Tokyo Story

Tokyo Story

Japanese theatrical release poster
Directed by Yasujirō Ozu
Produced by Takeshi Yamamoto
Written by Kōgo Noda
Yasujirō Ozu
Starring Chishū Ryū
Chieko Higashiyama
Setsuko Hara
Music by Kojun Saitō
Cinematography Yūharu Atsuta
Edited by Yoshiyasu Hamamura
Production
company
Release dates
  • November 3, 1953 (1953-11-03)
Running time
136 minutes
Country Japan
Language Japanese

Tokyo Story (東京物語 Tōkyō Monogatari) is a 1953 Japanese drama film directed by Yasujirō Ozu and starring Chishū Ryū and Chieko Higashiyama. It tells the story of an aging couple who travel to Tokyo to visit their grown children. The film contrasts the behavior of their children, who are too busy to pay them much attention, and their widowed daughter-in-law, who treats them with kindness.

Ozu and screenwriter Kōgo Noda wrote the script in 103 days and loosely based it on the 1937 American film Make Way for Tomorrow, directed by Leo McCarey. Noda first suggested adapting the film, which Ozu had not yet seen. Ozu used many of the same cast and crew members that he had worked with for years. Released in Japan in 1953, it did not immediately gain international recognition and was considered "too Japanese" to be marketable by Japanese film exporters. It was screened in London in 1957 and won the inaugural Sutherland Trophy the following year, and received praise from US film critics after a 1972 screening in New York City.

It is widely regarded as Ozu's masterpiece and is often cited as one of the greatest films ever made. In 2012, it was voted the best film of all time in a poll of film directors by Sight & Sound magazine.

Plot

A retired couple, Shūkichi and Tomi Hirayama (played by Chishū Ryū and Chieko Higashiyama respectively) live in the town of Onomichi in southwest Japan with their daughter Kyōko (played by Kyōko Kagawa). They have five adult children, four living. The couple travel to Tokyo to visit their son, daughter, and widowed daughter-in-law.

Their eldest son, Kōichi (So Yamamura), is a pediatrician, and their eldest daughter, Shige (Haruko Sugimura), runs a hairdressing salon. Kōichi and Shige are both busy, and do not have much time for their parents. Only their widowed daughter-in-law, Noriko (Setsuko Hara), goes out of her way to entertain them. She takes Shūkichi and Tomi on a sightseeing tour of metropolitan Tokyo.

Kōichi and Shige pay for their parents' stay at a hot spring spa at Atami, but the parents return early because the nightlife at the hotel interrupts their sleep. When they return, Shige explains that she sent them to Atami because she wanted to use their bedroom for a meeting. Tomi goes to stay with Noriko, whose husband, her son, died eight years ago in the war. Tomi advises Noriko to remarry. Shūkichi, meanwhile, gets drunk with some old friends, then returns to Shige's salon.

The couple remark on how their children have changed, and they leave for home, planning to see their younger son Keizō when the train passes through Osaka. Though they originally had planned to see him without leaving the train, Tomi takes ill during the journey and they decide to disembark, staying until she feels better the next day. However, when they later reach Onomichi, Tomi becomes critically ill. Kōichi, Shige and Noriko rush to Onomichi to see Tomi, who dies shortly afterwards. Keizō arrives late as he is out-stationed.

After the funeral, Kōichi, Shige and Keizō leave immediately, with only Noriko not returning. After they leave, Kyōko is angry with them and complains to Noriko that they are selfish to their family. She believes that Kōichi, Shige and Keizō don't care how hard it was for their father when he lost their mother, and thinks strangers would've been more respectful towards her. Noriko responds that while she understands Kyoko's disappointment with her siblings, she also explains that everyone has their own life to lead and that the drift between parents and children is inevitable. She convinces Kyoko not to be too harsh on her siblings because one day she too will understand how hard it is for them to have to take time from both their families and their own lives.

