Umarete Wa Mita Keredo


1h 29m 1932
Umarete Wa Mita Keredo

Brief Synopsis

Two boys go on a hunger strike when they see their dad toadying to his boss.

Film Details

Also Known As
I Was Born But..., Umarete Wa Mita Keredo
Genre
Silent
Comedy
Foreign
Release Date
1932
Production Company
Shochiku Company, Ltd.
Distribution Company
New Yorker Films
Location
Japan

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 29m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Synopsis

Two boys go on a hunger strike when they see their dad toadying to his boss.

Film Details

Also Known As
I Was Born But..., Umarete Wa Mita Keredo
Genre
Silent
Comedy
Foreign
Release Date
1932
Production Company
Shochiku Company, Ltd.
Distribution Company
New Yorker Films
Location
Japan

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 29m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Articles

I Was Born, But...


Japan had a vibrant national cinema and busy film industry during the silent era but sadly only a very small percentage of those films survive. Of the films that are available, Yasujiro Ozu's 1932 I Was Born, But... is among the most famous and beloved and remains the best known of Ozu's silent movies. This "picture book for grown-ups" (as the opening titles read) is a hilarious comedy of wills between the two wily young sons of salaryman Yoshi (Tatsuo Saito) as they move to a Tokyo suburb for the father's new job and prepare to enter a new school. But underneath the comedy is a bittersweet family comedy that offers social satire through its view of the adult social order through the eyes of children.

The young sons of Yoshi are genuine little rascals who skip school to avoid bullies, fake homework assignments to fool their parents and bribe a delivery boy to take care of the biggest bully on the block. When the brothers finally establish their dominance in the childhood pecking order, they are appalled to see their father submit to his new boss (Takeshi Sakamoto), whose own son is now a part of their little wolf pack. "You tell us to become somebody, but you're nobody. Why do you have to bow so much to Taro's father?" they demand in an epic tantrum, and they finally stage a hunger strike in indignation to this unfair social order. (The hunger strike was reworked as a silent protest for a TV set in Ozu's 1959 Ohayo, aka Good Morning, not quite a remake but certainly a family comedy indebted to this film.)

Ozu was a voracious film buff who threw his passion into filmmaking. After working his way up through studio ranks, from assistant cameraman to screenwriter and assistant director, he made his directorial debut in 1927 and was soon making every type of genre: lighthearted college comedies (I Graduated, But... (1929) and I Flunked, But..., 1930), crime dramas (Dragnet Girl, 1933), romantic melodramas (Woman of Tokyo, 1933), and even social dramas of the hard times of economic desperation (An Inn in Tokyo, 1935), as many as six features a year in this initial burst of filmmaking. I Was Born, But..., his 24th feature, borrows its title from earlier comedy success and is full of the playful physical gags and comic scenes of his earlier films, but it's also a more thoughtful and melancholy film and the humor is more organic to the drama. For instance, the private games between the boys--hand gestures, taunting poses, comic faces--are hilarious on the surface but also define the social dynamics of the juvenile world and the playful milieu of social competition of schoolboys.

In contrast to the respectful submission to the social order and the quiet resignation to social and familial expectations we see time and again in Ozu's adults, the children in Ozu's films are forces of pure id: impulsive, obstinate, willful, at times downright rude to parents and often destructive when they don't get their way. The brothers of this film are perhaps Ozu's greatest creations in childhood impertinence and impudence. Yet behind the deft comedy and spirited performances of the two boys is a somber engagement with the compromises adults make to the demands of the social order. The anxiety of the depression is never seen directly but its reverberations can be seen in the obsequious toadying of not just Yoshi but all of his fellow employees. Yoshi has no illusions of his place in the company hierarchy and dutifully kowtows to his boss and plays the clown in his home movies. His attempts to explain the realities of the adult world to the boys leads to soul searching of his own, and perhaps his ambivalence over such compromises explains the parents' astonishing tolerance of the boys' brazen impertinence and bad behavior.

