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Der Geschmack von grünem Tee über Reis

Originaltitel: Ochazuke no aji
  • 1952
  • Not Rated
  • 1 Std. 56 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,6/10
4130
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Der Geschmack von grünem Tee über Reis (1952)
Drama

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA childless middle-aged couple faces a marital crisis.A childless middle-aged couple faces a marital crisis.A childless middle-aged couple faces a marital crisis.

  • Regie
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Drehbuch
    • Kôgo Noda
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Shin Saburi
    • Michiyo Kogure
    • Kôji Tsuruta
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,6/10
    4130
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Drehbuch
      • Kôgo Noda
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Shin Saburi
      • Michiyo Kogure
      • Kôji Tsuruta
    • 21Benutzerrezensionen
    • 33Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 wins total

    Fotos67

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    Topbesetzung24

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    Shin Saburi
    Shin Saburi
    • Mokichi Satake
    Michiyo Kogure
    Michiyo Kogure
    • Taeko Satake
    Kôji Tsuruta
    Kôji Tsuruta
    • Non-chan…
    Chishû Ryû
    Chishû Ryû
    • Sadao Hirayama
    Chikage Awashima
    Chikage Awashima
    • Aya Amamiya
    Keiko Tsushima
    Keiko Tsushima
    • Setsuko Yamauchi
    Kuniko Miyake
    Kuniko Miyake
    • Chizu Yamauchi
    Eijirô Yanagi
    Eijirô Yanagi
    • Naosuke Yamauchi
    Hisao Toake
    • Toichiro Amamiya
    Yûko Mochizuki
    Yûko Mochizuki
    • Shige Hirayama
    Kôji Shitara
    Kôji Shitara
    • Koji Yamauchi
    Matsuko Shiga
    • Toichiro's mistress
    Yôko Kosono
    Yôko Kosono
    • Fumi
    Kinichi Ishikawa
    Kinichi Ishikawa
    • Company President
    Yoko Osakura
    Yoko Osakura
    • Kuroda Takako (as Yoko Uehara)
    Etsuko Miyama
    • Echo Bar Girl
    Noriko Hinatsu
    • Shopgirl
    Mie Kitahara
    Mie Kitahara
    • Waitress
    • Regie
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Drehbuch
      • Kôgo Noda
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen21

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    7asandor

    A subdued family drama; A good quality Ozu film

    The Flavour of Green Tea over Rice (Ochazuke no aji) is an Ozu film; a subdued drama analyzing the transformation of Japan post-WWII in small, personal ways. This film follows a childless married couple as they navigate changing traditions, conceptions of marriage, and love. The relationship between the two is strained - the husband is a simple country man who enjoys his country cigarettes, riding in the third class passenger car of trains, and throwing himself into his work with tact and politeness. The wife is a city girl, enjoying spa days, expensive and luxurious decorations, and first class train rides. These two struggle to relate to each other, in a marriage that was set up over a decade ago as an arranged marriage.

    The catalyst to this film is when their headstrong niece comes to stay. A product of the new Japan, she is not interested in an arranged marriage, and instead wants to meet someone through dating, and marry for love, not familial status. This is scandalous to both her parents and our married couple. However, the two begin to see each other in a new light, engaging with new ideas, trying new things, and ultimately coming together in a touching and mute scene of culinary exploration and intimacy.

    Ozu has a way with scenes. Each scene is meticulously detailed, and dripping with meaning, while maintaining a muted, quite feel. Ozu is, of course, a master of film making of this era, and this film is no different. It poignantly portrays the changing nature of relationships, love and marriage in Japan with subtlety, grace, and beauty. There are many wonderful scenes and shots in this film, and it is an Ozu film worth watching.

    Complaints-wise, this film feels much slower then many of Ozu's films, almost to the point of not really moving. This seems to be a stylistic choice that compliments the thesis of the film, but also makes the film a bit distractable at times. Scenes feel like they jump at times, and the chronology of events, while supposed to be clear, is often not, for brief moments.

    A wonderful film in many ways that just, barely, lacks the Ozu charm and perfection that is common in films like Tokyo Story, for example. Even so, this is a lovely, sweet and touching film that is easily watchable, and contains many of the charms of Ozu's work. Easy recommendation for fans of Ozu, or fans of quite, small and beautiful stories and dramas.
    chaos-rampant

    Rikyu's Echo Bar

    Ozu continues to unfold a worldview of melancholy joy. Here we are offered an insight of what informs this: the glum husband wants things that are 'intimate, primitive, familiar and relaxed', from his brand of cigarettes to pouring tea over his dinner of rice.

    So it seems Ozu gravitates towards his camera and world not from deep introspection or need for formalism but towards an intuition.

    The benefit is that he naturally envelops space. He doesn't construct it, each visual scene is a soft pencil-stroke tracing and re-tracing paths as a way of arriving at shape.

    Some kind of life emerges. In the scenes of the wife lounging with her friends in a spa around a table with drinks and then lazily feeding the fish in a pond, or the two army buddies reminiscing about a beach in Singapore during war with its palm trees, a melancholy breeze blows through it carrying sense, life, contact, memory, evocation. Individually there are wonderful visual moments here, some of the best in his films.

    (In all this, he's in line with the great tea master Rikyu's instructions about serving tea, whose name appears in the film. It should not be a lavish or formal ceremony, but sparse and intimate, looking for spontaneous appreciation of what two people relaxing in each other's presence can inspire. Serving tea is merely the opportunity, the framework for contact.)

