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The Only Son

Hitori musuko

Japan

1936

87 Min
Black and White
Japanese
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Yasujiro Ozu

SCR Yasujiro Ozu, Tadao Ikeda, Masao Arata

DP Shojiro Sugimoto

CAST Chouko Iida, Shinichi Himori, Masao Hayama

Synopsis

In 1923, in the province of Shinshu, the widow and simple worker of a silk factory Tsune Nonomiya (O-Tsune) decides to send her only son to Tokyo for having a better education. Thirteen years later, she visits her son Ryosuke Nonomiya (Shinichi Himori), and finds that he is a poor and frustrated night-school teacher with a wife, Sugiko (Yoshiko Tsubouchi), and a baby boy. —IMDb

Director

Yasujiro_ozu

Yasujiro Ozu

Yasujiro Ozu was born in the old Fukagawa district of Tokyo, to a fertilizer merchant, in 1903. In 1923, after a couple of years as an assistant teacher in rural Japan, Ozu was hired as assistant cameraman at the Shochiku Motion Picture Company. Early in his career, Ozu began to experiment with an idiosyncratic film style that ran contrary to the conventions of Japanese or Hollywood cinema of the day. He strove to reduce and simplify his film style; he cast such mainstays as the fade, the dissolve, and the pan from his cinematic palette. He shot solely from a low camera angle, using a 50mm lens, and he subordinated spatial continuity to visual aesthetics. Ozu directed his first film in 1927,The Sword of Penitence. In 1932, he began to hit his creative stride with the touching comedy I Was Born, But…, which was his first commercial success. During World War II, he made few films such as There Was a Father.

After the war, Ozu reached his creative peak and made some of his finest… read more

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Displaying 4 of 5 wall posts.
Picture of Louis Jackson

Louis Jackson

20Jan10

Spot on Rudgier. It truly is a great example of working class cinema.   
Picture of Rüdiger Tomczak

Rüdiger Tomczak

6Dec09

This is one of the very very few films I have seen which have an incredible deep understanding of the working class, a genuine sympathy and at the same time a sharp view on their social circumstances. Oh these blind so-called leftish, but in reality bourgois artist like the so called Japanese New Wave after 1960 never dared just to dream to make a film like The Only Son. The only Son is one of very few films about…  more
Picture of David Ehrenstein

David Ehrenstein

26Aug09

A deeply moving and extremely subtle social protest film -- a genre in which Ozu was a master. The notion that he was a middle-class conformist is rendered for the foolishness that it is by viewing this masterpeice.   
Picture of Genaro Navarro

Genaro Navarro

20May09

And one of the most beautiful films I have seen.