Film Review
Yasujirô Ozu had long wanted to remake his silent film
A Story of Floating Weeds
(1934) but it wasn't until 1959 that he was able to fulfil this
ambition. The year before, his attempt to mount a remake at
Shochiku, the company for which he made virtually all of his films, had
been thwarted by an unusually mild spell of winter weather. It
was important for Ozu that the film, retitled
The Ham Actor, should have a wintry
setting, so he postponed the project to make
Equinox Flower (1958), his
first colour film. It so happened that Masaichi Nagata, the
president of rival company Daiei, was keen to work with Ozu, who was by
now recognised as one of Japan's leading filmmakers. Despite his
loyalty to Shochiku, Ozu leapt at the chance to make a film with Daiei,
a more prestigious company, and that film was his long awaited remake
of
A Story of Floating Weeds.
Although Ozu often reused ideas from earlier films,
Floating Weeds is the only bona
fide remake he attempted. The plot may be identical to that of
his Depression Era masterpiece,
but its tone is very different, the bleakness of the earlier film
replaced by a warmer, gentler mood of contained melancholia and wistful
longing. There are some changes in the narrative and
characterisation,
but these are subtle and reflect Ozu's increasing preoccupation with
the transience of things. "Change is the only constant", one character
remarks, and this is the phrase that most succinctly sums up Ozu's late
work. The heartrending tragedy that lies at the heart of
Floating Weeds
is not a father's loss of his son, but the realisation that nothing
lasts for ever. The disbanding of Komajuro's happy troupe of
kabuki players mirrors the family break-ups that we witness in so many of
Ozu's films. Change is inevitable, and seldom is it without pain.
Floating Weeds presents
something of a problem for many of Ozu's most committed enthusiasts, in
spite of the fact that it is widely acknowledged as one of the
director's finest works. The film cannot be faulted on its
design, nor on the quality of its screenwriting and acting
(Daiei supplied Ozu with a first rate class that included top actors
Ganjirô Nakamura and Machiko Kyô). Ozu's attention to
detail is as meticulous as ever, every shot composed with the utmost
skill and precision. The opening shot of an empty wine bottle
positioned in the frame next to an identically shaped lighthouse is
pure genius. (When writing his scripts, Ozu would measure
his progress by the number of bottles of sake he managed to get through.)
Instead of employing tracking shots, Ozu
shows how a sequence of static shots can be used to achieve a similar dynamism,
so that you hardly notice the camera never moves (except in one rare shot).
As impressive as the film is, however, Ozu's distinctive
signature feels somewhat smothered by the production values. Amidst the gloss and the polish
something seems to be missing, that indefinable quality that resonates
through almost all of the films that Ozu made for Shochiku. It
would be going too far to describe
Floating
Weeds as a soulless beauty, for it is unquestionably one of the
great masterpieces of post-war Japanese cinema, but Ozu, the master of
understatement and quiet recording angel of banal incident, feels
curiously absent in this, his most lavish production.
Working for a rival studio, Ozu could hardly available himself of the
crew he had nurtured and grown accustomed to at Shochiku. He had
a new pool of expertise to make use of, and this included the great
Kazuo Miyagawa, Daiei's most senior cinematographer. Over the
past decade, Miyagawa had distinguished himself with his work on a
series of prestigious period films (
jidai-geki),
including Akira Kurosawa's
Rashômon (1950) and all
of Kenji Mizoguchi's late films, notably
Ugetsu monogatari (1953).
Whereas Yûharu Atsuta, Ozu's loyal cinematographer at Shochiku,
had reservations about moving from black-and-white to colour, Miyagawa
took to the new medium like a duck to water, and his contribution to
Floating Weeds represents the
summit of his achievements. Together, Ozu and Miyagawa created
one of the most beautiful films in history, the easiest entry point for
any westerner interested in exploring the cinema of the East.
Ozu claims he learned a great deal from Miyagawa during the making of
this film. In his two previous films,
Equinox Flower (1958) and
Good Morning (1959), Ozu's use
of colour is cautious and experimental rather than confident and
masterly. Ozu made the transition to colour with great reluctance
and was adamant that he would never make a widescreen film. The
making of
Floating Weeds was
a profoundly revelatory experience for Ozu. Under Miyagawa's
tutelage, he grew to appreciate how colour could be used to extend and
enhance his own aesthetic, to achieve an even richer level of cinematic
artistry. It is possible that, had Ozu lived just a few years
longer, he would not only have embraced widescreen, he would also have
brought a new splendour and graphic potency to cinema, of the kind we
can only guess at. Alas, Ozu was fated to make only three more
films after this, and he died before his true potential could be
realised - not that this prevents him from being
regarded as the greatest filmmaker who ever lived.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Yasujirô Ozu film:
Good Morning (1959)
Film Synopsis
One hot summer, a travelling kabuki theatre company arrives at a
provincial seaside town. Whilst the rest of the troupe are busy
promoting their show to the townsfolk, its lead actor Komajuro visits
his former mistress, Oyoshi, the owner of a small restaurant.
Many years ago, Oyoshi bore Komajuro an illegitimate son, Kiyoshi, and
the actor has since made several return visits, pretending to be the
boy's uncle. Kiyoshi now works as a post office clerk but he
plans to go to university. When Sumiko, Komajuro's present
mistress and the lead actress in his company, hears that her master has
been mysteriously taking time out she becomes suspicious and follows
him to Oyoshi's home. After a violent argument with Komajuro,
Sumiko takes her revenge by bribing a young actress, Kayo, to seduce
Kiyoshi. The plan backfires when the two young people fall in
love and plan to elope together. For Komajuro this is the final
straw. With his latest show struggling to attract an audience,
the old actor has no option but to disband his troupe.
Before he leaves town, he pays one last visit to Oyoshi and tells
Kiyoshi the truth about their relationship...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.