One of the most quietly powerful studies of the gradual and inevitable erosion of the family in a rapidly changing world.
Tokyo Story (1953)
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Reviews Counted:21
Fresh:21
Rotten:0
Average Rating:9.7/10
Runtime: 2 hrs 19 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Synopsis: The Japanese family's transformation by modern, Western culture formed the core theme of director Ozu's work, and this motif is crystallized in an exquisite, intimate story of alienation and... The Japanese family's transformation by modern, Western culture formed the core theme of director Ozu's work, and this motif is crystallized in an exquisite, intimate story of alienation and reconciliation in TOKYO STORY. An aging couple, living in retirement in rural Japan, decide to visit their married children in the bustling metropolis of post-war Tokyo. But once they arrive, they find that the children no longer have room for them in their busy lives. Shuffling their parents back and forth between each of their houses the couple is eventually shipped off to a health spa. Only the couple's daughter-in-law, widow of their son who died in the war, shows them any kindness. The parents return home lonely and disillusioned, and the mother soon falls sick. The children arrive too late, and have lost their chance to make any reconciliation. The patterns of movement, dialogue and nature combine with a scrupulous attention to character under Ozu's masterful eye and create a subtle yet overwhelmingly emotional drama. [More]
Starring: Chishu Ryu, Chiyeko Higashiyama, Sô Yamamura, Haruko Sugimura
Starring: Chishu Ryu, Chiyeko Higashiyama, Sô Yamamura, Haruko Sugimura, Setsuko Hara, Kyôko Kagawa, Shiro Osaka
Director: Yasujiro Ozu
Director: Yasujiro Ozu
Screenwriter: Yasujiro Ozu, Kogo Noda
Composer: Takanori Saito
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Reviews for Tokyo Story
It ennobles the cinema. It says, yes, a movie can help us make small steps against our imperfections.
Rife with a pervasive sense of loss, Tokyo story offers little comfort and promises great sorrow. This is a profoundly moving film.
The film is full of feelings, all understated, all with the tenor of universal truth.
Anyone can relate to those moments when the calm is broken by the undercurrents of anguish, disappointment and resentment that run through every family.
Ozu's style is one based on restriction, rigor, and repetition, which paradoxically expands his emotional meanings.
Ozu doesn't sentimentalize or condemn; he merely observes human nature with calm and clarity.
Luminous in its freedom from the sentimentality or the satire that so often obscure an artist's vision of normal living.
...captures the profound and infinite through simple vignettes and unsurpassed composition that juxtapose modern industry, trains, and clocks with humanity
constantly bursts with life and meaning, despite the fact that very little happens in the conventional narrative sense
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