"I started to make a film about children and ended up making a film about grownups," observed Ozu in a 1958 interview. I Was Born, But..., which the director developed from his own story, is a social satire of comic delights and melancholy resignation to the innocence lost as the boys face up to the world that awaits them. The film won first prize at the Kinema Jumpo awards--the first of six such prizes he would eventually win--and is regarded as Ozu's first genuine masterpiece.

Director: Yasujirô Ozu
Screenplay: Geibei Ibushiya (adaptation); Akira Fushimi (scenario); James Maki (idea)
Cinematography: Hideo Shigehara
Art Direction: Yoshiro Kimura, Takejiro Tsunoda
Music: Donald Sosin
Film Editing: Hideo Shigehara
Cast: Tatsuo Saito (Chichi), Tokkan-Kozou (Keiji), Mitsuko Yoshikawa (Haha, Yoshi's Wife), Hideo Sugawara (Ryoichi), Takeshi Sakamoto (Juuyaku, Iwasaki, Executive), Teruyo Hayami (Fujin, Iwasaki's wife), Seiichi Kato (Kodomo, Taro), Shoichi Kofujita (Kozou, Delivery boy), Seiji Nishimura (Sensei, Teacher), Zentaro Iijima (Asobi nakama, Friend).
BW-90m.

by Sean Axmaker
I Was Born, But...

I Was Born, But...

Japan had a vibrant national cinema and busy film industry during the silent era but sadly only a very small percentage of those films survive. Of the films that are available, Yasujiro Ozu's 1932 I Was Born, But... is among the most famous and beloved and remains the best known of Ozu's silent movies. This "picture book for grown-ups" (as the opening titles read) is a hilarious comedy of wills between the two wily young sons of salaryman Yoshi (Tatsuo Saito) as they move to a Tokyo suburb for the father's new job and prepare to enter a new school. But underneath the comedy is a bittersweet family comedy that offers social satire through its view of the adult social order through the eyes of children. The young sons of Yoshi are genuine little rascals who skip school to avoid bullies, fake homework assignments to fool their parents and bribe a delivery boy to take care of the biggest bully on the block. When the brothers finally establish their dominance in the childhood pecking order, they are appalled to see their father submit to his new boss (Takeshi Sakamoto), whose own son is now a part of their little wolf pack. "You tell us to become somebody, but you're nobody. Why do you have to bow so much to Taro's father?" they demand in an epic tantrum, and they finally stage a hunger strike in indignation to this unfair social order. (The hunger strike was reworked as a silent protest for a TV set in Ozu's 1959 Ohayo, aka Good Morning, not quite a remake but certainly a family comedy indebted to this film.) Ozu was a voracious film buff who threw his passion into filmmaking. After working his way up through studio ranks, from assistant cameraman to screenwriter and assistant director, he made his directorial debut in 1927 and was soon making every type of genre: lighthearted college comedies (I Graduated, But... (1929) and I Flunked, But..., 1930), crime dramas (Dragnet Girl, 1933), romantic melodramas (Woman of Tokyo, 1933), and even social dramas of the hard times of economic desperation (An Inn in Tokyo, 1935), as many as six features a year in this initial burst of filmmaking. I Was Born, But..., his 24th feature, borrows its title from earlier comedy success and is full of the playful physical gags and comic scenes of his earlier films, but it's also a more thoughtful and melancholy film and the humor is more organic to the drama. For instance, the private games between the boys--hand gestures, taunting poses, comic faces--are hilarious on the surface but also define the social dynamics of the juvenile world and the playful milieu of social competition of schoolboys. In contrast to the respectful submission to the social order and the quiet resignation to social and familial expectations we see time and again in Ozu's adults, the children in Ozu's films are forces of pure id: impulsive, obstinate, willful, at times downright rude to parents and often destructive when they don't get their way. The brothers of this film are perhaps Ozu's greatest creations in childhood impertinence and impudence. Yet behind the deft comedy and spirited performances of the two boys is a somber engagement with the compromises adults make to the demands of the social order. The anxiety of the depression is never seen directly but its reverberations can be seen in the obsequious toadying of not just Yoshi but all of his fellow employees. Yoshi has no illusions of his place in the company hierarchy and dutifully kowtows to his boss and plays the clown in his home movies. His attempts to explain the realities of the adult world to the boys leads to soul searching of his own, and perhaps his ambivalence over such compromises explains the parents' astonishing tolerance of the boys' brazen impertinence and bad behavior. "I started to make a film about children and ended up making a film about grownups," observed Ozu in a 1958 interview. I Was Born, But..., which the director developed from his own story, is a social satire of comic delights and melancholy resignation to the innocence lost as the boys face up to the world that awaits them. The film won first prize at the Kinema Jumpo awards--the first of six such prizes he would eventually win--and is regarded as Ozu's first genuine masterpiece. Director: Yasujirô Ozu Screenplay: Geibei Ibushiya (adaptation); Akira Fushimi (scenario); James Maki (idea) Cinematography: Hideo Shigehara Art Direction: Yoshiro Kimura, Takejiro Tsunoda Music: Donald Sosin Film Editing: Hideo Shigehara Cast: Tatsuo Saito (Chichi), Tokkan-Kozou (Keiji), Mitsuko Yoshikawa (Haha, Yoshi's Wife), Hideo Sugawara (Ryoichi), Takeshi Sakamoto (Juuyaku, Iwasaki, Executive), Teruyo Hayami (Fujin, Iwasaki's wife), Seiichi Kato (Kodomo, Taro), Shoichi Kofujita (Kozou, Delivery boy), Seiji Nishimura (Sensei, Teacher), Zentaro Iijima (Asobi nakama, Friend). BW-90m. by Sean Axmaker