After Kyōko leaves for school, Noriko informs her father-in-law that she must return to Tokyo that afternoon. Shūkichi tells her that she has treated them best despite not being related by blood. Noriko insists on her own selfishness; Shūkichi credits her protests to humility. He gives her a watch from the late Tomi as a memento. Noriko breaks down in tears and confesses her loneliness. Shūkichi encourages her to remarry again as soon as possible. At the end, the train with Noriko speeds from Onomichi back to Tokyo, leaving behind Kyōko and Shūkichi.

Hirayama family tree

Cast

  • Chishū Ryū as Shūkichi Hirayama (平山 周吉 Hirayama Shukichi)
  • Chieko Higashiyama as Tomi Hirayama (平山 とみ Hirayama Tomi)
  • Setsuko Hara as Noriko Hirayama (平山 紀子 Hirayama Noriko)
  • Haruko Sugimura as Shige Kaneko (金子 志げ Kaneko Shige)
  • So Yamamura as Kōichi Hirayama (平山 幸一 Hirayama Koichi)
  • Kuniko Miyake as Fumiko Hirayama (平山 文子 Hirayama Fumiko)
  • Kyōko Kagawa as Kyōko Hirayama (平山 京子 Hirayama Kyoko)
  • Eijirō Tōno as Sanpei Numata (沼田 三平 Numata Sanpei)
  • Nobuo Nakamura as Kurazō Kaneko (金子 庫造 Kaneko Kurazo)
  • Shirō Ōsaka as Keizō Hirayama (平山 敬三 Hirayama Keizo)
  • Hisao Toake as Osamu Hattori (服部 修 Hattori Osamu)
  • Teruko Nagaoka as Yone Hattori (服部 よね Hattori Tone)
  • Mutsuko Sakura as a patron of the Oden Restaurant
  • Toyo Takahashi as Shūkichi Hirayama's neighbour
  • Tōru Abe as a railway employee

  • Sachiko Mitani as Noriko's neighbour
  • Zen Murase as Minoru Hirayama, Kōichi's son
  • Mitsuhiro Mori as Isamu Hirayama, Kōichi's son
  • Junko Anami as a beauty salon assistant
  • Ryōko Mizuki as a beauty salon client
  • Yoshiko Togawa as a beauty salon client
  • Kazuhiro Itokawa as a student
  • Keijirō Morozumi as a police agent
  • Tsutomu Nijima as Noriko's office boss
  • Shōzō Suzuki as Noriko's office colleague
  • Yoshiko Tashiro as a hotel maid
  • Haruko Chichibu as a hotel maid
  • Takashi Miki as a singer
  • Binnosuke Nagao as the doctor at Onomichi

Production

Ozu (far right) on set during shooting.

The script was developed by Yasujirō Ozu and his long-time collaborator Kōgo Noda over a period of 103 days in a country inn in Chigasaki.[1] Ozu, Noda and cinematographer Yūharu Atsuta scouted locations in Tokyo and Onomichi for another month before shooting started. Shooting and editing the film took place from July to October 1953. Ozu used the same film crew and actors he had worked with for many years.[2][3] Actor Chishū Ryū said that Ozu was always happiest when finishing the final draft of a script and that there were never any changes to the final draft.[4]

Release and reception

Tokyo Story was released on November 3, 1953 in Japan. The following year Haruko Sugimura won the Mainichi Film Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role as the eldest daughter Shige.[5]

It was screened at the National Film Theatre in London in 1957.[6] It is Ozu's best known film in both the East and the West. After the success of Akira Kurosawa's Rashomon at the 1951 Venice Film Festival, Japanese films began getting international distribution.[7] However Japanese film exporters considered Ozu's work "too Japanese" and unmarketable. It was not until the 1960s that Ozu's films began to be screened in New York City at film festivals, museums and theaters.[8]

Tokyo Story is often admired for its emotional depth while avoiding melodrama. It was awarded the first Sutherland Trophy for the most original and creative film in 1958.[9] UK critic Lindsay Anderson wrote that "It is a film about relationships, a film about time, and how it affects human beings (particularly parents and children) and how we must reconcile ourselves to its workings."[10]

