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Yasujirō Ozu

Yasujirō Ozu (小津 安二郎, Ozu Yasujirō, 12 December 1903 – 12 December 1963) was a Japanese filmmaker. He began his career during the era of silent films, and his last films were made in colour in the early 1960s. Ozu first made a number of short comedies, before turning to more serious themes in the 1930s. The most prominent themes of Ozu's work are family and marriage, and especially the relationships between generations. His most widely beloved films include Late Spring (1949), Tokyo Story (1953), and An Autumn Afternoon (1962).

Yasujirō Ozu
小津 安二郎
Ozu in 1951
Born(1903-12-12)12 December 1903
Mannencho, Fukagawa City, Tokyo, Japan
Died12 December 1963(1963-12-12) (aged 60)
Bunkyō City, Tokyo, Japan
Resting placeEngaku-ji, Kamakura, Japan
Other namesJames Maki
Occupation(s)Film director, screenwriter
Years active1929–1963
MovementShomin-geki
Japanese name
Hiraganaおづ やすじろう
Katakanaオヅ ヤスジロウ
Transcriptions
RomanizationOzu Yasujirō

Widely regarded as one of the world's greatest and most influential filmmakers, Ozu's work has continued to receive acclaim since his death. In the 2012 Sight & Sound poll, Ozu's Tokyo Story was voted the third-greatest film of all time by critics world-wide. In the same poll, Tokyo Story was voted the greatest film of all time by 358 directors and film-makers world-wide.[1]

Biography Edit

Early life Edit

Ozu was born in the Fukagawa, Tokyo, the second son of merchant Toranosuke Ozu and his wife Asae.[2] His family was a branch of the Ozu Yoemon merchant family from Ise, and Toranosuke was the 5th generation manager of the family's fertilizer business in Nihonbashi.[3] Asae came from the Nakajō merchant family.[2][3] Ozu had five brothers and sisters. When he was three, he developed meningitis, and was in a coma for a couple of days. Asae devoted herself to nursing him, and Ozu made a recovery.[2] He attended Meiji nursery school and primary school.[4] In March 1913, at the age of nine, he and his siblings were sent by his father to live in his father's home town of Matsusaka in Mie Prefecture, where he remained until 1924.[4][5] In March 1916, at the age of 12, he entered what is now Ujiyamada High School.[n 1] He was a boarder at the school and did judo.[4] He frequently skipped classes to watch films such as Quo Vadis or The Last Days of Pompeii. In 1917, he saw the film Civilization and decided that he wanted to be a film director.[6]

In 1920, at the age of 17, he was thrown out of the dormitory after being accused of writing a love letter to a good-looking boy in a lower class, and had to commute to school by train.[6]

In March 1921, Ozu graduated from the high school. He attempted the exam for entrance into what is now Kobe University's economics department,[n 2] but failed. In 1922, he took the exam for a teacher training college,[n 3] but failed it too. On 31 March 1922, he began working as a substitute teacher at a school in the Mie prefecture. He is said to have traveled the long journey from the school in the mountains to watch films on the weekend. In December 1922, his family, with the exception of Ozu and his sister, moved back to Tokyo to live with his father. In March 1923, when his sister graduated, he also returned to live in Tokyo.

Entering the film business Edit

 
Yasujiro Ozu in Dragnet Girl 1933

With his uncle acting as intermediary, Ozu was hired by the Shochiku Film Company, as an assistant in the cinematography department, on 1 August 1923, against the wishes of his father.[6] His family home was destroyed in the earthquake of 1923, but no members of his family were injured.

On 12 December 1924, Ozu started a year of military service.[6][n 4] He finished his military service on 30 November 1925, leaving as a corporal.

In 1926, he became a third assistant director at Shochiku.[7] In 1927, he was involved in a fracas where he punched another employee for jumping a queue at the studio cafeteria, and when called to the studio director's office, used it as an opportunity to present a film script he had written.[7] In September 1927, he was promoted to director in the jidaigeki (period film) department, and directed his first film, Sword of Penitence, which has since been lost. Sword of Penitence was written by Ozu, with a screenplay by Kogo Noda, who would become his co-writer for the rest of his career. On September 25, he was called up for service in the military reserves until November, which meant that the film had to be partly finished by another director.[7]

In 1928, Shiro Kido, the head of the Shochiku studio, decided that the company would concentrate on making short comedy films without star actors. Ozu made many of these films. The film Body Beautiful, released on 1 December 1928, was the first Ozu film to use a low camera position, which would become his trademark.[7] After a series of the "no star" pictures, in September 1929, Ozu's first film with stars, I Graduated, But..., starring Minoru Takada and Kinuyo Tanaka, was released. In January 1930, he was entrusted with Shochiku's top star, Sumiko Kurishima, in her new year film, An Introduction to Marriage. His subsequent films of 1930 impressed Shiro Kido enough to invite Ozu on a trip to a hot spring. In his early works, Ozu used the pseudonym "James Maki"[n 5] for his screenwriting credit.[8] His film Young Miss, with an all-star cast, was the first time he used the pen name James Maki, and was also his first film to appear in film magazine Kinema Jumpo's "Best Ten" at third position.[9]

In 1932, his I Was Born, But..., a comedy about childhood with serious overtones, was received by movie critics as the first notable work of social criticism in Japanese cinema, winning Ozu wide acclaim.[10] In 1935 Ozu made a short documentary with soundtrack: Kagami Jishi, in which Kikugoro VI performed a Kabuki dance of the same title. This was made by request of the Ministry of Education.[11]: p. 221  Like the rest of Japan's cinema industry, Ozu was slow to switch to the production of talkies: his first film with a dialogue sound-track was The Only Son in 1936, five years after Japan's first talking film, Heinosuke Gosho's The Neighbor's Wife and Mine.

