Tags
Language
Tags
June 2025
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
    Attention❗ To save your time, in order to download anything on this site, you must be registered 👉 HERE. If you do not have a registration yet, it is better to do it right away. ✌

    ( • )( • ) ( ͡⚆ ͜ʖ ͡⚆ ) (‿ˠ‿)
    SpicyMags.xyz

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Posted By: FNB47
    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)
    1456 MB | 2:05:03 | Japanese with Eng.+Tur. s/t | XviD, 1390 Kb/s | 528x400

    The Mamiya family is seeking a husband for their daughter, Noriko, but she has ideas of her own. Played by the extraordinary Setsuko Hara, Noriko impulsively chooses her childhood friend, at once fulfilling her family's desires while tearing them apart. A seemingly simple story, Early Summer is one of Yasujiro Ozu's most complex works—a nuanced examination of life's changes across three generations. Criterion

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    In postwar Tokyo, this household is loving and serene: older parents, their 28-year-old daughter Noriko, their married son, his devoted wife, and two rascally sons. Their only discontent is Noriko's lack of a husband. Society is changing: she works, she has women friends who tease and argue, her brother sees her independence as impudence, she sees it as normal. When her boss suggests that she marry a 40-year-old bachelor who is his friend, all the members of her family press her to accept. Without seeking their advice, and to their chagrin, Noriko determines her own course of action. (http://imdb.com/title/tt0043313/plotsummary)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    "Early Summer" is the second of three films in which Setsuko Hara played a character named Noriko (the first was "Late Spring"; the third was "Tokyo Story"); in all three, the martial status of Noriko is a major plot device. In "Early Summer", as in "Late Spring", the problem is that Noriko is still unmarried, but in "Early Summer", Noriko is part of a large extended family, and their interactions, constant bickering, jovial meddling provide humorous counterpoint. "Early Summer" remains one of the most buoyant of Ozu's films, and shows how he can take the same theme and storyline, and create a comic as opposed to a dramatic work. (http://imdb.com/title/tt0043313/usercomments)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Like any of Yasujiro Ozu's best-known films, Early Summer is a marvel of cinematic simplicity, revealing layers of depth through multiple viewings. It may seem at first that Ozu's family tale is too simple, but looks are deceiving, and closer study reveals an intensely structured, highly formalized example of Ozu's transcendental realism, focusing on the dilemma of 28-year-old Noriko (played by the immensely popular Setsuko Hara), whose late-breaking decision to marry sends unexpected shock waves through three generations of her close-knit family. (–Jeff Shannon - Editorial Reviews - Amazon.com)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    While providing a vivid portrait of liberated womanhood in post-war Japan, this lighthearted yet quietly devastating drama also serves as a gentle study of tradition vs. modernity, and a clash between conformity and independence. It's also a triumph of DVD-as-film-school: As he did for Criterion's release of A Story of Floating Weeds, the distinguished scholar Donald Richie provides an eloquent full-length commentary as valuable as the film itself, thoroughly exploring the purpose of Ozu's low-angle style, the influence of Ernst Lubitsch, the importance of Setsuko as a role model for Japanese girls, stylistic comparison to Jane Austen's fiction, and a variety of other relevant topics. (–Jeff Shannon - Editorial Reviews - Amazon.com)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)

    Yasujiro Ozu-Bakushû ('Early Summer') (1951)