After a screening at the New Yorker Theater in 1972 it received rave reviews from several prominent critics who were unfamiliar with the film or Ozu up until that point.[11] Charles Micherer of Newsweek said it was "like a Japanese paper flower that is dropped into water and then swells to fill the entire container with its beauty."[12] Stanley Kauffmann put it on his 10 Best list of 1972 and wrote "Ozu, a lyrical poet, whose lyrics swell quietly into the epic."[13]

Legacy

The film has appeared several times in the British Film Institute polls of "greatest films" of directors and critics published in Sight & Sound. On the critics' poll, it was third in 1992, fifth in 2002, and third again in 2012. On the directors' poll, it was 17th in 1992, tied at number 16 with Psycho and The Mirror in 2002, and in 2012 it topped the poll, receiving 48 votes out of the 358 directors polled.[14][15][16][17]

It holds a 100% "Fresh" rating on the review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 38 critical reviews, with an average score of 9.7/10.[18] John Walker, former editor of the Halliwell's Film Guides, places Tokyo Story at the top of his published list of the best 1000 films ever made. Tokyo Story is also included in film critic Derek Malcolm's The Century of Films,[19][20] a list of films which he deems artistically or culturally important, and Time magazine lists it among its All-Time 100 Movies. Roger Ebert includes it in his series of great movies,[21] and Paul Schrader placed it in the "Gold" section of his Film Canon.[22]

Style and themes

Like all of Ozu's sound films, Tokyo Story's pacing is slow.[23] Important events are often not shown on screen but revealed through dialogue. For example, the train journeys to and from Tokyo are not depicted.[24] A distinctive camera style is used, in which the camera height is low and almost never moves; film critic Roger Ebert notes that the camera moves once in the film, which is "more than usual" for an Ozu film.[21] The low camera positions are also reminiscent of sitting on a traditional Japanese tatami mat.[25] Ozu rarely shot master shots[26] and often broke the 180-degree rule of filmmaking and screen direction. Characters, who often sit side by side in scenes, often appear to be facing the same direction when speaking to each other, such as in the first scene with Shūkichi and Tomi.[27] During some transitions, characters exit a scene screen right and then enter the next scene screen right.[28]

Ozu favored a stationary camera[29] and believed strongly in minimalism.[30] David Dresser has compared the film's style and "de-emphasized plot“ to Zen Buddhism and the modern world's fascination with surface value and materialism.[31] Many of the transitional shots between sequences were still lives without any people, such as smokestacks and landscapes.[32] In his narrative storytelling, Ozu often had certain key scenes take place off camera with the viewer only learning about them through the characters' dialogue. The audience never sees Shūkichi and Tomi visit their son Keizō and Tomi's illness begins off-screen.[33]

Themes in the film include the break-up and Westernization of the traditional Japanese family after World War II and the inevitability of children growing apart from their parents.[34] The film takes place in 1953 post-war Japan, a few years after the new Civil Code of 1948 began the country's rapid re-growth and embraced Western capitalist ideals, while simultaneously destroying older traditions such as the Japanese family and its values.[35] Ozu was very close to his own mother, living with her as a surrogate wife and never marrying.[36] Ozu called Tokyo Story "the film that tends most strongly to melodrama."[37] It is considered a Shomin-geki film for its depiction of working-class people.[38]

Similarities to Make Way for Tomorrow

Tokyo Story was inspired by the 1937 American film Make Way for Tomorrow, directed by Leo McCarey. Noda initially suggested the plot of the older film to Ozu, who hadn't seen it. Noda remembered it from its initial release in Japan.[39][40] Both films depict an elderly couple and their problems with their family[41] and both films depict the couple travelling to visit their children.[42] Differences include the older film taking place in Depression era US with the couple's problem being economical and Toyko Story taking place in post-war Japan, where the problems are more cultural and emotional.[43] The two films also end differently.[44] David Bordwell wrote that Ozu "re-cast" the original film instead of adapt it.[45]

Influence

German director Doris Dörrie drew inspiration from Tokyo Story for her 2008 film Cherry Blossoms, in particular the family constellation.[46]

In 2013 Ozu's former Assistant Director Yōji Yamada remade the film as Tōkyō Kazoku.[47]

Home media

The film was restored and released on DVD and Blu-ray by The Criterion Collection (Region 1) and by Tartan Video in Region 2. In 2010, the BFI released a Region 2 dual-format edition (Blu-ray + DVD).[48] Included with this release is a standard definition presentation of Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family.