War-time Edit

On 9 September 1937, at a time when Shochiku was unhappy about Ozu's lack of box-office success, despite the praise he received from critics, the thirty-four-year-old Ozu was conscripted into the Imperial Japanese Army. He spent two years in China in the Second Sino-Japanese War. He arrived in Shanghai on 27 September 1937 as part of an infantry regiment which handled chemical weapons.[12] He started as a corporal but was promoted to sergeant on 1 June 1938.[12] From January until September 1938 he was stationed in Nanjing, where he met Sadao Yamanaka, who was stationed nearby. In September, Yamanaka died of illness.[12] In 1939, Ozu was dispatched to Hankou, where he fought in the Battle of Nanchang and the Battle of Xiushui River. In June, he was ordered back to Japan, arriving in Kobe in July, and his conscription ended on 16 July 1939.[12]

Some of Ozu’s published diaries cover his wartime experiences between December 20, 1938, to June 5, 1939.[13] Another diary from his wartime years (陣中日記) he expressly forbade from publication. In the published diaries, reference to his group's participation in chemical warfare (in violation of the Geneva Protocol, though Japan had withdrawn from the League of Nations in 1933) can be found, for example, in various entries from March 1939. In other entries, he describes Chinese soldiers in disparaging terms, likening them in one passage to insects.[14] Although operating as a military squad leader, Ozu retains his directorial perspective, once commenting that the initial shock and subsequent agony of a man as he is hacked to death is very much like its depiction in period films.[15]

Ozu's writings also offers a glimpse into the Japanese military's use of comfort women. In a letter sent to friends in Japan on April 11, 1938, from Dingyuan County in China's Anhui Province, Ozu writes about the comfort station protocol in lightly coded terms.[16] In a January 13, 1939, diary entry, Ozu writes more openly about his group's upcoming turn for use of a comfort station near Yingcheng. He mentions that two tickets, ointment, and prophylatics are provided and that three Korean and 12 Chinese women were being held at the comfort station for their use. Comfort station rates and schedules are also given by Ozu.[17]

In 1939, he wrote the first draft of the script for The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice but shelved it due to extensive changes insisted on by military censors.[12] The first film Ozu made on his return was the critically and commercially successful Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family, released in 1941. He followed this with There Was a Father (Chichi Ariki, 1942), which explored the strong bonds of affection between a father and son despite years of separation.

In 1943, Ozu was again drafted into the army for the purpose of making a propaganda film in Burma. However, he was sent to Singapore instead, to make a documentary Derii e, Derii e ("To Delhi, to Delhi") about Chandra Bose.[18] During his time in Singapore, having little inclination to work, he spent an entire year reading, playing tennis, and watching American films provided by the Army information corps. He was particularly impressed with Orson Welles's Citizen Kane.[19] He occupied a fifth-floor room facing the sea in the Cathay Building where he entertained guests, drew pictures, and collected rugs. At the end of the Second World War in August 1945, Ozu destroyed the script, and all footage, of the film.[18] He was detained as a civilian, and worked in a rubber plantation. Of his film team of 32 people, there was only space for 28 on the first repatriation boat to Japan. Ozu won a lottery giving him a place, but gave it to someone else who was anxious to return.[18][19]

Postwar Edit

Ozu returned to Japan in February 1946, and moved back in with his mother, who had been staying with his sister in Noda in Chiba prefecture. He reported for work at the Ofuna studios on 18 February 1946. His first film released after the war was Record of a Tenement Gentleman in 1947. Around this time, the Chigasakikan[n 6] Ryokan became Ozu's favoured location for scriptwriting.

 
Ozu's grave at Engaku-ji, Kamakura in 2018

Tokyo Story was the last script that Ozu wrote at Chigasakikan. In later years, Ozu and Noda used a small house in the mountains at Tateshina in Nagano Prefecture called Unkosō[n 7] to write scripts, with Ozu staying in a nearby house called Mugeisō.[n 8][20]

Ozu's films from the late 1940s onward were favourably received, and the entries in the so-called "Noriko trilogy" (starring Setsuko Hara) of Late Spring (1949), Early Summer (1951), and Tokyo Story (1953) are among his most acclaimed works, with Tokyo Story widely considered his masterpiece.[21] Late Spring, the first of these films, was the beginning of Ozu's commercial success and the development of his cinematography and storytelling style. These three films were followed by his first colour film, Equinox Flower, in 1958, Floating Weeds in 1959, and Late Autumn in 1960. In addition to Noda, other regular collaborators included cinematographer Yuharu Atsuta, along with the actors Chishū Ryū, Setsuko Hara, and Haruko Sugimura.

His work was only rarely shown overseas before the 1960s. Ozu's last film was An Autumn Afternoon, which was released in 1962.

He served as president of the Directors Guild of Japan from 1955 to his death in 1963.[22]

Ozu was known for his drinking. He and Noda measured the progression of their scripts by how many bottles of sake they had drunk. Ozu never married.[23][24] He lived with his mother until she died in 1961.[citation needed]

A heavy smoker, Ozu died of throat cancer in 1963, on his sixtieth birthday. The grave he shares with his mother at Engaku-ji in Kamakura bears no name—just the character mu ("nothingness").[25]

Legacy and style Edit

 
Setsuko Hara (left) and Yasujirō Ozu (far right) on location of Tokyo Story (1953)

Ozu is probably as well known for the technical style and innovation of his films as for the narrative content. The style of his films is most striking in his later films, a style he had not fully developed until his post-war sound films.[26] He did not conform to Hollywood conventions.[27] Rather than using the typical over-the-shoulder shots in his dialogue scenes by most directors, the camera gazes on the actors directly, which has the effect of placing the viewer in the middle of the scene.[27] Throughout his career, Ozu used a 50mm lens, which is usually considered to be the lens closest to human vision.[28]

Ozu did not use typical transitions between scenes, either. In between scenes he would show shots of certain static objects as transitions, or use direct cuts, rather than fades or dissolves. Most often the static objects would be buildings, where the next indoor scene would take place. It was during these transitions that he would use music, which might begin at the end of one scene, progress through the static transition, and fade into the new scene. He rarely used non-diegetic music in any scenes other than in the transitions.[29] Ozu moved the camera less and less as his career progressed, and ceased using tracking shots altogether in his colour films.[30] However, David Bordwell argues that Ozu is one of the few directors to "create a systematic alternative to Hollywood continuity cinema, but he does so by changing only a few premises."[31]

Ozu invented the "tatami shot", in which the camera is placed at a low height, supposedly at the eye level of a person kneeling on a tatami mat.[32] Actually, Ozu's camera is often even lower than that, only one or two feet off the ground, which necessitated the use of special tripods and raised sets. He used this low height even when there were no sitting scenes, such as when his characters walked in hallways. When Ozu made his move to color, he chose to shoot under the German color process Agfacolor, as he felt that it captured reds much better than any other color process.[33]

 
Ozu during a film shoot

Ozu eschewed the traditional rules of movie storytelling, most notably eyelines. In his review of Floating Weeds, film critic Roger Ebert recounts:

[Ozu] once had a young assistant who suggested that perhaps he should shoot conversations so that it seemed to the audience that the characters were looking at one another. Ozu agreed to a test. They shot a scene both ways, and compared them. "You see?" Ozu said. "No difference!"[34]

Ozu was also an innovator in Japanese narrative structure through his use of ellipses, or the decision not to depict major events in the story.[35] In An Autumn Afternoon (1962), for example, a wedding is merely mentioned in one scene, and the next sequence references this wedding (which has already occurred); the wedding itself is never shown. This is typical of Ozu's films, which eschew melodrama by eliding moments that would often be used in Hollywood in attempts to stir an excessive emotional reaction from audiences.[35]

Ozu became recognized internationally when his films were shown abroad.[36] Influential monographs by Donald Richie,[11] Paul Schrader,[37] and David Bordwell[38] have ensured a wide appreciation of Ozu's style, aesthetics, and themes by the Anglophonic audience.