Silent Ozu: Three Family Comedies on DVD from Eclipse


If all you know of Yasujiro Ozu, Japan's national treasure of a film director, is the quiet restraint and rigorous simplicity of his sound films, then you only have half of the story of the director's remarkable career. The artist called the most "Japanese" of Japanese directors was a voracious film buff more interested in Hollywood movies than his own national cinema early in his career. He was hired as an assistant cameraman at Shochiku, Japan's biggest film studio, in the early 1920s and (after a year off for military service, which he largely spent in the infirmary) soon worked his way up to assistant to director Tadamoto Okubo, who specialized in "nonsense" comedies." He made his directorial debut in 1927 with a period picture (it would turn out to be the only one in his career) that has not survived and was soon making every type of genre: lighthearted college comedies (I Graduated, But... and I Flunked, But...), crime dramas (Dragnet Girl), romantic melodramas (Woman of Tokyo), and even social dramas of the hard times of economic desperation (An Inn in Tokyo), as many as six features a year in his initial burst of filmmaking. All were influenced by his love of Hollywood movies (he was a big fan of Ernst Lubtisch and Harold Lloyd) and he was flexed his creative muscles with tracking shots and dramatic angles and dynamic compositions while looking for his own voice and style.

Perhaps his most beloved films of the silent era, and certainly his most enduring, are his lively family comedies. Silent Ozu: Three Family Comedies, a collection released by Criterion's no-frills Eclipse label, features some of the director's richest and most delightful productions from the period.

Tokyo Chorus (1931) opens with a scene of familiar college humor (students horsing around as a teacher eyes them and carefully marks out their demerits in his notepad) and segues into salaryman movie territory. Hapless college boy Shinji (played by Tokihiko Okada) is now a husband and father of three (including a very willful son) working for an insurance company and eagerly awaiting his bonus (the gags of adult men attempting to discreetly count their bonus money suggests they haven't matured much since their college days). The father stands up to his boss over the unfair firing of an elder employee (Ozu regular Takeshi Sakamoto) and, after a childish game of tit-for-tat played with folded fans escalates into a comic scrap, joins the ranks of the unemployed (the "Tokyo Chorus" of the title).

