Ganjiro Nakamura, Haruko Sugimura
Hiroshi Kawaguchi, Machiko Kyo, Mantaro Ushio
Haruo Tanaka, Ayako Wakao, Koji Mitsui
Mutsuko Sakura, Chishu Ryu
Like the majority of director Yasujiro Ozu's work, Floating Weeds
is concerned with family relationships and interactions between
different generations. It also shares the director's amazingly serene
yet appealing visual style, created through the use of the simplest
means possible: no tracking shots and no use of dissolves or fades,
just long, steady shots, often in a wide frame, interrupted only
by judicious editing, with occasional symbolic or atmospheric "pillow
shots," which offer moments of contemplative pause. The effect
is hypnotic and enthralling and used to particularly good effect
in Weeds. The script is also typically Ozu, dealing with a subject
that could easily fall into heavy melodrama or even soap opera,
but which for the most part skillfully avoids this through the use
of implication and nuance rather than direct statement; it is only
in the second half that the schematics of the story come into play
a bit too strongly. The actors are uniformly excellent, creating
a genuine ensemble piece (entirely appropriate for a film dealing
with a troupe of actors) and providing many memorable moments, such
as the touching final segment in which Machiko Kyo deftly signaling
her love and forgiveness of Ganjiro Nakamura merely by the manner
in which she pours a glass of wine for him. Weeds is a film of quiet
beauty, a gem that discriminating viewers will treasure. |