Tributes and documentaries Edit

Five, also known as Five Dedicated to Ozu, is an Iranian documentary film directed by Abbas Kiarostami. The film consists of five long takes set by the ocean. Five sequences: 1) A piece of driftwood on the seashore, carried about by the waves 2) People walking on the seashore. The oldest ones stop by, look at the sea, then go away 3) Blurry shapes on a winter beach. A herd of dogs. A love story 4) A group of loud ducks cross the image, in one direction then the other 5) A pond, at night. Frogs improvising a concert. A storm, then the sunrise.

In 2003, the centenary of Ozu's birth was commemorated at various film festivals around the world. Shochiku produced the film Café Lumière (珈琲時光), directed by Taiwanese film-maker Hou Hsiao-hsien as homage to Ozu, with direct reference to the late master's Tokyo Story (1953), to premiere on Ozu's birthday.

Ozu was voted the tenth greatest director of all time in the 2002 British Film Institute's Sight & Sound poll of critics' top 10 directors.[39] Ozu's Tokyo Story has appeared several times in the Sight & Sound poll of best films selected by critics and directors. In 2012, it topped the poll of film directors' choices of "greatest film of all time". Ozu was one of film critic Roger Ebert's favourite filmmakers, who described him as the most humanistic director of all time.[40][41][42]

In 2013, director Yoji Yamada of the Otoko wa Tsurai yo film series remade Tokyo Story in a modern setting as Tokyo Family.[43]

In the Wim Wenders documentary film Tokyo-Ga, the director travels to Japan to explore the world of Ozu, interviewing both Chishū Ryū and Yuharu Atsuta.

Filmography Edit

Filmography of Yasujirō Ozu[44][45]
Year Japanese title Rōmaji English title Notes
Silent films
1927 懺悔の刃 Zange no yaiba Sword of Penitence Lost
1928 若人の夢 Wakōdo no yume Dreams of Youth Lost
女房紛失 Nyōbō funshitsu Wife Lost Lost
カボチャ Kabocha Pumpkin Lost
引越し夫婦 Hikkoshi fūfu A Couple on the Move Lost
肉体美 Nikutaibi Body Beautiful Lost
1929 宝の山 Takara no yama Treasure Mountain Lost
学生ロマンス 若き日 Gakusei romansu: wakaki hi Student Romance: Days of Youth Ozu's earliest surviving film
和製喧嘩友達 Wasei kenka tomodachi Fighting Friends Japanese Style 14 minutes survives
大学は出たけれど Daigaku wa detakeredo I Graduated, But... 10 minutes survives
会社員生活 Kaishain seikatsu The Life of an Office Worker Lost
突貫小僧 Tokkan kozō A Straightforward Boy Short film
1930 結婚学入門 Kekkongaku nyūmon An Introduction to Marriage Lost
朗かに歩め Hogaraka ni ayume Walk Cheerfully
落第はしたけれど Rakudai wa shitakeredo I Flunked, But...
その夜の妻 Sono yo no tsuma That Night's Wife
エロ神の怨霊 Erogami no onryō The Revengeful Spirit of Eros Lost
足に触った幸運 Ashi ni sawatta kōun The Luck Which Touched the Leg Lost
お嬢さん Ojōsan Young Miss Lost
1931 淑女と髯 Shukujo to hige The Lady and the Beard
美人哀愁 Bijin aishu Beauty's Sorrows Lost
東京の合唱 Tōkyō no kōrasu Tokyo Chorus
1932 春は御婦人から Haru wa gofujin kara Spring Comes from the Ladies Lost
大人の見る繪本 生れてはみたけれど Umarete wa mita keredo I Was Born, But...
靑春の夢いまいづこ Seishun no yume ima izuko Where Now Are the Dreams of Youth?
また逢ふ日まで Mata au hi made Until the Day We Meet Again Lost
1933 東京の女 Tōkyō no onna Woman of Tokyo
非常線の女 Hijōsen no onna Dragnet Girl
出来ごころ Dekigokoro Passing Fancy
1934 母を恋はずや Haha o kowazuya A Mother Should be Loved
浮草物語 Ukigusa monogatari A Story of Floating Weeds
1935 箱入娘 Hakoiri musume An Innocent Maid Lost
東京の宿 Tōkyō no yado An Inn in Tokyo
1936 大学よいとこ Daigaku yoitoko College Is a Nice Place Lost
Sound, black-and-white films
1936 菊五郎の鏡獅子 Kagami jishi Lion in the Mirror Short documentary
一人息子 Hitori musuko The Only Son
1937 淑女は何を忘れたか Shukujo wa nani o wasureta ka What Did the Lady Forget?
1941 戸田家の兄妹 Todake no kyōdai Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family
1942 父ありき Chichi ariki There Was a Father
1947 長屋紳士録 Nagaya Shinshiroku Record of a Tenement Gentleman
1948 風の中の牝鶏 Kaze no naka no mendori A Hen in the Wind
1949 晩春 Banshun Late Spring Ozu's first film with Setsuko Hara
1950 宗方姉妹 Munekata Kyōdai The Munekata Sisters
1951 麥秋 Bakushu Early Summer
1952 お茶漬の味 Ochazuke no aji The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice Adapted from censored 1939 script
1953 東京物語 Tōkyō monogatari Tokyo Story
1956 早春 Sōshun Early Spring
1957 東京暮色 Tōkyō boshoku Tokyo Twilight
Colour films
1958 彼岸花 Higanbana Equinox Flower Ozu's first film in colour
1959 お早よう Ohayō Good Morning Remake of I Was Born, But...
浮草 Ukigusa Floating Weeds Remake of A Story of Floating Weeds
1960 秋日和 Akibiyori Late Autumn
1961 小早川家の秋 Kohayagawa-ke no aki The End of Summer Ozu's last film with Setsuko Hara
1962 秋刀魚の味 Sanma no aji An Autumn Afternoon Ozu's final work