Directing from a screenplay by Kogo Noda, who went on to write many of Ozu's greatest films (including Tokyo Story, 1953, and Floating Weeds, 1959), Ozu fills the film with deft sight gags, many thanks to the antics of the son, yet there's undercurrent of desperation to the comedy. As father struggles to find work to support his wife and children, and is forced to sell his wife's kimonos to pay the doctor when their young daughter falls ill (the sick child is a classic dramatic crisis in Ozu's silent films, invariably illustrated with the image of a bag of ice water suspended on the child's forehead with a string). And when the wife sees Shinji marching the streets with an advertising banner, reduced to the lowest form of day labor, she's first humiliated by his spectacle and then shamed by her attitude to his sacrifice for them. For all the comedy, the film is filled with tender and delicate moments in such seemingly simple scenes as a round-robin of patty-cake with the kids or sing-song at the teacher's banquet. It's still very traditional filmmaking compared to his later style, more Lubitsch than late Ozu, but you can see the director mastering his tools and finding his voice. In the words of Japanese film historian Donald Ritchie, "With this film, what Ozu called his "darker side" and what we would call his mature style began to emerge."

Young father Shinji begins the film as something of a clown but matures along the way, learning to subsume the emotions and his impulses of his youth and join the adult world of duty and deference. There is no greater contrast to this sensibility than the children of Ozu's films. They are forces of pure id: impulsive, obstinate, willful, at times downright rude to parents and often destructive when they don't get their way, as when the young son throws a tantrum when he doesn't get the bike he wanted. He makes a show of his indignation by poking holes through the paper walls and methodically eating the scraps.

In I Was Born, But... (1932), the portrait of self-absorbed childhood is even more comically egocentric and creatively crafty. This "picture book for grown-ups" (as the opening titles read) follows two young sons of salaryman Yoshi (Tatsuo Saito, the schoolteacher from Tokyo Chorus) as they move to a Tokyo suburb and a new school. These boys are truly little rascals, skipping school to avoid bullies, faking homework assignments to fool their parents, bribing a delivery boy to take care of the biggest bully on the block. Ozu's lively peek into the social dynamics of the juvenile world is full of private games – hand gestures, taunting poses, comic faces – that define the playful milieu of their social competition. When the brothers finally establish their dominance in the childhood pecking order, they are appalled to see their father submit to his boss (Takeshi Sakamoto again). "You tell us to become somebody, but you're nobody. Why do you have to bow so much to Taro's father?" they demand in an epic tantrum, and they finally staging a hunger strike to protest this unfair social order. (The hunger strike was reworked as a silent protest for a TV set in Ozu's 1959 Ohayo, aka Good Morning, not quite a remake but certainly a family comedy indebted to this film.)

Behind the deft comedy and spirited performances of the two boys is a rather somber engagement with the compromises adults make to the demands of the social order. Yoshi has no illusions of his place in the company hierarchy and dutifully kowtows to his boss and plays the clown in his home movies. But his attempts to explain the realities of the adult world to the boys leads to an introspective talk between husband and wife after the boys have fallen asleep. Their faces glow with innocence as father blesses them with the wish: "Don't become an apple polisher like me, boys." Perhaps that ambivalence over such compromises explains the parents' astonishing tolerance of the boys' brazen impertinence and bad behavior. "I started to make a film about children and ended up making a film about grownups," observed Ozu in a 1958 interview. I Was Born, But..., which Ozu developed from his own story, is a social satire of comic delights and melancholy resignation to the innocence lost as the boys face up to the compromises that await them. The film won first prize at the Kinema Jumpo awards – the first of six such prizes he would eventually win – and is regarded as Ozu's first genuine masterpiece.