References

Notes

  1. Desser, David, ed. (1997). Ozu's Tokyo Story. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 20. ISBN 0-521-48435-9.
  2. Dresser.1997. pp. 20-21.
  3. Eleftheriotis, Dimitris; Gary Needham (May 2006). Asian cinemas: a reader and guide. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 17–26. ISBN 978-0-8248-3085-4.
  4. Dresser. 1997.p. 152.
  5. "第9回". THE MAINICHI NEWSPAPERS. Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  6. Desser. 1997. p. 145
  7. Dresser. 1997. p. 2.
  8. Dresser. 1997. p. 3.
  9. "Sutherland Trophy". 2013. Retrieved 6 June 2016.
  10. Dresser. 1997. p. 149.
  11. Dresser. 1997. p. 155.
  12. Dresser. 1997. p. 156.
  13. Dresser. 1997.p. 151.
  14. "The 2012 Sight & Sound Directors' Top Ten". Sight & Sound. British Film Institute. 2 August 2012. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  15. "Top Ten Poll 1992 - Directors' and Critics' Poll". Sight & Sound. Published by British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 2012-01-11. Retrieved October 29, 2010.
  16. "Sight & Sound Top Ten Poll 2002 - The rest of the directors' list". Sight & Sound. Published by British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 2012-03-09. Retrieved October 29, 2010.
  17. "The Top 50 Greatest Films of All Time". Published by British Film Institute. 1 August 2012. Retrieved 2 August 2012.
  18. "Tokyo Story (Tôkyô monogatari)". rottentomatoes.com. 3 November 1953. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  19. Malcolm, Derek (4 May 2000). "Yasujiro Ozu: Tokyo Story". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 August 2012.
  20. Malcolm, Derek (2000). A Century of Film. IB Tauris. pp. 85–87.
  21. 1 2 Ebert, Roger (November 9, 2003). "Tokyo Story Movie Review & Film Summary (1953)". Retrieved 6 August 2012.
  22. Jeffrey M. Anderson (14 November 2006). "Paul Schrader's Film Canon, Film Comment - September/October 2006".
  23. David Bordwell; Kristin Thompson (2003). Film History: An Introduction (2nd ed.). McGraw-Hill. p. 396.
  24. David Desser (2005). "The Space of Ambivalence". In Jeffrey Geiger. Film Analysis. Norton. pp. 462–3.
  25. Dresser. 1997.p. 4.
  26. Dresser. 1997. p. 15.
  27. Dresser. 1997. pp. 12-15.
  28. Dresser. 1997. p. 19.
  29. Dresser. 1997. p. 41.
  30. Dresser. 1997. p. 157.
  31. Dresser. 1997. p. 5.
  32. Dresser. 1997. p. 10.
  33. Dresser. 1997. pp. 6-7.
  34. Dresser.1997.p. 4.
  35. Dresser. 1997. pp. 30-31.
  36. Dresser. 1997. p. 95.
  37. Dresser. 1997. 122.
  38. Dresser. 1997. p. 26.
  39. "Tokyo Story". TCM. Retrieved May 30, 2011.
  40. Dresser. 1997. p. 26.
  41. Dresser.1997.p. 28.
  42. Dresser. 1997. p. 69.
  43. Dresser. 1997. p. 28.
  44. Dresser. 1997. p. 46.
  45. Dresser. 1997. p. 25.
  46. "Kirschblüten - Hanami, Filmdatenblatt berlinale 2008".
  47. "世界358監督が選んだベスト1映画は小津安二郎「東京物語」…没後50年、こだわった「家族」と「戦争」". Sankei News. 16 November 2013. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  48. "Tokyo Story: Dual Format Edition". Retrieved 2 August 2012.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tokyo Story.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.