Notes Edit

  1. ^ 宇治山田高等学校
  2. ^ 神戸高商, Kobe Kosho
  3. ^ 三重県立師範学校, Mie-ken ritsu shihan gakko
  4. ^ Ozu's military service was of a special type called ichinen shiganhei (一年志願兵) where the usual two-year term of conscription was shortened to one year on condition that the conscriptee paid for himself.
  5. ^ ヂェームス・槇
  6. ^ 茅ケ崎館
  7. ^ 雲呼荘
  8. ^ 無芸荘

References Edit

  1. ^ "Directors' 10 Greatest Films of All Time". Sight & Sound. British Film Institute. 4 December 2014.
  2. ^ a b c Chiba, Nobuo; 千葉伸夫 (2003). Ozu Yasujirō to 20-seiki (Shohan ed.). Kokusho Kankōkai. pp. 16, 20. ISBN 4-336-04607-7. OCLC 54757823.
  3. ^ a b Matsuura, Kanji (2019). Ozu Yasujirō, taizen = Ozu. Miyamoto Akiko. pp. 154–158. ISBN 978-4-02-251599-5. OCLC 1101101857.
  4. ^ a b c Hasumi 2003, p. 319
  5. ^ Weston, Mark (1999). Giants of Japan. Kodansha International. p. 303. ISBN 9781568362861.
  6. ^ a b c d Hasumi 2003, p. 320
  7. ^ a b c d Hasumi 2003, p. 321
  8. ^ Shindo 2004, p. 11
  9. ^ Hasumi 2003, p. 322
  10. ^ Scott, A.O. (24 June 2010). "Revenge on the Bully, Silently, in Japan". New York Times. New York Times Company. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  11. ^ a b Richie, Donald (July 1977). Ozu. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-03277-4.
  12. ^ a b c d e Hasumi 2003, p. 327
  13. ^ Tanaka, Masumi (1993). 全日記 小津安二郎. Firumu Atosha. ISBN 978-4845993215.
  14. ^ Tanaka, Masumi (2005). 小津安二郎と戦争. Misuzu Shobo. ISBN 978-4622071488.
  15. ^ Sato, Tadao (1978). 小津安二郎の芸術 上. Asahi Shimbun. ISBN 978-4022592262.
  16. ^ Tanaka, Masumi (2005). 小津安二郎と戦争. Misuzu Shobo. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-4622071488.
  17. ^ Tanaka, Masumi (1993). 全日記 小津安二郎. Firumu Atosha. pp. 231, 233. ISBN 978-4845993215.
  18. ^ a b c Shindo, Kaneto (21 July 2004). Shinario Jinsei [A life in scriptwriting]. Iwanami Shinsho (in Japanese). Vol. 902. Iwanami. ISBN 4-00-430902-6.
  19. ^ a b Hasumi 2003, p. 329
  20. ^ Shindo 2004, pp. 31–32
  21. ^ Parkinson, David. "Yasujiro Ozu – The Noriko Trilogy". MovieMail. MovieMail Ltd. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  22. ^ (in Japanese). Nihon eiga kantoku kyōkai. Archived from the original on 26 July 2010. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
  23. ^ Vishnevetsky, Ignatiy (2016). "Yasujirô Ozu's quietly staggering Late Spring returns in a new restoration". Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  24. ^ Rayns, Tony (2010). . Archived from the original on 3 August 2012. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  25. ^ Easterwood, Kurt (2004). "Yasujiro Ozu's gravesite in Kita-Kamakura: How to get there (Part Two)". Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  26. ^ Miyao, Daisuke. "The Scene at the Kyoto Inn: Teaching Ozu Yasujiro's Late Spring" (PDF). Columbia University in the City of New York. Columbia University. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  27. ^ a b Ebert, Roger, "Ozu: The Masterpieces You've Missed", retrieved 8 June 2014.
  28. ^ Projecting History: German Nonfiction Cinema, 1967-2000, Nora M. Alter, 2009
  29. ^ Schilling, Mark (7 December 2013). "Re-examining Yasujiro Ozu on film". Japan Times. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  30. ^ Magill, Frank Northen (1985). Magill's survey of cinema, foreign language films, Volume 6. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Salem Press. p. 2542. ISBN 978-0893562434.
  31. ^ Bordwell, David. "Konban-wa, Ozu-san" (PDF).
  32. ^ Ebert, Roger. "Ozu: The Masterpieces You've Missed". Roger Ebert's Film Journal. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  33. ^ Ozu: His Life and Films; Donald Richie, 1977
  34. ^ Ebert, Roger. "Floating Weeds (1959)". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
  35. ^ a b Desser, David (1997). Ozu's Tokyo Story. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-0521482042.
  36. ^ Anderson, Lindsay (Winter 1957). "Two inches off the ground". Sight & Sound.
  37. ^ Schrader, Paul (1972). Transcendental Style in Film: Ozu, Bresson, Dreyer. ISBN 978-0-306-80335-2.
  38. ^ Bordwell, David (1988). . Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00822-6. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011.
  39. ^ . 2 August 2011. Archived from the original on 18 June 2012. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
  40. ^ "Ozu:Masterpieces you've missed". Roger Ebert. 7 January 2005.
  41. ^ "Silence is golden to Ozu". Roger Ebert. 14 August 1994.
  42. ^ Floating Weeds (1959) review and summary, Roger Ebert, 1997
  43. ^ Elley, Derek. "Tokyo Family". Retrieved 14 April 2015.
  44. ^ Hasumi 1998, p. 229
  45. ^ Sato 1997b, p. 280

Sources Edit

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  • Yasujiro Ozu at IMDb
  • (archived)
  • Digital Ozu 2 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine – notes from an exhibition at Tokyo University.
  • Directions for finding Yasujiro Ozu's grave at Engaku-ji
  • The quiet master at The Guardian
  • Ozu's Angry Women by Shigehiko Hasumi
  • Yasujirō Ozu at the Japanese Movie Database (in Japanese)
  • OZU Yasujiro Story on YouTube

