent films, from a prominently placed, life-sized Clara Bow
poster to a gangster moll sporting a Louise Brook's haircut. The film
resembles a Chaplinesque romantic comedy drama as a petty thief and career
criminal named Kenji (Minoru Takada) - also known through the moniker Ken
the Knife - performs a surveillance of a jewelry store with his accomplice
and targets an honest, kind-hearted office clerk whom he mistakenly believes
is a wealthy woman after she is observed collecting a diamond ring from the
jeweler.
The Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family, 1941
On the occasion of the
family patriarch's 69th birthday, the noble and privileged Toda family has
assembled for a formal commemorative photograph and a dinner banquet that
would prove to be their father's last. Forced to sell the family home in
order to settle their father's unresolved, business-related debts, Mrs. Toda
(Ayako Katsuragi) and the youngest daughter Setsuko (Mieko Takamino) - with
a devoted domestic servant (Choko Iida) and mynah bird in tow - are sent to
live with the oldest son, Shinichiro (Tatsuo Saito), before being politely
passed off from one sibling to another. Expounding on similar themes of
filial duty and respect to elders as Tokyo Story with the social commentary
on the vanishing way of life of the feudal era, wealthy merchant class (note
the samurai clan armor that decorates the hallway of the Toda residence),
The Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family is a poignant and graceful film
that exemplifies Ozu's later, more insular (and distilled) gendai-geki home
dramas.
A Straightforward Boy, 1930
A purely fun, entertaining, and
lighthearted short film, A Straightforward Boy follows the adventures of a
kidnapper (Tatsuo Saito) who, on an idyllic, sunny day (that, as the film
comments, is conducive for such nefarious activities), lures a cherubic,
bespectacled boy (Tomio Aoki) with toys and treats back into the hideout.
However, when the mischievous and precocious boy becomes too much of a
handful, the kidnapper's attempts to get rid of him proves to be a greater
challenge than the abduction itself.
Note: The screening print for A Straightforward Boy consisted of
reconstructed opening and ending scenes that results in a film that is
significantly shorter (around 10 minutes) than the original 38 minute
running time.
There Was a Father, 1942
A widowed Tokyo high school teacher named Horikawa
(Chishu Ryu) experiences a traumatic episode during a school field trip and
consequently, decides to abandon his profession and move to a small town
where his son, Ryohei may obtain a good education. However, unable to earn
enough money to pay for Ryohei's boarding school, Horikawa decides to return
to Tokyo to find a better paying job. The separation between father and son
would prove to be permanent and irreversible, as Ryohei completes his
studies and becomes a schoolteacher in a rural province while his father
continues to work in Tokyo. The film is a more sentimentally subdued - but
nevertheless, affecting - quintessential Ozu home drama on parental
obligation and the inevitable dissolution of family. At this juncture, Ozu's
camera is more static and understated (similar to Brothers and Sisters of
the Toda Family), such as the repeated extended sequence of father and son
fishing in synchrony at a lake: first, when Ryohei was a young boy, then
later, as a grown man vacationing with his father at a resort.
The print for There Was a Father was passable (typical of 1940s Japanese
films), and occasionally missing a few frames. The soundtrack is in poor
shape, very noisy and muffled.
A Hen in the Wind, 1948
A somber, bleak, and uncharacteristically
violent Ozu postwar film, A Hen in the Wind follows the plight of a
dressmaker named Tokiko (Kinuyo Tanaka) who lives meagerly as a boarder in a
modest house in a working class district with her young son Hiroshi.
Awaiting her husband's repatriation from Manchuria, Tokiko subsists through
dressmaking and the occasional sale of household possessions. Despite their
continued hardship, increasing poverty (due to rampant inflation and
scarcity of goods), and uncertainty over her husband's return, Tokiko has
resisted the temptation to work in a brothel in order to earn extra money.
However, when Hiroshi unexpectedly falls ill, Tokiko is compelled to
sacrifice her dignity in order to tender payment for accrued medical
expenses. Paralleling Tokiko's desperate act with the reluctant livelihood
of a young prostitute, Ozu forms an austere perspective of postwar Japanese
life that is harrowing and life-affirming, tragic and hopeful, compassionate
and indicting.
Both of these afternoon shows for The Munekata Sisters and Late Spring were nearly sold out - it was really great
to see so much interest in Ozu.
The Munekata Sisters, 1950
The film follows the plight of the upper
beautiful, middle-class Munekata sisters - the conservative and traditional
married older sister, Setsuko (Kinuyo Tanaka) (dressed in a kimono) and the
liberal minded and free-spirited younger sister Mariko (Hideko Takamine)
(dressed in Western attire) - as they struggle to build a new life in
postwar Tokyo away from their beloved, ailing father (Chishu Ryu) by running
a small bar. While visiting the temples of Kyoto, Setsuko remembers happier
times with a former suitor named Hiroshi (Ken Uehara), a nostalgic sentiment
that the more forward-minded Mariko begins to encourage her to act on by
expressing her contempt for Setsuko's unemployed, hard-drinking husband
(Masayuki Mori). Cultivating a friendship with the charming Hiroshi, now a
successful furniture maker in Kobe, Mariko attempts to reunite the
unrequited lovers. Ozu juxtaposes the serene and contemplative images of
Kyoto (the ancient capital of Japan) with the progressive and modernized
(and industrialized) images of Tokyo and Kobe in order to illustrate the
dichotomy and cultural conflict between tradition and modernity in postwar
Japan.
Late Spring, 1949
Since, every Ozu fan will be familiar with this film, I
just wanted to note that the screening print of the film looks good and that
two things that particularly struck me on watching this film: (1) from my
vantage point (seated back row, center), it does seem as though my
perspective is constantly symmetric whether characters are near or far,
suggesting that Ozu's peculiar camera angle maintains correct
proportionality irrespective of distance; and (2) when Noriko (Setsuko Hara)
repeatedly asks her father, Professor Somiya (Chishu Ryu) if he really does
intend to remarry, Somiya gives a noticeable facial tick before nodding in
the affirmative - a subtle nuance (and quintessentially Ozu), that indicates
that the father is telling a fib.
The Flavor of Green Tea Over Rice, 1950
Revisiting themes of marital
complacency and mutual respect as his earlier domestic comedy What Did the
Lady Forget?, The Flavor of Green Tea Over Rice demonstrates unusually
dynamic camerawork a later period, postwar Ozu film, featuring several low
angle tracking shots - often placed as interstitial scenes in lieu of his
more familiar 'pillow' shots - that move through the empty spaces of the
Satake's upper middle-class household. In an early episode, Taeko (Michiko
Kogure) fabricates an ill-conceived excuse of going away in order to care
for a friend with appendicitis (despite having to switch the patient's
identity midway through the flimsy explanation after her niece Setsuko
(Keiko Tsushima) unexpectedly returns home and ruins the premise of the
concocted story) in order to go on holiday with friends at a spa resort. As
Taeko alternately belittles her husband Mokichi (Shin Saburi) and goads
Setsuko into accepting a marriage interview, the two invariably seek refuge
outside their home, eventually finding their way to a pachinko parlor
operated by Mokichi's former military colleague Hirayama (Chishu Ryu). The
film's title, derived from Mokichi's humble taste for the comfortable and
familiar dish, invariably proves to be a reflection of the film itself: a
subtle, pleasant, and simple experience that evokes a personality of
meaning.
[Thanks to Pascal for forwarding the reports each day.]
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