Where Chimneys Are Seen

Alternate title(s):
Foreign Title: Entotsu no mieru basho
Date: January 01, 1953 to December 31, 1953
Dates Note: 1953
Country of Origin: Japan
Place of Origin: Japan
Languages: Japanese
Color: B&W
Silent: No
Based On: a novel by Rinzo Shiina
Additional Info:


Curator Notes

Film Series/Exhibition Title: 
Shitamachi: Tales of Downtown Tokyo
Description: 

Heinosuke Gosho’s most celebrated film in both Japan and the West, Where Chimneys Are Seen is perhaps the most compelling example of his concern for, and insights into, the everyday lives of lower-middle-class people. “One of the really important postwar Japanese films” (Joseph Anderson and Donald Richie), the film depicts the lives of two couples against the backdrop of Tokyo’s growing industrialization during the 1950s. Ken Uehara and Kinuyo Tanaka portray a tabi sock salesman and his lonely wife, whose lives—along with those of their two timidly amorous lodgers (Hideko Takamine and Hiroshi Akutagawa)—are disrupted, and finally transformed, by the appearance of an abandoned baby on their tenement doorstep. The going metaphor—democratically shared by characters and filmmaker alike—is a mysterious group of chimneys that appear as one, two, three, or four smokestacks, depending on the angle from which they are viewed. The people living in the vicinity develop a certain affection for the anomaly, and for the philosophy it suggests: “Life is whatever you think it is,” asserts one character. “It can be sweet or bitter, whichever you are.”

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