Familiar Ozu character actor Takeshi Sakamoto takes the lead for the first time in Passing Fancy (1933), playing easy living single father Kihachi with a big, guileless grin. "I'm not as useless as people think," he claims with a smile, but his actions say otherwise, especially when he falls for a pretty young homeless woman (Nobuko Fushimi) who is attracted Kihachi's younger best friend, Jiro (Den Obinata). Tokkan Kozo, who played the younger brother in I Was Born, But..., is Kihachi's son Tomio, a kid who does more parenting than his father. A night, dad piggy-packs the boy home from the bar, and in the morning the boy is forced to become a human alarm clock to rouse Kihachi for work. His method is quite effective: a sharp blow to the shin with a club. The story takes a melodramatic turn in the third act when Tomio gets ill, thanks to an act of generosity gone wrong. "It's so horrible not having an education. I got my son sick and I can't pay for the doctor." Sakamoto went on to play variations of the same character in A Story of Floating Weeds (1934) and An Inn at Tokyo (1935). The film's sentimental streak lacks the conviction Ozu brings to the other films in the set, but the street milieu of day laborers and working class men living paycheck to paycheck and drinking their evenings away in the local bar is fascinating. Like the other films of the set, it is utterly contemporary to the times, a stylized snapshot of working class life in 1933 Japan, and Ozu's details of their subsistence existence (not to mention little touches such as the eye-patch that Tomio wears in the opening scenes – never explained but surely another example of Kihachi's benign negligence) creates a rich atmosphere.

A release of Eclipse, the budget-minded branch of Criterion, the discs come in separate thinpak cases in a paperboard sleeve. The sad truth about the state of film preservation in Japan is that most silent films were not well preserved and the existing prints are not in the best of condition. The master prints used for this set are of varying quality. Tokyo Chorus is the most scuffed and scratched, with splotchy frames (the result of chemical degradation) and seriously damaged sequences, but the image is always watchable and is generally steady throughout. Passing Fancy is much better, with minor scuffing and chemical splotching, but a couple of sequences look as if a blizzard has suddenly erupted on the screen. A few frames have been briefly held as still frames to cover damaged footage. I Was Born But... is the cleanest and brightest of the prints, with only minor scratching and image degradation. The framing is overly tight on top throughout, cutting off the tops of heads in some scenes.

There are no supplements on the no-frills discs apart from the piano accompaniment composed and performed by Donald Sosin His original scores match the mood of each film with bright, upbeat music (a little more restrained in I Was Born, But..., instilled with a torchy saloon-song lilt for Passing Fancy). There is an option to watch the films silent or with the score. The films feature the Japanese intertitles with optional English subtitles. The option also gives subtitle translations of some of the notes and signs in the film.

For more information about Silent Ozu - Three Family Comedies, visit Eclipse Films. To order Silent Ozu - Three Family Comedies, go to TCM Shopping