yasujirō, 小津, 安二郎, yasujirō, december, 1903, december, 1963, japanese, filmmaker, began, career, during, silent, films, last, films, were, made, colour, early, 1960s, first, made, number, short, comedies, before, turning, more, serious, themes, 1930s, most, pr. Yasujirō Ozu 小津 安二郎 Ozu Yasujirō 12 December 1903 12 December 1963 was a Japanese filmmaker He began his career during the era of silent films and his last films were made in colour in the early 1960s Ozu first made a number of short comedies before turning to more serious themes in the 1930s The most prominent themes of Ozu s work are family and marriage and especially the relationships between generations His most widely beloved films include Late Spring 1949 Tokyo Story 1953 and An Autumn Afternoon 1962 Yasujirō Ozu小津 安二郎Ozu in 1951Born 1903 12 12 12 December 1903Mannencho Fukagawa City Tokyo JapanDied12 December 1963 1963 12 12 aged 60 Bunkyō City Tokyo JapanResting placeEngaku ji Kamakura JapanOther namesJames MakiOccupation s Film director screenwriterYears active1929 1963MovementShomin gekiJapanese nameHiraganaおづ やすじろうKatakanaオヅ ヤスジロウTranscriptionsRomanizationOzu YasujirōWidely regarded as one of the world s greatest and most influential filmmakers Ozu s work has continued to receive acclaim since his death In the 2012 Sight amp Sound poll Ozu s Tokyo Story was voted the third greatest film of all time by critics world wide In the same poll Tokyo Story was voted the greatest film of all time by 358 directors and film makers world wide 1 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Entering the film business 1 3 War time 1 4 Postwar 2 Legacy and style 3 Tributes and documentaries 4 Filmography 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Ozu was born in the Fukagawa Tokyo the second son of merchant Toranosuke Ozu and his wife Asae 2 His family was a branch of the Ozu Yoemon merchant family from Ise and Toranosuke was the 5th generation manager of the family s fertilizer business in Nihonbashi 3 Asae came from the Nakajō merchant family 2 3 Ozu had five brothers and sisters When he was three he developed meningitis and was in a coma for a couple of days Asae devoted herself to nursing him and Ozu made a recovery 2 He attended Meiji nursery school and primary school 4 In March 1913 at the age of nine he and his siblings were sent by his father to live in his father s home town of Matsusaka in Mie Prefecture where he remained until 1924 4 5 In March 1916 at the age of 12 he entered what is now Ujiyamada High School n 1 He was a boarder at the school and did judo 4 He frequently skipped classes to watch films such as Quo Vadis or The Last Days of Pompeii In 1917 he saw the film Civilization and decided that he wanted to be a film director 6 In 1920 at the age of 17 he was thrown out of the dormitory after being accused of writing a love letter to a good looking boy in a lower class and had to commute to school by train 6 In March 1921 Ozu graduated from the high school He attempted the exam for entrance into what is now Kobe University s economics department n 2 but failed In 1922 he took the exam for a teacher training college n 3 but failed it too On 31 March 1922 he began working as a substitute teacher at a school in the Mie prefecture He is said to have traveled the long journey from the school in the mountains to watch films on the weekend In December 1922 his family with the exception of Ozu and his sister moved back to Tokyo to live with his father In March 1923 when his sister graduated he also returned to live in Tokyo Entering the film business Edit nbsp Yasujiro Ozu in Dragnet Girl 1933With his uncle acting as intermediary Ozu was hired by the Shochiku Film Company as an assistant in the cinematography department on 1 August 1923 against the wishes of his father 6 His family home was destroyed in the earthquake of 1923 but no members of his family were injured On 12 December 1924 Ozu started a year of military service 6 n 4 He finished his military service on 30 November 1925 leaving as a corporal In 1926 he became a third assistant director at Shochiku 7 In 1927 he was involved in a fracas where he punched another employee for jumping a queue at the studio cafeteria and when called to the studio director s office used it as an opportunity to present a film script he had written 7 In September 1927 he was promoted to director in the jidaigeki period film department and directed his first film Sword of Penitence which has since been lost Sword of Penitence was written by Ozu with a screenplay by Kogo Noda who would become his co writer for the rest of his career On September 25 he was called up for service in the military reserves until November which meant that the film had to be partly finished by another director 7 In 1928 Shiro Kido the head of the Shochiku studio decided that the company would concentrate on making short comedy films without star actors Ozu made many of these films The film Body Beautiful released on 1 December 1928 was the first Ozu film to use a low camera position which would become his trademark 7 After a series of the no star pictures in September 1929 Ozu s first film with stars I Graduated But starring Minoru Takada and Kinuyo Tanaka was released In January 1930 he was entrusted with Shochiku s top star Sumiko Kurishima in her new year film An Introduction to Marriage His subsequent films of 1930 impressed Shiro Kido enough to invite Ozu on a trip to a hot spring In his early works Ozu used the pseudonym James Maki n 5 for his screenwriting credit 8 His film Young Miss with an all star cast was the first time he used the pen name James Maki and was also his first film to appear in film magazine Kinema Jumpo s Best Ten at third position 9 In 1932 his I Was Born But a comedy about childhood with serious overtones was received by movie critics as the first notable work of social criticism in Japanese cinema winning Ozu wide acclaim 10 In 1935 Ozu made a short documentary with soundtrack Kagami Jishi in which Kikugoro VI performed a Kabuki dance of the same title This was made by request of the Ministry of Education 11 p 221 Like the rest of Japan s cinema industry Ozu was slow to switch to the production of talkies his first film with a dialogue sound track was The Only Son in 1936 five years after Japan s first talking film Heinosuke Gosho s The Neighbor s Wife and Mine War time Edit On 9 September 1937 at a time when Shochiku was unhappy about Ozu s lack of box office success despite the praise he received from critics the thirty four year old Ozu was conscripted into the Imperial Japanese Army He spent two years in China in the Second Sino Japanese War He arrived in Shanghai on 