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Equinox Flower

Higanbana

Japan

1958

118 Min
Color
Japanese
  • Currently 4.1/5 Stars.
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DIR Yasujiro Ozu

SCR Kogo Noda, Yasujiro Ozu

DP Yuharu Atsuta

CAST Shin Saburi, Ineko Arima, Kinuyo Tanaka, Teiji Takahashi, Keiji Sata, Miyuki Kuwano, Chishu Ryu, Chieko Naniwa, Nobuo Nakamura

ED Yoshiyasu Hamamura

MUSIC Kojun Saito

Synopsis

Later in his career, Ozu started becoming increasingly sympathetic with the younger generation, a shift that was cemented in Equinox Flower, his gorgeously detailed first color film, about an old-fashioned father and his newfangled daughter. —The Criterion Collection

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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Francis

22Nov09

The feng shui force is strong in this film. I liked the arrangements in Equinox Flower better than some of his other films. I thought Shin Saburi gave a very fine performance. Still, the film is too long and it would have been better if there was a way to shut off the soap opera music in the background. Nice, terse ending.  
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Travess

29Dec08

I hardly see this film as "any time any where." Yes, I think you might need to elaborate Mr. Jahnke. I felt far removed from the particular generation gap this film speaks too. I saw it as documentation of post-war Japan's emerging upper-middle class society, and a generations' desire for independence from their parents conservative ideals. A beautifully shot film. Did Ozu ever work in other aspect ratios?  
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angud

28Dec08

I don't know if modern day Japan is like that but it was interesting for me to see the movie where the matter of marriage was handled like the India - I grew up in & I know India is no longer like that.  
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Jay a.k.a. 6FOOT

11Dec08

A really good film about the gender gap and about marriage!  

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Untitled

By Jason Troches​set on February 19, 2009

spoilers ahead:

(1958) Equinox Flower
Ozu’s first color film. Beautiful. Another one of Ozu’s ‘marriage’ pictures, but this one is really more about the father than anything. For me…  read review

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Equinox Flower/Late Autumn

7 posts by 4 people 11 months ago

DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.