by Sean Axmaker

Silent Ozu: Three Family Comedies on DVD from Eclipse

If all you know of Yasujiro Ozu, Japan's national treasure of a film director, is the quiet restraint and rigorous simplicity of his sound films, then you only have half of the story of the director's remarkable career. The artist called the most "Japanese" of Japanese directors was a voracious film buff more interested in Hollywood movies than his own national cinema early in his career. He was hired as an assistant cameraman at Shochiku, Japan's biggest film studio, in the early 1920s and (after a year off for military service, which he largely spent in the infirmary) soon worked his way up to assistant to director Tadamoto Okubo, who specialized in "nonsense" comedies." He made his directorial debut in 1927 with a period picture (it would turn out to be the only one in his career) that has not survived and was soon making every type of genre: lighthearted college comedies (I Graduated, But... and I Flunked, But...), crime dramas (Dragnet Girl), romantic melodramas (Woman of Tokyo), and even social dramas of the hard times of economic desperation (An Inn in Tokyo), as many as six features a year in his initial burst of filmmaking. All were influenced by his love of Hollywood movies (he was a big fan of Ernst Lubtisch and Harold Lloyd) and he was flexed his creative muscles with tracking shots and dramatic angles and dynamic compositions while looking for his own voice and style. Perhaps his most beloved films of the silent era, and certainly his most enduring, are his lively family comedies. Silent Ozu: Three Family Comedies, a collection released by Criterion's no-frills Eclipse label, features some of the director's richest and most delightful productions from the period. Tokyo Chorus (1931) opens with a scene of familiar college humor (students horsing around as a teacher eyes them and carefully marks out their demerits in his notepad) and segues into salaryman movie territory. Hapless college boy Shinji (played by Tokihiko Okada) is now a husband and father of three (including a very willful son) working for an insurance company and eagerly awaiting his bonus (the gags of adult men attempting to discreetly count their bonus money suggests they haven't matured much since their college days). The father stands up to his boss over the unfair firing of an elder employee (Ozu regular Takeshi Sakamoto) and, after a childish game of tit-for-tat played with folded fans escalates into a comic scrap, joins the ranks of the unemployed (the "Tokyo Chorus" of the title). Directing from a screenplay by Kogo Noda, who went on to write many of Ozu's greatest films (including Tokyo Story, 1953, and Floating Weeds, 1959), Ozu fills the film with deft sight gags, many thanks to the antics of the son, yet there's undercurrent of desperation to the comedy. As father struggles to find work to support his wife and children, and is forced to sell his wife's kimonos to pay the doctor when their young daughter falls ill (the sick child is a classic dramatic crisis in Ozu's silent films, invariably illustrated with the image of a bag of ice water suspended on the child's forehead with a string). And when the wife sees Shinji marching the streets with an advertising banner, reduced to the lowest form of day labor, she's first humiliated by his spectacle and then shamed by her attitude to his sacrifice for them. For all the comedy, the film is filled with tender and delicate moments in such seemingly simple scenes as a round-robin of patty-cake with the kids or sing-song at the teacher's banquet. It's still very traditional filmmaking compared to his later style, more Lubitsch than late Ozu, but you can see the director mastering his tools and finding his voice. In the words of Japanese film historian Donald Ritchie, "With this film, what Ozu called his "darker side" and what we would call his mature style began to emerge." Young father Shinji begins the film as something of a clown but matures along the way, learning to subsume the emotions and his impulses of his youth and join the adult world of duty and deference. There is no greater contrast to this sensibility than the children of Ozu's films. They are forces of pure id: impulsive, obstinate, willful, at times downright rude to parents and often destructive when they don't get their way, as when the young son throws a tantrum when he doesn't get the bike he wanted. He makes a show of his indignation by poking holes through the paper walls and methodically eating the scraps. In I Was Born, But... (1932), the portrait of self-absorbed childhood is even more comically egocentric and creatively crafty. This "picture book for grown-ups" (as the opening titles read) follows two young sons of salaryman Yoshi (Tatsuo Saito, the schoolteacher from Tokyo Chorus) as they move to a Tokyo suburb and a new school. These boys are truly little rascals, skipping school to avoid bullies, faking homework assignments to fool their parents, bribing a delivery boy to take care of the biggest bully on the block. Ozu's lively peek into the social dynamics of the juvenile world is full of private games – hand gestures, taunting poses, comic faces – that define the playful milieu of their social competition. When the brothers finally establish their dominance in the childhood pecking order, they are appalled to see their father submit to his boss (Takeshi Sakamoto again). "You tell us to become somebody, but you're