27 September 1937 as part of an infantry regiment which handled chemical weapons 12 He started as a corporal but was promoted to sergeant on 1 June 1938 12 From January until September 1938 he was stationed in Nanjing where he met Sadao Yamanaka who was stationed nearby In September Yamanaka died of illness 12 In 1939 Ozu was dispatched to Hankou where he fought in the Battle of Nanchang and the Battle of Xiushui River In June he was ordered back to Japan arriving in Kobe in July and his conscription ended on 16 July 1939 12 Some of Ozu s published diaries cover his wartime experiences between December 20 1938 to June 5 1939 13 Another diary from his wartime years 陣中日記 he expressly forbade from publication In the published diaries reference to his group s participation in chemical warfare in violation of the Geneva Protocol though Japan had withdrawn from the League of Nations in 1933 can be found for example in various entries from March 1939 In other entries he describes Chinese soldiers in disparaging terms likening them in one passage to insects 14 Although operating as a military squad leader Ozu retains his directorial perspective once commenting that the initial shock and subsequent agony of a man as he is hacked to death is very much like its depiction in period films 15 Ozu s writings also offers a glimpse into the Japanese military s use of comfort women In a letter sent to friends in Japan on April 11 1938 from Dingyuan County in China s Anhui Province Ozu writes about the comfort station protocol in lightly coded terms 16 In a January 13 1939 diary entry Ozu writes more openly about his group s upcoming turn for use of a comfort station near Yingcheng He mentions that two tickets ointment and prophylatics are provided and that three Korean and 12 Chinese women were being held at the comfort station for their use Comfort station rates and schedules are also given by Ozu 17 In 1939 he wrote the first draft of the script for The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice but shelved it due to extensive changes insisted on by military censors 12 The first film Ozu made on his return was the critically and commercially successful Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family released in 1941 He followed this with There Was a Father Chichi Ariki 1942 which explored the strong bonds of affection between a father and son despite years of separation In 1943 Ozu was again drafted into the army for the purpose of making a propaganda film in Burma However he was sent to Singapore instead to make a documentary Derii e Derii e To Delhi to Delhi about Chandra Bose 18 During his time in Singapore having little inclination to work he spent an entire year reading playing tennis and watching American films provided by the Army information corps He was particularly impressed with Orson Welles s Citizen Kane 19 He occupied a fifth floor room facing the sea in the Cathay Building where he entertained guests drew pictures and collected rugs At the end of the Second World War in August 1945 Ozu destroyed the script and all footage of the film 18 He was detained as a civilian and worked in a rubber plantation Of his film team of 32 people there was only space for 28 on the first repatriation boat to Japan Ozu won a lottery giving him a place but gave it to someone else who was anxious to return 18 19 Postwar Edit Ozu returned to Japan in February 1946 and moved back in with his mother who had been staying with his sister in Noda in Chiba prefecture He reported for work at the Ofuna studios on 18 February 1946 His first film released after the war was Record of a Tenement Gentleman in 1947 Around this time the Chigasakikan n 6 Ryokan became Ozu s favoured location for scriptwriting nbsp Ozu s grave at Engaku ji Kamakura in 2018Tokyo Story was the last script that Ozu wrote at Chigasakikan In later years Ozu and Noda used a small house in the mountains at Tateshina in Nagano Prefecture called Unkosō n 7 to write scripts with Ozu staying in a nearby house called Mugeisō n 8 20 Ozu s films from the late 1940s onward were favourably received and the entries in the so called Noriko trilogy starring Setsuko Hara of Late Spring 1949 Early Summer 1951 and Tokyo Story 1953 are among his most acclaimed works with Tokyo Story widely considered his masterpiece 21 Late Spring the first of these films was the beginning of Ozu s commercial success and the development of his cinematography and storytelling style These three films were followed by his first colour film Equinox Flower in 1958 Floating Weeds in 1959 and Late Autumn in 1960 In addition to Noda other regular collaborators included cinematographer Yuharu Atsuta along with the actors Chishu Ryu Setsuko Hara and Haruko Sugimura His work was only rarely shown overseas before the 1960s Ozu s last film was An Autumn Afternoon which was released in 1962 He served as president of the Directors Guild of Japan from 1955 to his death in 1963 22 Ozu was known for his drinking He and Noda measured the progression of their scripts by how many bottles of sake they had drunk Ozu never married 23 24 He lived with his mother until she died in 1961 citation needed A heavy smoker Ozu died of throat cancer in 1963 on his sixtieth birthday The grave he shares with his mother at Engaku ji in Kamakura bears no name just the character mu nothingness 25 Legacy and style Edit nbsp Setsuko Hara left and Yasujirō Ozu far right on location of Tokyo Story 1953 Ozu is probably as well known for the technical style and innovation of his films as for the narrative content The style of his films is most striking in his later films a style he had not fully developed until his post war sound films 26 He did not conform to Hollywood conventions 27 Rather than using the typical over the shoulder shots in his dialogue scenes by most directors the camera gazes on the actors directly which has the effect of placing the viewer in the middle of the scene 27 Throughout his career Ozu used a 50mm lens which is usually considered to be the lens closest to human vision 28 Ozu did not use typical transitions between scenes either In between scenes he would show shots of certain static objects as transitions or use direct cuts rather than fades or dissolves Most often the static objects would be buildings where the next indoor scene would take place It was during these transitions that he would use music which might begin at the end of one scene progress through the static transition and fade into the new scene He rarely used non diegetic music in any scenes other than in the transitions 29 Ozu moved the camera less and less as his career progressed and ceased using tracking shots