| Setsuko Hara, Chishu Ryu , Chikage
Awashima, Kuniko Miyake, Ichiro Sugai, Haruko Sugimura .
Like any of Yasujiro Ozu's best-known films, Early Summer is a
marvel of cinematic simplicity, revealing layers of depth through
multiple viewings. It may seem at first that Ozu's family tale is
too simple, but looks are deceiving, and closer study reveals an
intensely structured, highly formalized example of Ozu's transcendental
realism, focusing on the dilemma of 28-year-old Noriko (played by
the immensely popular Setsuko Hara), whose late-breaking decision
to marry sends unexpected shock waves through three generations
of her close-knit family. While providing a vivid portrait of liberated
womanhood in post-war Japan, this lighthearted yet quietly devastating
drama also serves as a gentle study of tradition vs. modernity,
and a clash between conformity and independence. It's also a triumph
of DVD-as-film-school: As he did for Criterion's release of A Story
of Floating Weeds, the distinguished scholar Donald Richie provides
an eloquent full-length commentary as valuable as the film itself,
thoroughly exploring the purpose of Ozu's low-angle style, the influence
of Ernst Lubitsch, the importance of Setsuko as a role model for
Japanese girls, stylistic comparison to Jane Austen's fiction, and
a variety of other relevant topics. "Ozu's Films from Behind
the Scenes" gathers three of Ozu's longtime collaborators for
affectionate reminiscence, and mini-essays by Ozu expert David Bordwell
and long-time Ozu admirer Jim Jarmusch lend further appreciation
from critical and personal perspectives. This is Criterion's fifth
Ozu release on DVD, and like the others, it's highly recommended. |