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Hijôsen no onna

  • 1933
  • 1 Std. 40 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
1211
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Hijôsen no onna (1933)
CrimeDramaRomance

Ein Gangster versucht, mit der ungewollten Hilfe einer unschuldigen Verkäuferin Erlösung zu finden, und seine eifersüchtige Freundin wird alles tun, um ihn zu halten.Ein Gangster versucht, mit der ungewollten Hilfe einer unschuldigen Verkäuferin Erlösung zu finden, und seine eifersüchtige Freundin wird alles tun, um ihn zu halten.Ein Gangster versucht, mit der ungewollten Hilfe einer unschuldigen Verkäuferin Erlösung zu finden, und seine eifersüchtige Freundin wird alles tun, um ihn zu halten.

  • Regie
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Drehbuch
    • Tadao Ikeda
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Kinuyo Tanaka
    • Jôji Oka
    • Sumiko Mizukubo
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,9/10
    1211
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Drehbuch
      • Tadao Ikeda
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Kinuyo Tanaka
      • Jôji Oka
      • Sumiko Mizukubo
    • 16Benutzerrezensionen
    • 22Kritische Rezensionen
    • 78Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos15

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    Topbesetzung13

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    Kinuyo Tanaka
    Kinuyo Tanaka
    • Tokiko
    Jôji Oka
    • Jyoji
    Sumiko Mizukubo
    • Kazuko
    Kôji Mitsui
    Kôji Mitsui
    • Hiroshi
    • (as Hideo Mitsui)
    Yumeko Aizome
    • Misako
    Yoshio Takayama
    • Senko
    Kôji Kaga
    • Misawa
    Yasuo Nanjo
    • Okazaki
    Shunsaku Kashima
    • Bad guy at Dance Hall
    Seiji Nishimura
    • Policeman
    Chishû Ryû
    Chishû Ryû
    • Policeman
    Nobuo Takemura
    • Boss at Boxing Club
    Reikô Tani
    • Secretary
    • Regie
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Drehbuch
      • Tadao Ikeda
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen16

    6,91.2K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7christopher-underwood

    photography splendid

    As this started I realised that it was a silent film and noted later that even though I have seen many of Ozu's films, never the silent ones of which there are at least twenty, but never even other Japanese silents. This is a wonderfully clear blu-ray from BFI and the photography splendid. I understand that Ozu loved the gangsters but I have to say that although in the gym is well shot but the boxers we never see them fighting and although all the men wear their fedoras and coats there is never any great action. We also have the girls, the gangster's moll and the good girl working in a shop, she wants her brother to leave the gang, she tries to get the gang boss to influence him and she falls in love with him. It is interesting but even though it is trying to be American, with all the posters and signage and the wisecracking and gun-toting it is really still very Japanese.
    9treywillwest

    nope

    I've enjoyed few silent films as much as this wonderful gangster movie from none other than Yasujiro Ozu, best known for his brilliantly ponderous family dramas of the talkie era. The silent films of Ozu, whose sound films are considered so very "eastern" by western viewers, are eye-brow raisingly informed by Hollywood aesthetics. Indeed, some of his early crime films such as this one, perhaps invented important aspects of what would become known as Hollywood genre tropes. A tale of the intimate lives and feelings of seemingly hardened underworld denizens, Dragnet Girl discovers the world of Noir years before John Huston in Maltese Falcon or, for that matter, Marcel Carne in Le Jour se Leve, walked on that ground. And while Dragnet Girl precedes the films that were to be labeled Noir, it also in many ways transcends them. For Ozu has no use for the dreary fatalism that would characterize the American, German or French crime film. For these characters, these criminals, are not simplistically doomed. Their paths are shaped more by their feelings for each other than their violation of any moral code. This makes the narrative truly unpredictable and moving.
    chaos-rampant

    In search of a contemplative heart

    A gangster with feelings, mirrored in the young boxer who is eager to drop out of school to join the gang: boyish impertinence and bravado in this part, a recalcitrant code of honor among thieves, the common tropes of the gangster film.

