| Haruko Sugimura, Chishu Ryu, Yumeji
Tsukioka, Jun Usami , Setsuko Hara, Kuniko Miyake, Masao Mishima .
Elegantly shot and quietly powerful, Late Spring is considered
one of Yasujiro Ozu's finest films, along with Tokyo
Story (1953) and Early Summer (1951).
Like those films, Spring stars beautiful, enigmatic Setsuko Hara
as Noriko, a woman reluctant to abandon her widowed father for marriage.
And like most Ozu films, Spring subtly details the clash between
the values of traditional Japan and those of contemporary society.
Either Noriko leaves her father and enters the confining yet socially
sanctioned world of marriage or she stays with him and enters the
alienated labor pool like her thoroughly modernized friend Aya.
Yet the film could just as easily be read as a wistful elegy to
lost freedom. Though Ozu shoots the film with his trademark idiosyncratic
restraint -- including wide and low camera angles, mismatched eyelines,
and long shots of unpeopled spaces -- the camera is remarkably mobile
during the first half of the film. Noriko is seen enjoying herself
on a bicycle ride with a handsome young man and later exulting on
a train trip. As Noriko progresses towards marriage, the camera
confines her, echoing her own social entrapment. By the end of the
film, Noriko's presence is replaced with a wedding portrait, while
her father sits alone in an empty house. Late Spring is a remarkably
moving film by one of world cinema's finest masters. |