nobody. Why do you have to bow so much to Taro's father?" they demand in an epic tantrum, and they finally staging a hunger strike to protest this unfair social order. (The hunger strike was reworked as a silent protest for a TV set in Ozu's 1959 Ohayo, aka Good Morning, not quite a remake but certainly a family comedy indebted to this film.) Behind the deft comedy and spirited performances of the two boys is a rather somber engagement with the compromises adults make to the demands of the social order. Yoshi has no illusions of his place in the company hierarchy and dutifully kowtows to his boss and plays the clown in his home movies. But his attempts to explain the realities of the adult world to the boys leads to an introspective talk between husband and wife after the boys have fallen asleep. Their faces glow with innocence as father blesses them with the wish: "Don't become an apple polisher like me, boys." Perhaps that ambivalence over such compromises explains the parents' astonishing tolerance of the boys' brazen impertinence and bad behavior. "I started to make a film about children and ended up making a film about grownups," observed Ozu in a 1958 interview. I Was Born, But..., which Ozu developed from his own story, is a social satire of comic delights and melancholy resignation to the innocence lost as the boys face up to the compromises that await them. The film won first prize at the Kinema Jumpo awards – the first of six such prizes he would eventually win – and is regarded as Ozu's first genuine masterpiece. Familiar Ozu character actor Takeshi Sakamoto takes the lead for the first time in Passing Fancy (1933), playing easy living single father Kihachi with a big, guileless grin. "I'm not as useless as people think," he claims with a smile, but his actions say otherwise, especially when he falls for a pretty young homeless woman (Nobuko Fushimi) who is attracted Kihachi's younger best friend, Jiro (Den Obinata). Tokkan Kozo, who played the younger brother in I Was Born, But..., is Kihachi's son Tomio, a kid who does more parenting than his father. A night, dad piggy-packs the boy home from the bar, and in the morning the boy is forced to become a human alarm clock to rouse Kihachi for work. His method is quite effective: a sharp blow to the shin with a club. The story takes a melodramatic turn in the third act when Tomio gets ill, thanks to an act of generosity gone wrong. "It's so horrible not having an education. I got my son sick and I can't pay for the doctor." Sakamoto went on to play variations of the same character in A Story of Floating Weeds (1934) and An Inn at Tokyo (1935). The film's sentimental streak lacks the conviction Ozu brings to the other films in the set, but the street milieu of day laborers and working class men living paycheck to paycheck and drinking their evenings away in the local bar is fascinating. Like the other films of the set, it is utterly contemporary to the times, a stylized snapshot of working class life in 1933 Japan, and Ozu's details of their subsistence existence (not to mention little touches such as the eye-patch that Tomio wears in the opening scenes – never explained but surely another example of Kihachi's benign negligence) creates a rich atmosphere. A release of Eclipse, the budget-minded branch of Criterion, the discs come in separate thinpak cases in a paperboard sleeve. The sad truth about the state of film preservation in Japan is that most silent films were not well preserved and the existing prints are not in the best of condition. The master prints used for this set are of varying quality. Tokyo Chorus is the most scuffed and scratched, with splotchy frames (the result of chemical degradation) and seriously damaged sequences, but the image is always watchable and is generally steady throughout. Passing Fancy is much better, with minor scuffing and chemical splotching, but a couple of sequences look as if a blizzard has suddenly erupted on the screen. A few frames have been briefly held as still frames to cover damaged footage. I Was Born But... is the cleanest and brightest of the prints, with only minor scratching and image degradation. The framing is overly tight on top throughout, cutting off the tops of heads in some scenes. There are no supplements on the no-frills discs apart from the piano accompaniment composed and performed by Donald Sosin His original scores match the mood of each film with bright, upbeat music (a little more restrained in I Was Born, But..., instilled with a torchy saloon-song lilt for Passing Fancy). There is an option to watch the films silent or with the score. The films feature the Japanese intertitles with optional English subtitles. The option also gives subtitle translations of some of the notes and signs in the film. For more information about Silent Ozu - Three Family Comedies, visit Eclipse Films. To order Silent Ozu - Three Family Comedies, go to TCM Shopping by Sean Axmaker

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Winner of Kinwema Jumpo's Best Film Award. This marks Ozu's first in a series of Best Film Awards.

Released in United States October 12, 1999

Released in United States on Video October 12, 1999

Shown in New York City (Film Forum) as part of program "The Early Spring of Yasujiro Ozu: 1929-1937" January 24 - March 14, 1994.

b&w

dialogue Japanese

subtitled English

Released in United States October 12, 1999

Released in United States on Video October 12, 1999