    The boxer's quiet, unassuming sister, mirrored in the gangster's moll who gradually opts out of the glamorous life in favor of true happiness: deep female selfless intuition, enduring, indomitable caring.

    The four of them are intertwined in a dance between many different faces for the one life - all of them fit but some make you agonize. The whole plays out like a response to Sternberg's Underworld, a prototypical gangster film that culminated in a similarly sacrificial denouement. As is common with these films, having experienced the thrills of an outcast life, we're meant to leave the theater rehabilitated into common social mind.

    This is fine and the film generally slick and efficient, but I want to direct your attention to these specifics.

    • one is the shot of a chrome plate from inside a moving car, that reflects distortions of the surrounding world as the car speeds ahead. This encapsulates both cinematic eye and internal mind, modern and anxious, that give rise both to events depicted and the type of film that frames them.


    • the other is the series of static shots that end the film, with cops signaling each to each that the chase is over and departing and the quiet interior of the empty house greeting the first morning light. Now Ozu's journey is from superficial Western adoration (except for the sister everyone is dressed in western garb here, the brother has taken up boxing, the whole recalls Western film above all) onto a discovery of a contemplative Japanese heart. The transition is vividly exemplified here: from the neon marquees of tumultuous movie night into the stillness of morning. We'll see a lot more of this in the future.
    8liehtzu

    who you callin static?

    ozu's ultimate triumph of style over substance, a slick gangster/juvenile delinquency picture starring a very young kinuyo tanaka. tanaka's the girl who's an office worker whose boss has a fondness for sexual harassment (in many ways it's a similar role to the one isuzu yamada played in mizoguchi's "osaka story" a couple years later). she meets and falls for a local thug and they turn to petty crime. from what i've read ozu barely remembers this one, one of the many potboilers he churned out in the 20s and 30s, but it still shows he had fun making it. the film may come as a shock to those who are used to the rather static camerawork of ozu's later films - lots of cool dollies, lush photography, great noir-ish lighting, and a meticulous attention to minor detail. ozu's primary influence at this point in his career seems to be joseph von sternberg, there's an extraordinary amount of clutter in almost every frame (look at the later films and you'll see that sternberg's one of the few western influences ozu never quite discarded). still, lots of "pillow shots," direct closeups, along with some low-level shots for those who like to point out that ozu only ever had one camera position. great fun, even if it is silent and i can't read japanese intertitles (a subplot about a friend in trouble lost me).
    9boblipton

    Proto-Film Noir

    Kinuyo Tanaka works in an office, where she has caught the attention of the boss' son. She means to take him for a bundle, because after office hours, she's the moll of Joji Oka, a washed-up boxer and gangster. However, when Sumiko Mizukubo, a nice, old-fashioned shop girl, asks Joji to let her brother, Koji Mitsui out of their gang, the two lovers see a vision of a decent life. Is it beyond their reach?

    This movie gives the impression that Ozu was trying to shoot a movie half in the style of Joseph von Sternberg and half in the stye of Frank Borzage -- what would happen if George Bancroft in THUNDERBOLT met a Janet Gaynor character? Visually, it's very Germanic, with lots of half-lit faces and many tracking shots, nothing at all like the style Ozu would adopt after the War. The set design is typical for Ozu in this period, with lots of American posters on the walls.

    It has often been stated (which is a slovenly way to not have to cite sources) that Film Noir arose from filtering German expressionism through French Poetic Realism and American Pulp Mystery. Although it did not begin to take shape until the late 1930s, nor flower until the mid-1940s, there's an interesting early sideline in this movie, complete with a femme fatale who leads people to their doom -- who is a nice girl!

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    Handlung

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      Tokiko: I understand why you fell for her. I've fallen for her too.

    • Verbindungen
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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 27. April 1933 (Japan)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Sprachen
      • Noon
      • Japanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Dragnet Girl
    • Drehorte
      • Shochiku-Kamata Studios, Tokio, Japan(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Shochiku
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    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 40 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Silent
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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