The End of Summer

The End of Summer comes in with many humorous touches and goes out with a bleak recognition of the fleeting nature of all things. It is the chronicle of a sake-brewing family in Fushimi, outside of Kyoto. While the daughters are variously considering marriage proposals and attempting to reform their philandering father, the old man suffers a heart attack. The family is left to contemplate his last words, spoken to his mistress: “So this is how it ends.” Only in its pacing and visuals, where Ozu meditates on emptiness, does the film prepare us for this abrupt encounter with death. “Death, in the films of Ozu as in life, is simple absence,” Donald Richie has noted. In The End of Summer, Richie writes, “death triumphs....One of Ozu's most beautiful films, it is one of his most disturbing.”

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