Quote from: Hal on April 03, 2011, 04:02:49 AMThanks, Jon. I enjoyed reading that!I enjoyed it too.
Thanks, Jon. I enjoyed reading that!
I found this film to be very slow getting started, but eventually I became more engaged as it went along. One of the things that bugged me was the physical quality of the film. I expected Criteria would have done a lot more "cleaning up" and I found the quality of the lighting, especially for the indoor scenes to be extremely annoying because of its inconsistency, displaying light "blooms" and then darkness in waves and reminding me of silent films from the '20s, rather than a movie made in 1953.
All that aside, the story was compelling, as we see the parents shuffled from the child to child and then to a daughter-in-law and ultimately to a hotel/spa because the children were "too busy". It is a story that has become all too familiar in this country, but it was unexpected because of the culture and time frame in which it is told. Not being all that familiar with Japanese culture, I was nonetheless very surprised at the absence of emotion. Although the children demonstrated great respect for the parents, there was little warmth or caring, except surprisingly from the daughter-in-law, whose husband (the actual child of the parents) had died 8 years earlier in the war. It would seem that their lives were being governed more by duty than anything else.The scene of the one son (who was closest) arriving too late, hit a little too close to home as the same thing happened to me, but for a different reason. It brought back some very strong emotions.The moral of the story is an old one, but it is one that we continue to ignore everyday as we get wrapped up in our own "busy lives" and forget the things that are truly important in this life. Very sad!
There are some beautiful scenes and, for me, Setsuka Hara (Norika) provided the best performance of the lot. This is a great film that everybody should see.
You should check out Leo McCarey's 1937 film Make Way for Tomorrow, which deals with the same storyline, it's considered McCarey's best film.Then I would definitely recommend my favorite Ozu film, Banshun (Late Spring) (1949), she just radiates in that film and the story is a little more accessible than Tokyo Story.
Quote from: Antares on April 03, 2011, 06:04:49 PMYou should check out Leo McCarey's 1937 film Make Way for Tomorrow, which deals with the same storyline, it's considered McCarey's best film.Then I would definitely recommend my favorite Ozu film, Banshun (Late Spring) (1949), she just radiates in that film and the story is a little more accessible than Tokyo Story.Thanks. I've added both to my wishlist!
As promised, this is the article Barry Norman has written for the current issue of Radio Times, relating an encounter with Elizabeth Taylor...Barry Norman Radio Times article
Good Morning / I Was Born, But... (which I read recently was the silent movie that revolutionised Japanese cinema). Late Spring Early SummerTokyo Story
I had actually never seen this movie before, mainly because I had picked up the impression somewhere along the way that it was a long, single episode soap opera. It turns out, that's exactly what it is. I have a feeling that this film benefits from the "James Dean" effect, as it is the last film he starred in before his tragic death in a car accident in 1955. Somehow, Hollywood actors who die young seem to acquire a certain mystical aura which seems to work retroactively, and perhaps sometimes affording a film a greater stature than it would have otherwise enjoyed had the tragedy not occurred.