altogether in his colour films 30 However David Bordwell argues that Ozu is one of the few directors to create a systematic alternative to Hollywood continuity cinema but he does so by changing only a few premises 31 Ozu invented the tatami shot in which the camera is placed at a low height supposedly at the eye level of a person kneeling on a tatami mat 32 Actually Ozu s camera is often even lower than that only one or two feet off the ground which necessitated the use of special tripods and raised sets He used this low height even when there were no sitting scenes such as when his characters walked in hallways When Ozu made his move to color he chose to shoot under the German color process Agfacolor as he felt that it captured reds much better than any other color process 33 nbsp Ozu during a film shootOzu eschewed the traditional rules of movie storytelling most notably eyelines In his review of Floating Weeds film critic Roger Ebert recounts Ozu once had a young assistant who suggested that perhaps he should shoot conversations so that it seemed to the audience that the characters were looking at one another Ozu agreed to a test They shot a scene both ways and compared them You see Ozu said No difference 34 Ozu was also an innovator in Japanese narrative structure through his use of ellipses or the decision not to depict major events in the story 35 In An Autumn Afternoon 1962 for example a wedding is merely mentioned in one scene and the next sequence references this wedding which has already occurred the wedding itself is never shown This is typical of Ozu s films which eschew melodrama by eliding moments that would often be used in Hollywood in attempts to stir an excessive emotional reaction from audiences 35 Ozu became recognized internationally when his films were shown abroad 36 Influential monographs by Donald Richie 11 Paul Schrader 37 and David Bordwell 38 have ensured a wide appreciation of Ozu s style aesthetics and themes by the Anglophonic audience Tributes and documentaries EditFive also known as Five Dedicated to Ozu is an Iranian documentary film directed by Abbas Kiarostami The film consists of five long takes set by the ocean Five sequences 1 A piece of driftwood on the seashore carried about by the waves 2 People walking on the seashore The oldest ones stop by look at the sea then go away 3 Blurry shapes on a winter beach A herd of dogs A love story 4 A group of loud ducks cross the image in one direction then the other 5 A pond at night Frogs improvising a concert A storm then the sunrise In 2003 the centenary of Ozu s birth was commemorated at various film festivals around the world Shochiku produced the film Cafe Lumiere 珈琲時光 directed by Taiwanese film maker Hou Hsiao hsien as homage to Ozu with direct reference to the late master s Tokyo Story 1953 to premiere on Ozu s birthday Ozu was voted the tenth greatest director of all time in the 2002 British Film Institute s Sight amp Sound poll of critics top 10 directors 39 Ozu s Tokyo Story has appeared several times in the Sight amp Sound poll of best films selected by critics and directors In 2012 it topped the poll of film directors choices of greatest film of all time Ozu was one of film critic Roger Ebert s favourite filmmakers who described him as the most humanistic director of all time 40 41 42 In 2013 director Yoji Yamada of the Otoko wa Tsurai yo film series remade Tokyo Story in a modern setting as Tokyo Family 43 In the Wim Wenders documentary film Tokyo Ga the director travels to Japan to explore the world of Ozu interviewing both Chishu Ryu and Yuharu Atsuta Filmography EditFilmography of Yasujirō Ozu 44 45 Year Japanese title Rōmaji English title NotesSilent films1927 懺悔の刃 Zange no yaiba Sword of Penitence Lost1928 若人の夢 Wakōdo no yume Dreams of Youth Lost女房紛失 Nyōbō funshitsu Wife Lost Lostカボチャ Kabocha Pumpkin Lost引越し夫婦 Hikkoshi fufu A Couple on the Move Lost肉体美 Nikutaibi Body Beautiful Lost1929 宝の山 Takara no yama Treasure Mountain Lost学生ロマンス 若き日 Gakusei romansu wakaki hi Student Romance Days of Youth Ozu s earliest surviving film和製喧嘩友達 Wasei kenka tomodachi Fighting Friends Japanese Style 14 minutes survives大学は出たけれど Daigaku wa detakeredo I Graduated But 10 minutes survives会社員生活 Kaishain seikatsu The Life of an Office Worker Lost突貫小僧 Tokkan kozō A Straightforward Boy Short film1930 結婚学入門 Kekkongaku nyumon An Introduction to Marriage Lost朗かに歩め Hogaraka ni ayume Walk Cheerfully落第はしたけれど Rakudai wa shitakeredo I Flunked But その夜の妻 Sono yo no tsuma That Night s Wifeエロ神の怨霊 Erogami no onryō The Revengeful Spirit of Eros Lost足に触った幸運 Ashi ni sawatta kōun The Luck Which Touched the Leg Lostお嬢さん Ojōsan Young Miss Lost1931 淑女と髯 Shukujo to hige The Lady and the Beard美人哀愁 Bijin aishu Beauty s Sorrows Lost東京の合唱 Tōkyō no kōrasu Tokyo Chorus1932 春は御婦人から Haru wa gofujin kara Spring Comes from the Ladies Lost大人の見る繪本 生れてはみたけれど Umarete wa mita keredo I Was Born But 靑春の夢いまいづこ Seishun no yume ima izuko Where Now Are the Dreams of Youth また逢ふ日まで Mata au hi made Until the Day We Meet Again Lost1933 東京の女 Tōkyō no onna Woman of Tokyo非常線の女 Hijōsen no onna Dragnet Girl出来ごころ Dekigokoro Passing Fancy1934 母を恋はずや Haha o kowazuya A Mother Should be Loved浮草物語 Ukigusa monogatari A Story of Floating Weeds1935 箱入娘 Hakoiri musume An Innocent Maid Lost東京の宿 Tōkyō no yado An Inn in Tokyo1936 大学よいとこ Daigaku yoitoko College Is a Nice Place LostSound black and white films1936 菊五郎の鏡獅子 Kagami jishi Lion in the Mirror Short documentary一人息子 Hitori musuko The Only Son1937 淑女は何を忘れたか Shukujo wa nani o wasureta ka What Did the Lady Forget 1941 戸田家の兄妹 Todake no kyōdai Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family1942 父ありき Chichi ariki There Was a Father1947 長屋紳士録 Nagaya Shinshiroku Record of a Tenement Gentleman1948 風の中の牝鶏 Kaze no naka no mendori A Hen in the Wind1949 晩春 Banshun Late Spring Ozu s first film with Setsuko Hara1950 宗方姉妹 Munekata Kyōdai The Munekata Sisters1951 麥秋 Bakushu Early Summer1952 お茶漬の味 Ochazuke no aji The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice Adapted from censored 1939 script1953 東京物語 Tōkyō monogatari Tokyo Story1956 早春 Sōshun Early Spring1957 東京暮色 Tōkyō boshoku Tokyo TwilightColour films1958 彼岸花 Higanbana Equinox Flower Ozu s first film in colour1959 お早よう Ohayō Good Morning Remake of I Was Born But 浮草 Ukigusa Floating Weeds Remake of A Story of Floating Weeds1960 秋日和 Akibiyori Late Autumn1961 小早川家の秋 Kohayagawa ke no aki The End of Summer Ozu s last film with Setsuko Hara1962 秋刀魚の味 Sanma no aji An Autumn Afternoon Ozu s final workNotes Edit 宇治山田高等学校 神戸高商 Kobe Kosho 三重県立師範学校 Mie ken ritsu shihan gakko Ozu s military service was of a special type called ichinen shiganhei 一年志願兵 where the usual two year term of