    The flipside of that intuitive approach is that it's enough for Ozu to sketch as he goes. The idea is that life is a bit like this, apparent only in retrospect. He does have in mind a larger transition: a marriage that has grown cold and distant, the lonely night of breaking them apart and, as the man's flight is unexpectedly cancelled, their coming together again in the empty house.

    This is a great great notion, the idea that you can create an entire life and for this to slowly crystallize realization in a single moment between two people. It resembles more clearly than any of his other films where Cassavetes would take this mentality in his Woman.

    Ozu had tried this several times. For whatever reason, probably a rushed production, he's not in control of it here. This is the most disjointed of his films, a real mess. The ending is possibly the worst work Ozu has done, the wife now enlightened about the purpose of marriage explaining to the young girl (and through her to young women in the audience).
    8crossbow0106

    A Good Ozu Film

    This film mines much of the territory of Ozu films, including the complex relationships of the major characters, the resistance of a young lady to agree to an arranged marriage and the aesthetics of everyday living amongst the working classes. The film has two main stories, parallel to each other, running through it: Takeo, who is bored with her husband who is very simple in his needs, lies to him so she can go to a spa with her friends. Their niece, the pretty Setsuko, is the one who is resisting the arranged marriage meeting. How the two stories bisect is typical Ozu, creating conflict and anger. This film is not as good as much of Ozu's output at the time, but that includes "Tokyo Story", "Early Summer" and "Late Spring", which are standout classics. The great Setsuko Hara is not in this film and the equally great Chishu Ryu is a bit player, but I think you'll still find this film worthy of your time. If you haven't seen an Ozu film, start with "Tokyo Story" or "Late Spring" (others too, including "Good Morning" and "Autumn Afternoon") but give this a try. I don't think you will be disappointed.
    8frankde-jong

    Ozu as the master of the small emotions at his very best

    "The flavour of green tea over rice" is both a typical Ozu movie and one that defiates from his usual format in some respects.

    Typical Ozu is the emphasis on small- and not on big emotions. The story is, as usual. Situated in the post World War II era, and the influence of the United States on the Japanese society is clearly visiblle (baseball match).

    In most of the Ozu films the central relations are between children and parents (at the beginning of his career) or between parents and grandparents (later in his career). In "The flavour of green tea over rice" it is a married couple that forms the center of the film. Their marriage was arranged and is not in good shape. You can feel it when the man returns home from his work and the greeting of the two spouses is lukewarm at best.

    The woman seems independent and emancipated at first. She has her female friends and she likes going out with them. As the film progresses she becomes however less and less sympathetic. In front of her female friends she expresses herself very disrespectfully about her husband (a dummy), whom we get to know as a person of great integrity. She happens to be of richer descent than her husband and dislikes his "cheap taste" (maybe being a snob herself).

    Although differences between genarations do play a lesser role than in most Ozu films, they aren't totally non existent either. Seeing the marriage between her uncle and aunt, a niece of the woman in a subplot vehemtly resists becoming trapped in an arranged marriage herself.

    In one of the most beautiful happy ends I have ever seen the two spouses reconcile with each other. When the man arrives at home in the middle of the night from the airport the servants are already in bed. Man and woman together prepare a meal, in so doing discovering how their kitchen works (normally the woman never cooks herself). The act of preparing a meal is capable to bridge the gap that hitherto existed between man and woman, just like the act of eating a (delicious) meal is capable of bridiging tge gap between Protestants and Roman Catholics in "Babette's feast" (1987, Gabriel Axel). The meal in "The flavour of green tea over rice" is however very simple compared with "Babette's feast". It's not the food itself that does the trick, it is all about the small talk during the preparation. Ozu as the master of the small emotions at his very best.
    7Andy-296

    Not top notch Ozu, but well worth watching

    Japanese master Yasujiro Ozu made this 1952 film between two masterpieces, Early Summer and (especially) Tokyo Story, and this film suffers a bit by comparison with them. As in other (somewhat more accomplished) movies by Ozu (one thinks especially of the superb Late Spring) the plot deals on the issue of whether a young woman should marry, and if that marriage should be a love marriage or arranged one. There is a middle aged, childless couple, the snobbish, nasty Taeko (Michiyo Kogure) and her husband, the honest, good but a bit dull salary man Satake (Shin Saburi). Her nephew, the pretty young Setsuko (Keiko Tsushima) comes to visit, she has to go to an interview for an arranged marriage, but seeing the loveless marriage between Taeko and Satake, and how she mocks him behind his back, is not very interested.

    Ozu's best films haven't dated a bit, but this one has somewhat. Moreover, while I don't agree with the generalization that all of Ozu's films are slow (not all of them are), this one is on the leisurely paced side. What's more, the movie takes some time to develop its plot so it does require a bit of patience from the viewer. You will eventually warm up to this movie, I think, but not immediately.

    On the plus side, it is a good, interesting movie, with believable, well developed characters. Chishu Ryu, Chikage Awashima and Kumiko Mikaye (all regular of many Ozu films) have bit roles here.

    Verwandte Interessen

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    Drama

    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      At the start of the film, two characters mention going to see a new film with Jean Marais. The film was most likely Orpheus (1950), which was released in Japan in June 1951.
    • Zitate

      Taeko Satake: Think well before you pick your groom, it's important.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in David Bordwell on 'The Flavor of Green Tea Over Rice' (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      Love's Old Sweet Song
      Composed by J.L. Molloy (as James Lyman Molloy)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 1. Oktober 1952 (Japan)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Sprache
      • Japanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Der Geschmack grünen Tees über Reis
    • Drehorte
      • Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokio, Japan
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Shochiku
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    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 56 Min.(116 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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