Film Review
Towards the end of his long and productive career as a filmmaker,
Yasujirô Ozu became increasingly interested in capturing the
essence of life in his films, digging deeper into the human psyche
without resorting to excessive emotionality. His final three
films are simply constructed
shomin-geki
or 'home dramas', of the kind he had been routinely making since the
1930s, in which he reworks his favourite themes in an unstinting
attempt to refine his art and get nearer to the underlying truths of
human experience. To a casual observer, most of Ozu's films are
remarkably alike, mostly understated dramas involving family conflict,
but on closer examination they are seen to be surprisingly varied,
offering subtle yet profound variations on a similar theme.
Late Autumn is a near-remake
of Ozu's previous
Late Spring (1949). Both
films are
shomin-geki that
revolve around a well-intended but ineptly executed ruse to marry off a
daughter who is stubbornly attached to a widowed parent - her father in
the earlier film, her mother in the later one. Apart from the
obvious narrative similarities, these two films are quite different in
their tone and underlying themes, and a comparison between them reveals
not only a substantial refinement in Ozu's technique but also a deeper
understanding of human nature.
Of the two films,
Late Spring
is the one that is better known and generally better regarded, the
first work of Ozu's 'mature period'. It is darker in tone than
Late Autumn and, in narrative and
thematic terms, somewhat simpler. In common with Ozu's last few
films,
Late Autumn isn't
quite so relentlessly melancholic - it is warmer, veering towards
comedy in parts, but still has its moments of painful introspection,
including a devastatingly poignant ending.
Late Autumn is more ironic than
comedic, wryly observing that life would be so such simpler were it not
for interfering so-and-sos who insist on complicating everything.
Good intentions give the Devil ample scope to work his mischief, as the
well-meaning Mamiya and his buddies discover when they resort to a spot
of harmless matchmaking.
Following the example of
Equinox
Flower (1958), Ozu wrote the screenplay in collaboration with
his longterm writing partner Kôgo Noda and the popular author Ton
Satomi, developing a script and novel in parallel. Borrowing
ideas from previous films, Ozu reworks many familiar themes around
self-sacrifice, conflict between tradition and modernity, female
empowerment and the decline of the family. As in Ozu's previous
three colour film,
Late Autumn's
use of colour serves as a subtle leitmotif, intended to reflect its
underlying subject matter, this time autumnal hues (dominated by soft
browns and greens) suggesting moral decay and the fading of old
ideals. Autumn, the most melancholic of the seasons, is a time of
transition and quiet regret, and these feelings are powerfully conveyed
by Ozu's film.
One striking characteristic of Ozu's late films is how women come to
the fore and play an increasingly important role in the narrative -
something that reflected the growing importance of women in Japanese
society. In
Late Autumn,
the focus is primarily on the female protagonists, each of whom is
played by an actress of immense talent and beauty. Setsuko Hara,
one of Japan's leading film stars, had played the self-sacrificing
daughter in
Late Spring
(amongst several other notable Ozu roles), and here she returns in the
reverse role, as the mother, with rising star Yôko Tsukasa
playing her devoted daughter. At the time, Hara and Tsukasa were
under contract to Shôchiku's rival company Toho, and in exchange
for 'borrowing' these two stars for
Late
Autumn, Ozu agreed to make one film for Toho with the same
actresses - that was to be
The End
of Summer (1961), his penultimate film.
The other notable female presence is Mariko Okada, the daughter of the
silent film star Tokihiko Okada, who appeared in four of Ozu's films
before his premature death in 1934. Unlike her father, Mariko
Okada enjoyed a long and distinguished career; she had previously
featured in Mikio Naruse's
Floating
Clouds (1955) and
Nagareru
(1956) and would appear in Ozu's final film,
An Autumn Afternoon (1962).
The male members of the cast include longstanding Ozu regular
Chishû Ryû (in a small role) and Shin Saburi, who played
the lead male role in several Ozu films, including
Brothers and Sisters of the Toda Family
(1941),
Flavour of Green Tea Over
Rice (1952) and
Equinox Flower.
Throughout much of his career, Ozu was concerned with the conflict
between tradition and modern values - as well he might, considering how
rapidly and profoundly his country changed in the course of his
lifetime. Modernity brings the promise of increased comfort and
prosperity, greater personal freedom and the prospect of a happier,
longer life. But, in the rush to embrace all things modern, isn't
there a danger that the old values, the things that give life meaning,
will be trodden underfoot? In
Late Autumn, this dichotomy is
represented by the contrasting attitudes of the three central
female protagonists. Ayako and her mother Akiko are governed by
traditional Japanese customs - the widow devotes herself to the memory
of her dead husband, the daughter sacrifices herself to care for her
mother. Akiko is only seen in traditional Japanese garb, the
kimono; Ayako wears western clothes that are modest, reflecting her
unassuming nature. If these two women represent continuity and
respect for tradition, then Yukiko, Ayako's feisty best friend, denotes
change - fierce and confident change.
Yukiko is every inch the 'modern miss' - lively, self-assertive,
truculent, more western than Japanese in her outlook and
behaviour. In more than one scene, Yukiko manages to turn the
table on the trio of middle-aged matchmakers and she emerges as the
only sensible character in the narrative. Ozu's deeper sympathies
may have been with Ayako and her mother, but you can't help feeling
that Yukiko is the woman he most admires. As in
Equinox Flower, it is the male
protagonists who end up as objects of ridicule - ineffectual, vain,
wallowing in nostalgia and too easily outsmarted by their female
entourage. It is ironic that at a time when Ozu was
beginning to be written off as out-of-touch and irrelevant in his own
country (he had yet to be 'discovered' by the West), his films were
among some of the most accurate and perceptive in charting the
developments in Japanese society in the late 1950s, early 60s.
Yasujirô Ozu was as much a chronicler of social change as a great
filmmaker.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Yasujirô Ozu film:
An Autumn Afternoon (1962)