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Tôkyô no kôrasu

  • 1931
  • 1 Std. 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
1657
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Tôkyô no kôrasu (1931)
DramaKomödie

Ein verheirateter Mann aus Tokio wird entlassen, nachdem er sich für einen älteren Kollegen eingesetzt hat.Ein verheirateter Mann aus Tokio wird entlassen, nachdem er sich für einen älteren Kollegen eingesetzt hat.Ein verheirateter Mann aus Tokio wird entlassen, nachdem er sich für einen älteren Kollegen eingesetzt hat.

  • Regie
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Drehbuch
    • Komatsu Kitamura
    • Kôgo Noda
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Tokihiko Okada
    • Emiko Yagumo
    • Hideo Sugawara
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,1/10
    1657
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Drehbuch
      • Komatsu Kitamura
      • Kôgo Noda
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Tokihiko Okada
      • Emiko Yagumo
      • Hideo Sugawara
    • 16Benutzerrezensionen
    • 25Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos17

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    Topbesetzung13

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    Tokihiko Okada
    • Shinji Okajima
    Emiko Yagumo
    • Tsuma Sugako (His Wife)
    Hideo Sugawara
    • Sono Chounan (First Son)
    Hideko Takamine
    Hideko Takamine
    • Sono Choujo (First Daughter)
    Tatsuo Saitô
    Tatsuo Saitô
    • Omura Sensei (Teacher)
    Chôko Iida
    Chôko Iida
    • Sensei no tusma (Mrs. Omura)
    Takeshi Sakamoto
    Takeshi Sakamoto
    • Rou-Shain Yamada (Old Employee)
    Reikô Tani
    • Shachou (Company President)
    Ken'ichi Miyajima
    • Hisho (Secretary)
    Isamu Yamaguchi
    • Kaisha no Douryou (An Employee)
    Mitsuo Ichimura
      Kanji Kawara
        Chishû Ryû
        Chishû Ryû
          • Regie
            • Yasujirô Ozu
          • Drehbuch
            • Komatsu Kitamura
            • Kôgo Noda
          • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
          • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

          Benutzerrezensionen16

          7,11.6K
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          Empfohlene Bewertungen

          alsolikelife

          I Worked, But...

          A well-to-do employee of an insurance firm gets a handsome bonus only to get fired for standing up for a laid-off co-worker; his stay-at-home wife, son and daughter (a very young but no less adorable Hideko Takamine) all must contend with the effects of his unemployment. This could very well be re-titled I WORKED, BUT... as it has the same eclectic mix of tones found in that "trilogy", this time ranging from the wistfully ruminative to the starkly violent to the hilariously scatalogical. The film also continues the major theme that preoccupied Ozu at this time, employment as a determinant of social status and self-esteem, while also pointing to the dichotomy of home life vs. office life and how children view their parents which would be explored further in I WAS BORN BUT... It is wonderful to witness the sheer range of devices Ozu employs, from tracking shots to keyhole iris shots, generous helpings of physical slapstick and odd assorted throwaway moments that reveal characters in quirky, intimate ways. With its freewheeling technique examining the foibles and fissures of Japanese society from all angles, this is a major example of the young, robust Ozu at his best.
          7sergalpeev

          Very good film. Watched in one breath

          It is reasonable to read about this period in history, because there are quite a lot of Ozu's films from this time about unemployment. When you understand more about Great Depression then the topic looks more clear to you when you watch the film.
          7boblipton

          Degradation

          Tokihiko Okada is a salaryman at an insurance company in Tokyo. He has a wife, Emiko Yagumo, a son, a daughter (played by Hideko Takamine) and a baby. Money is tight, but a bonus is coming his way. Unfortunately for him, a fellow worker is fired in a manner that suggests the boss wants him gone before his pension vests. Okada goes to speak to the boss, gets into a shoving match with him, and is fired himself.

          At first it seems that it will be a matter of picking up a new job, but he soon finds himself one of the "Tokyo Chorus" of the unemployed. Matters grow worse and worse...

          This movie starts out as a comedy, with Physical Education teacher Tatsuo Saitô terrorizing his students -- including Okada -- like a cop in a Hal Roach comedy writing tickets. As the movie goes on, the tone begins to take on a more serious tone, with outbursts of real problems -- like when Miss Takamine has to go to the hospital -- amidst the comedy, which grows ever more wan. When Okada goes to work for his former teacher, handing out leaflets advertising his restaurant, his wife sees him doing so, and is humiliated; Okada, who starts this movie like Harold Lloyd trying to keep up with the Joneses, has crashed through the floor of the educated middle class, into the lower class; this is not America, where he can be redeemed and restored, but Japan, where appearances are more important than the reality. This is no longer a comedy, but a tragedy.

