Film Review
After Passing Fancy (1933), a
film whose themes include a son's unthinking rejection of his father,
Yasujirô Ozu was bound to make a similar film in which a mother
was the object of filial abandonment. Ozu had barely completed
work on the script for
A Mother
Should Be Loved
when his father died, and his grief can be felt throughout the film,
which rates as possibly his most melodramatic and lachrymose.
This is a typical haha mono or 'mother film', a genre that was
extremely popular in Japan from the 1920s to the 1950s, and to which
Ozu contributed one of his best films,
The Only Son (1936), although
throughout his career he was more preoccupied with the relationship
between fathers and sons.
A Mother Should Be Loved has
never been rated highly by Ozu's enthusiasts, and the director was
himself pretty dismissive of it, referring to it as 'dull'. The
cloying title was foisted on him by his bosses - he preferred the more
abstract
Tokyo Twilight,
which he would later use for one of his best sound films. Ozu
particularly disliked the contrivance of the two brothers having
different mothers, as he felt this weakened the overarching theme of
the film, which was the slow but inevitable decline of a typical middle
class family after the death of its patriarch. Ozu would return
to this same subject many times in the course of his subsequent career,
perhaps most successfully in
The Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family
(1941), the film that established him as commercially successful
filmmaker in Japan.
There is another, more obvious, reason why
A Mother Should Be Loved has tended
to be overlooked and judged harshly by its critics. The first and
last of its nine reels have been lost, and so the film in its present
state lacks both a beginning and an ending. The loss of the first
reel hardly matters as its content can effectively be summarised in a
few sentences and adds little to the ensuing drama. The fact that
the spectator is denied an ending is more problematic, and it is hard
to gauge how powerful the plot resolution must have been from a mere
précis of the script.
As was ever the case in Ozu's early films, it is not too hard to spot
the western influences. The old cleaning woman who shows up in
the last surviving reel and serves as a convenient
deus ex machina is borrowed from
Harry F. Millarde's
Over the Hill to
the Poorhouse (1920), an American melodrama in which a mother
ends up as an impoverished cleaner after being rejected by her
children. A poster for Julien Duvivier's
Poil de carotte (1932) is
glimpsed in one scene, linking the unfortunate neglected child of that
film with the main character of Ozu's film, Sadao. The irony, of
course, is that Sadao has been spoiled and cosseted by his stepmother
and feels neglected only because he cannot forgive her from keeping the
circumstances of his birth from him. Another poster, of Lewis
Milestone's
Rain (1932), has
a portrait of Joan Crawford dominating a brothel set, appropriately
since in that film Crawford plays a prostitute struggling to redeem
herself.
From what remains of it, it is clear that
A Mother Should Be Loved is a
lesser Ozu work, too melodramatic and contrived to have anything like
the emotional resonance of the director's later 'home dramas' in which
the striving for authenticity was paramount. Yet, despite its
obvious shortcomings, this is a stylish and compelling piece in which
Ozu shows his customary visual flair as he continues to develop his
unique style. As the family's personal circumstances deteriorate,
putting an increased strain on the relationship between the two
brothers and their mother, the mood of the film gradually darkens,
culminating in one of the most bitter scenes in any Ozu film, with a
son refusing to have anything more to do with the woman who selflessly
raised him since he was a small boy. How frustrating that we are
denied the reconciliation scene, but given that too much of Ozu's early
work has been lost forever (along with so many masterpieces of
early Japanese cinema), we should be grateful that most of Ozu's films
survive intact, allowing us witness the gradual development of a true
master of the seventh art. Many other film directors were far
less fortunate.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Yasujirô Ozu film:
A Story of Floating Weeds (1934)
Film Synopsis
Whilst they are at school, two brothers - Sadao and Kosaku - learn that
their father has just died from a heart attack. After the
funeral, Okazuki, their uncle, visits their mother, Chieko, and asks
her to carry on raising Sadao as if he were her own son. Some
years later, when the brothers have entered college, Sadao sees his
birth certificate and discovers that Chieko is not his mother. He
is in fact the son of his father's first wife, who died before he can
remember. Unable to forgive Chieko for deceiving him, Sadao
soon begins to despise her. He notices that she treats him
more favourably than her own son and he finally becomes so resentful
that he storms out of his home and moves into a brothel. Kosaku
and his mother appeal to Sadao to return home, but he stubbornly
refuses, until an old cleaning woman has a few quiet words with him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.