A Story of Floating Weeds
A Story of Floating Weeds | |
---|---|
Directed by | Yasujirō Ozu |
Produced by | Shochiku |
Written by |
Tadao Ikeda Yasujirō Ozu |
Starring |
Takeshi Sakamoto Chouko Iida Koji Mitsui Yoshiko Tsubouchi |
Cinematography | Hideo Shigehara |
Edited by | Hideo Shigehara |
Distributed by | Shochiku |
Release dates | 1934 |
Running time | 86 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language |
Silent film Japanese intertitles |
A Story of Floating Weeds (浮草物語 Ukikusa monogatari) is a 1934 silent film directed by Yasujirō Ozu which he later remade as Floating Weeds in 1959 in color. It won the Kinema Junpo Award for best film, the third consecutive year an Ozu film won, following I Was Born, But... and Passing Fancy.[1][2][3]
Plot
The film starts with a travelling kabuki troupe arriving by train at a provincial seaside town. Kihachi Ichikawa (Takeshi Sakamoto), the head of the troupe, is a very popular actor. He takes time off to visit a former mistress Otsune (Chouko Iida), with whom he had a son years before. His son, now a student, does not know that Kihachi is his father, thinking him an uncle. Kihachi and his son, Shinkichi, spend a fruitful afternoon fishing for dace in a nearby river.
When the troupe's performance tour is postponed by the constant downpour around the region, one of the members of the troupe unwittingly reveals a secret: that Kihachi is seeing a woman every day. Otaka (Rieko Yagumo), one of Kihachi’s actresses and his present mistress, decides to pay a visit to Otsune's watering-hole with fellow actress Otoki (Yoshiko Tsubouchi). Kihachi becomes enraged, warns Otaka never to come and harass the mother and son again, and breaks off his relationship with her.
To get back at Otsune and Kihachi, Otaka suggests to Otoki to try to seduce Shinkichi and offers her some money. Otoki waits for Shinkichi at a tree by the road one day and offers to meet after her performance at the same place. Shinkichi agrees to the meeting, and the two start a clandestine love affair.
As time goes by, Otoki realizes she has fallen for Shinkichi. She tells Shinkichi to forget her because she is merely a traveling actress. Kihachi discovers their affair, confronts Otoki and slaps her, demanding to know what she wants. Otoki reveals Otaka's setup, but tells him she now loves Shinkichi and is not doing this for money. Kihachi then beats up Otaka, but realizes he no longer has any control over the affair.
Kihachi decides to disband the troupe, selling all their costumes and props. The kabuki actors have one last night together. Kihachi visits Otsune, and tells her of his troupe's break-up. She invites him to stay with her for good, and they decide to tell Shinkichi of his paternity secret. Shinkichi and Otoki return, but Shinkichi and Kihachi get into a violent quarrel when Kihachi hits Otoki repeatedly.
Otsune now tells Shinkichi that Kihachi is his father, but Shinkichi refuses to acknowledge him for abandoning them. Otsune reasons that Kihachi doesn't want Shinkichi to become a traveling actor like him. Shinkichi leaves for his room in a huff. Kihachi decides to restart another troupe, realizing he cannot stay. Otoki asks to join him, but Kihachi leaves her in Otsune's care and asks Otoki to help his son be a great man.
Shinkichi comes down to look for his father but he has gone on the road. At the railway station, Kihachi meets Otaka who helps light his cigarette with matches. He invites her to start a new traveling troupe with him at Kamisuwa. Otaka goes to buy an extra ticket to accompany him. The film ends with a shot of a train traveling toward Kamisuwa.
Themes
The film includes the first appearance of what became one of the director's trademarks: a title sequence in which the credits appear against a sackcloth backdrop. Not only does this fit the story's pastoral setting, but since the credit sequences of Ozu's previous films had featured cartoony illustrations, the choice of humble sackcloth indicates the emergence of his mature film-making style. It earned Ozu the Kinema Junpô Critics' Prize for Best Japanese Film, his third in as many years.
DVD release
A Story of Floating Weeds was released on Region 1 DVD on The Criterion Collection on April 20, 2004 as a two-disc set with Floating Weeds.[4] An alternate audio track contains a commentary by Japanese film historian Donald Richie; another features a new score by composer Donald Sosin.
Legacy
In 2005, the New York Guitar Festival commissioned the guitarist Alex de Grassi to compose a score to A Story of Floating Weeds. The guitarist performed his original music to accompany the film at the 2006 New York Guitar Festival.[5]
References
- ↑ "Kinema Junpo Awards for 1935". IMDB. Retrieved 2012-10-12.
- ↑ "Kinema Junpo Awards for 1933". IMDB. Retrieved 2012-10-12.
- ↑ "Kinema Junpo Awards for 1934". IMDB. Retrieved 2012-10-12.
- ↑ A Story of Floating Weeds/Floating Weeds: Two Films by Yasujiro Ozu
- ↑ http://newyorkguitarfestival.org/schedule/jan-28-2006-saturday-800-pm/story-floating-weeds-page-madness
External links
- A Story of Floating Weeds at the Internet Movie Database
- A Story of Floating Weeds at AllMovie
- Criterion Collection essay by Donald Richie
- "浮草物語 (Ukikusa monogatari)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
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