          The print I saw on TCM was certainly not pristine; the titles were worn, and there was extensive chipping. The story was also far more episodic than fluid. This is not the Ozu of the 1950s, but a different one, with slapstick and tracking shots. These last points raise an issue I have been thinking of. Ozu is famous for the way he directed his later movies: long, still takes shot from floor level. Why the change? The late introduction of sound movies into Japan meant that the problems of moving cameras had been solved by the time Ozu made his first sound feature in 1936. He only gradually abandoned tracking shots, and was still using them as late as 1949.

          I have concluded that a good movie is composed of story, character, incident and camerawork, and as Ozu entered the 1950s, he settled firmly on character and the interactions between them as his interest. With his often-repeated plots, his people's relationships were the stuff that fascinated him and his audience. Incident (in the form of slapstick comedy) and camera movement were matters that distracted viewers from the people, and made it too easy for them. By removing the overt comedy, Ozu removed the distraction. By removing the camera movement, he made his audience work harder at understanding the characters, which invested them in the process

          Anyway, that's my understanding at the moment. What's yours?
          8crossbow0106

          Early Ozu. Seems Very Current

          An insurance man promises to buy his son a bicycle since it is the day he would get his bonus (the beginning sequence of him being kind of a loser in army drills is funny). A colleague gets fired nd the man sticks up for him nd gets fired also. His son is angry because he can't buy the bicycle. What follows is Ozu at his best: Taking a small situation and making it compelling. There is drama but also some slapstick in this film (and, in the role of the young daughter, the eventual wonderful actress Hideko Takamine) and it works because the story seems so close to home. There are lots of family moments, and your wish throughout the film is that everything will be all right (watch to find if it will be). Not a great film, but well worth your time. Ozu's next film was the excellent "I Was Born, But", and you can get them both on the box set "Silent Ozu", which have English subtitles. Recommended.
          7frankde-jong

          A father being courageous or reckless ... that's the question.

          "Tokyo story" is another silent movie of Yasujiro Ozu, of witch "I was born ... but" (1932) is the most well known.

          Just like "I was born ... but" "Tokyo chorus" is about young parents and young children. In later years Ozu would concentrate more on the relationship between adult children and elderly parents. The obvious explanation would be that the stage of life of Ozu himself was leading in the choice of his subject. Given that Ozu was a bachelor all his life this explanation is however not true.

          Just like "I was born ... but" "Tokyo chorus" is about shame with the employment of the father. In this case however it are not the children who feel the shame but the wife. Moreover in "Tokyo chorus" the "inferior" employment of the father is the result of his solidarity with an older colleague which was treated unfair. With this solidarity he showed his courage (unlike his other colleagues) but ultimately he only achieved that he was fired as well.

          In Western eyes this gives the film a certain social engagement. Not very typical for Ozu! I wonder however if Ozu really meant it this way. In the beginning of the film we see that the main character was a rebel in his student years. In in between shots we see images of laundry drying in the sun. Another (more Japanese?) interptretation is that the main character is immature at the beginning of the film, insufficiently aware of his responsibilities as a father (symbolized by landry drying in the sun). Only through misfortune (of his own making) he finally grows up.

          Whatever the interpretation, already in 1931 the style of Ozu was taking form, both regarding subject (family life) as regarding style (the use of in between shots).

          Handlung

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          • Wissenswertes
            In the top 10 of Kinema Junpo's Top Japanese Movies of 1931.
          • Patzer
            The father takes the ice-water bag off his ill daughter's forehead twice between shots.
          • Zitate

            Shinji Okajima: A drowning man will clutch at straws.

          • Verbindungen
            Featured in Die linkshändige Frau (1977)

          Top-Auswahl

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          FAQ12

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          Details

          Ändern
          • Erscheinungsdatum
            • 15. August 1931 (Japan)
          • Herkunftsland
            • Japan
          • Offizieller Standort
            • Official Site - DVD (Japan)
          • Sprachen
            • Noon
            • Japanisch
          • Auch bekannt als
            • Tokyo Chorus
          • Produktionsfirmen
            • Shochiku
            • Shochiku Kamata
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          Technische Daten

          Ändern
          • Laufzeit
            • 1 Std. 30 Min.(90 min)
          • Farbe
            • Black and White
            • Black and White
          • Sound-Mix
            • Silent
          • Seitenverhältnis
            • 1.37 : 1

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