Ozu’s thoughful and poetic postwar films focusing on middle-class life, including the Noriko trilogy starring Setsuko Hara.
Read full descriptionChishu Ryu and Setsuko Hara star as father and daughter in a deceptively simple, eloquent story of filial devotion and parental sacrifice. A near-perfect film, and one of Ozu's own favorites.
This simple, sad story of the gap between generations in a Japanese family revealed to Western viewers the poetic acuteness of Ozu's style. "Wonderful . . . One of the manifest miracles of cinema” (The New Yorker).
A salaryman's marriage is threatened when, stifled by routine, he indulges in an affair. "I wanted to . . . let the viewer experience the peculiar sadness of the office man's existence” (Ozu).
"I wanted to depict the cycles of life, the transience of life" (Ozu). An exquisite, faintly melancholy portrait of a family, with Setsuko Hara as the daughter upon whose marriage everything depends.
Teenage girls quietly rebel against their traditional parents' plans. "Gentle and amused in the way that it acknowledges time's passage, the changing of values, and the adjustments that have to be made between generations” (NY Times).
Two little boys refuse to talk until their parents buy them a new TV in Ozu’s genial comedy of manners and tweak of domestic conformity. “The wildcard of Ozu’s career” (Rick Prelinger).
Coming full circle from Late Spring, Setsuko Hara plays a widowed mother pushing her unwilling daughter to marry. "Exquisite and not to be missed” (New Republic).
Chishu Ryu once again plays a widowed father planning to marry off his daughter in Ozu's beautiful, bittersweet last film. "Quietly tears your heart to pieces” (Terence Davies).