Yasujiro Ozu

  • Yasujirô Ozu – Bakushû aka Early summer (1951) (HD)

    Yasujiro Ozu1951-1960DramaJapan

    Quote:
    Noriko, 28, is a secretary in a small company in Tokyo. She is a modern young woman but she still lives with her parents, just like her brother, his wife and their two children. She is under great pressure from her family; in fact, it is not reasonable at this age not to have yet married. But the young girl rejoices in her independence. Her boss offers her a good deal of his knowledge but Noriko hesitates until a sort of illumination solves the problem for her, at least…Read More »

  • Yasujirô Ozu – Ukikusa monogatari AKA A Story of Floating Weeds (1934)

    Yasujiro Ozu1931-1940DramaJapan
    Ukikusa monogatari (1934)
    Ukikusa monogatari (1934)

    PLOT: A kabuki actor’s mistress hatches a jealous plot to bring down her lover’s son.Read More »

  • Yasujirô Ozu – Tokkan kozô AKA A Straightforward Boy (1929)

    Yasujiro Ozu1921-1930ComedyJapanSilent
    Tokkan kozô (1929)
    Tokkan kozô (1929)

    Quote:
    One of the earliest surviving silent comedies by master filmmaker Yasujiro Ozu, A Straightforward Boy is a rambunctious, adorable kidnapping caper now screening in a new restoration that restores to it eight long-lost and recently rediscovered minutes. The short features one of the all-time great child actors, Tomio Aoki, at age six and in his first starring role as the titular boy all too happy to be abducted – so long as his petty-crook captors (Tatsuo Saitô and Takeshi Sakamoto) are willing to endure his company. Aoki’s extraordinary career would go on to include over 300 films, from Ozu’s 1932 I Was Born, But… to Seijun Suzuki’s 2001 Pistol Opera.Read More »

  • Yasujirô Ozu – Banshun AKA Late Spring (1949)

    Yasujiro Ozu1941-1950AsianDramaJapan
    Banshun (1949)
    Banshun (1949)

    Quote:
    Shukichi is a professor, a widower, absorbed in his work. His unmarried daughter, Noriko, runs his household for him. Both are perfectly content with this arrangement until the old man’s sister declares that her niece should get married. Noriko is, after all, in her mid-20s; in Japan in 1949, a single woman that old is approaching the end of her shelf life. His sister warns the professor that after his death Noriko will be left alone in the world; it is his duty to push her out of the nest and find a husband who can support her. The professor reluctantly agrees. When his daughter opposes any idea of marriage, he tells her he is also going to remarry. That is a lie, but he will sacrifice his own comfort for his daughter’s future. She marries.Read More »

  • Yasujirô Ozu – Tôkyô monogatari aka Tokyo story (1953)

    Yasujiro Ozu1951-1960ClassicsDramaJapan
    Tôkyô monogatari (1953)
    Tôkyô monogatari (1953)

    東京物語

    They one hot beautiful summer day joyfully left home
    She one hot sad day stumbled sideways
    He strangely found himself back home
    one of those so beautiful noisy hot summer days one saysRead More »

  • Yasujiro Ozu – Ohayô aka Good Morning (1959)

    Yasujiro Ozu1951-1960Amos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtComedyDramaJapan
    Ohayô (1959)
    Ohayô (1959)

    Quote:
    “Sooner or later, everyone who loves movies comes to Ozu. He is the quietest and gentlest of directors, the most humanistic, the most serene.” — Roger Ebert

    It took long enough, but I sampled my first Yasujiro Ozu film, Good Morning (Ohayo), and will soon indulge myself with as many of his works as I can locate. At one time, his films were thought to be “too Japanese” and weren’t available in the West, but if Good Morning is any indication of his craft and appeal, Ozu deserves a much wider audience. It’s a film that works at multiple levels, and only artistic geniuses like Shakespeare have been able to pull off such a universal work that works with both down to earth people and with the upper levels of critical audiences equally.Read More »

  • Yasujiro Ozu – Bakushû AKA Early Summer (1951)

    Drama1951-1960AsianJapanYasujiro Ozu

    Quote:
    An independent-minded 28-year old woman living in cosmopolitan, postwar Tokyo may seem immune from the societal pressures of marriage, but in Noriko’s (Setsuko Hara) environment, it is a perennially surfacing, unavoidable topic. Her father, Shukichi (Ichirô Sugai), and mother, Shige (Chieko Higashiyama), are unable to retire to her uncle’s house in the provincial town of Yamato until their duty to marry off Noriko to a worthy suitor has been fulfilled. Her visits with school friends invariably break down into playful arguments between the married and unmarried women. Even her office director offers to introduce her to a 40-year old business acquaintance, providing her photographs of the obscured prospective suitor to take home to show her family. Read More »

Back to top button