conscription was shortened to one year on condition that the conscriptee paid for himself ヂェームス 槇 茅ケ崎館 雲呼荘 無芸荘References Edit Directors 10 Greatest Films of All Time Sight amp Sound British Film Institute 4 December 2014 a b c Chiba Nobuo 千葉伸夫 2003 Ozu Yasujirō to 20 seiki Shohan ed Kokusho Kankōkai pp 16 20 ISBN 4 336 04607 7 OCLC 54757823 a b Matsuura Kanji 2019 Ozu Yasujirō taizen Ozu Miyamoto Akiko pp 154 158 ISBN 978 4 02 251599 5 OCLC 1101101857 a b c Hasumi 2003 p 319 Weston Mark 1999 Giants of Japan Kodansha International p 303 ISBN 9781568362861 a b c d Hasumi 2003 p 320 a b c d Hasumi 2003 p 321 Shindo 2004 p 11 Hasumi 2003 p 322 Scott A O 24 June 2010 Revenge on the Bully Silently in Japan New York Times New York Times Company Retrieved 19 May 2015 a b Richie Donald July 1977 Ozu University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 03277 4 a b c d e Hasumi 2003 p 327 Tanaka Masumi 1993 全日記 小津安二郎 Firumu Atosha ISBN 978 4845993215 Tanaka Masumi 2005 小津安二郎と戦争 Misuzu Shobo ISBN 978 4622071488 Sato Tadao 1978 小津安二郎の芸術 上 Asahi Shimbun ISBN 978 4022592262 Tanaka Masumi 2005 小津安二郎と戦争 Misuzu Shobo pp 76 77 ISBN 978 4622071488 Tanaka Masumi 1993 全日記 小津安二郎 Firumu Atosha pp 231 233 ISBN 978 4845993215 a b c Shindo Kaneto 21 July 2004 Shinario Jinsei A life in scriptwriting Iwanami Shinsho in Japanese Vol 902 Iwanami ISBN 4 00 430902 6 a b Hasumi 2003 p 329 Shindo 2004 pp 31 32 Parkinson David Yasujiro Ozu The Noriko Trilogy MovieMail MovieMail Ltd Retrieved 19 May 2015 Nihon eiga kantoku kyōkai nenpyō in Japanese Nihon eiga kantoku kyōkai Archived from the original on 26 July 2010 Retrieved 17 August 2010 Vishnevetsky Ignatiy 2016 Yasujiro Ozu s quietly staggering Late Spring returns in a new restoration Retrieved 19 February 2019 Rayns Tony 2010 Ozu Yasujiro tofu maker Archived from the original on 3 August 2012 Retrieved 19 February 2019 Easterwood Kurt 2004 Yasujiro Ozu s gravesite in Kita Kamakura How to get there Part Two Retrieved 20 August 2009 Miyao Daisuke The Scene at the Kyoto Inn Teaching Ozu Yasujiro s Late Spring PDF Columbia University in the City of New York Columbia University Retrieved 19 May 2015 a b Ebert Roger Ozu The Masterpieces You ve Missed retrieved 8 June 2014 Projecting History German Nonfiction Cinema 1967 2000 Nora M Alter 2009 Schilling Mark 7 December 2013 Re examining Yasujiro Ozu on film Japan Times Retrieved 19 May 2015 Magill Frank Northen 1985 Magill s survey of cinema foreign language films Volume 6 Englewood Cliffs N J Salem Press p 2542 ISBN 978 0893562434 Bordwell David Konban wa Ozu san PDF Ebert Roger Ozu The Masterpieces You ve Missed Roger Ebert s Film Journal Retrieved 19 May 2015 Ozu His Life and Films Donald Richie 1977 Ebert Roger Floating Weeds 1959 Chicago Sun Times Retrieved 22 August 2012 a b Desser David 1997 Ozu s Tokyo Story Cambridge amp New York Cambridge University Press pp 6 7 ISBN 978 0521482042 Anderson Lindsay Winter 1957 Two inches off the ground Sight amp Sound Schrader Paul 1972 Transcendental Style in Film Ozu Bresson Dreyer ISBN 978 0 306 80335 2 Bordwell David 1988 Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00822 6 Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 BFI Sight amp Sound Top Ten Poll 2002 The Critics Top Ten Directors 2 August 2011 Archived from the original on 18 June 2012 Retrieved 22 August 2012 Ozu Masterpieces you ve missed Roger Ebert 7 January 2005 Silence is golden to Ozu Roger Ebert 14 August 1994 Floating Weeds 1959 review and summary Roger Ebert 1997 Elley Derek Tokyo Family Retrieved 14 April 2015 Hasumi 1998 p 229 Sato 1997b p 280Sources EditBock Audie 1978 Yasujiro Ozu Japanese Film Directors Kodansha pp 69 98 ISBN 0 87011 304 6 Hasumi Shiguehiko 1998 Yasujiro Ozu translated by Hasumi Shiguehiko Nakamura Ryoji Rene de Ceccatty Paris Cahiers du cinema ISBN 978 2 86642 191 5 Hasumi Shiguehiko 2003 Kantoku Ozu Yasujiro Director Yasujiro Ozu in Japanese Enlarged and definitive ed Chikuma Shobo ISBN 4 480 87341 4 Inoue Kazuo 2003 Ozu Yasujirō Zenshu Collected Works of Ozu Yasujiro two volume boxed set in Japanese Tokyo Shinshokan ISBN 4403150012 Ozu Yasujiro 2016 Scritti sul cinema edited by Franco Picollo and Hiromi Yagi in Italian Rome Donzelli ISBN 9788868434816 Rothman William 2006 Jeffrey Crouse ed Notes on Ozu s Cinematic Style Film International Stanley Cavell special issue ed 4 22 33 42 doi 10 1386 fiin 4 4 33 Sato Tadao 1997b Le Cinema japonais Tome II translated by Karine Chesneau Rose Marie Makino Fayolle Tanaka Chiharu Paris Centre Georges Pompidou ISBN 978 2 85850 930 0 Shindo Kaneto 21 July 2004 Shinario Jinsei A life in scriptwriting Iwanami Shinsho in Japanese Vol 902 Iwanami ISBN 4 00 430902 6 Torres Hortelano Lorenzo J Primavera tardia de Yasujiro Ozu cine clasico y poetica zen Caja Espana Leon Obra Social y Cultural ISBN 978 84 95917 24 9 Yoshida Kiju 1998 Ozu s Anti Cinema Center for Japanese Studies University of Michigan ISBN 978 1 929280 27 8 Further reading EditAndreas Becker Action Cut Screenplay Analysis of Yasujirō Ozu s Equinox Flower Higanbana Remarks on the Screenplay and the Aesthetics of Montage in a Transcultural Comparison in Marcos P Centeno Martin and Norimasa Morita 2020 Japan beyond Its Borders Transnational Approaches to Film and Media Chiba Seibunsha ISBN 4 901404 32 6 147 157 Bordwell David 1988 Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00822 6 Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 1 March 2014 Desser David 13 April 1997 Ozu s Tokyo Story Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48435 0 Gillett John Wilson David 1976 Yasujiro Ozu A Critical Anthology British Film Institute ISBN 9780851700489 Ozu Yasujirō Noda Kōgo 2003 Tokyo Story The Ozu Noda Screenplay Stone Bridge Press ISBN 978 1 880656 80 8 Ozu Yasujirō 2006 Ozu Yasujirō s Two Post war Films Godage ISBN 978 955 20 8936 7 Richie Donald 1 January 1977 Ozu University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 03277 4 Yoshida Yoshishige 2003 Ozu s Anti Cinema Center for Japanese Studies University of Michigan ISBN 9781929280261 OCLC 53013473 External links Edit nbsp Biography portalYasujiro Ozu at IMDb OzuYasujirō com archived Digital Ozu Archived 2 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine notes from an exhibition at Tokyo University Directions for finding Yasujiro Ozu s grave at Engaku ji The quiet master at The Guardian Ozu s Angry Women by Shigehiko Hasumi Yasujirō Ozu at the Japanese Movie Database in Japanese OZU Yasujiro Story on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yasujirō Ozu amp oldid 1175723202, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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