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Nagaya shinshiroku

  • 1947
  • 1h 12m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,7/10
2,5 k
MA NOTE
Nagaya shinshiroku (1947)
Drame

Dans le Japon d'après-guerre, personne ne veut s'occuper d'un petit garçon perdu hormis Tané, une veuve amère. Le lendemain, elle le ramène chez lui et découvre que son père est parti à Toky... Tout lireDans le Japon d'après-guerre, personne ne veut s'occuper d'un petit garçon perdu hormis Tané, une veuve amère. Le lendemain, elle le ramène chez lui et découvre que son père est parti à Tokyo: il semblerait que le petit ait été abandonné.Dans le Japon d'après-guerre, personne ne veut s'occuper d'un petit garçon perdu hormis Tané, une veuve amère. Le lendemain, elle le ramène chez lui et découvre que son père est parti à Tokyo: il semblerait que le petit ait été abandonné.

  • Director
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Writers
    • Tadao Ikeda
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Stars
    • Chôko Iida
    • Hôhi Aoki
    • Eitarô Ozawa
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,7/10
    2,5 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Writers
      • Tadao Ikeda
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Stars
      • Chôko Iida
      • Hôhi Aoki
      • Eitarô Ozawa
    • 19Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 18Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Photos13

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    Rôles principaux14

    Modifier
    Chôko Iida
    Chôko Iida
    • Otane
    Hôhi Aoki
    • Kohei the boy
    Eitarô Ozawa
    Eitarô Ozawa
    • Father
    Mitsuko Yoshikawa
    Mitsuko Yoshikawa
    • Kikuko
    Reikichi Kawamura
    • Tamekichi
    Hideko Mimura
    • Okiku
    Chishû Ryû
    Chishû Ryû
    • Tashiro
    Takeshi Sakamoto
    Takeshi Sakamoto
    • Kihachi Kawayoshi
    Eiko Takamatsu
    • Tome Kawayoshi
    Taiji Tonoyama
    Taiji Tonoyama
    • Photographer
    Yûichi Kôno
    Seiji Nishimura
    • Neighbor
    Fujiyo Osafune
    • Shigeko
    Yoshino Tani
    • Mother
    • Director
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Writers
      • Tadao Ikeda
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs19

    7,72.4K
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    Avis en vedette

    8AlsExGal

    Director Ozu returns after a five year break

    Japanese drama from Shochiku and director Yasujiro Ozu. Poor second-hand merchant O-Tane (Choko Iida) is put in a tough spot when her neighbors bring her a very young boy (Hohi Aoki) and ask her to take care of him. It seems the child was abandoned, and after searching for some time, no family for him could be found. O-Tane angrily agrees, but her grumpy exterior slowly softens as she spends more time with the quiet child. Also featuring Chishu Ryu, Reikichi Kawamura, Takeshi Sakamoto, Mitsuko Yoshikawa, and Eitaro Ozawa.

    This was Ozu's first film after a five year break during WW2. It seems a warm return home, as his style is intact, and many of the same familiar Shochiku players return. Ozu regular Iida gets a spotlight role as the cranky old widow who slowly warms to becoming a surrogate mother. The film is also of interest for its glimpse of post-war Japan, and the struggles and hardships of maintaining a life in the rubble left behind. My only complaint would that, at 71 minutes, it's a bit too short.
    8crossbow0106

    Very Good

    This is a simple story about a fortune teller (Chishu Ryu, who 2 years later would be in "Late Spring" looking like he aged 25 years) who brings home a lost boy. No one wants to take over the burden of caring for the kid, but Otane eventually has to (played by Lida Choko). She clearly wants to get rid of him after going to the place where the kid and his father lived, to find out the father deserted him. He wets the bed and thinks she'll throw him out anyway, because she shows no affection for the boy, but gradually warms to him. Ozu's film is simply told, but there is a sociological underpinning to it that is complex. This situation of deserted children in war and post war Japan had to be a significant one and it is told plainly but effectively. In the small community (with wide open spaces where buildings should be), there is camaraderie and that is heartwarming. It is a fairly short film, just 72 minutes, but the length of the film is perfect. Like many of Ozu's films, this features many of the actors/actresses that were in other films of his, but that is good. They know their roles so well and play them well. Not a masterpiece, but a worthy film to watch.
    10barev-85094

    Little known Ozu Masterpiece packs a subtle Wallop!

    Ozu's Record of a Tenement Gentleman, 1947. B/w, 72 minutes. Original title "Nagaya Shinshiroku ~ (長屋紳士録 ).

    Viewed at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival of 2003. One of the best films seen here that year was a little known Japanese film, in the Ozu retrospective sidebar entitled, "RECORD OF A TENEMENT DWELLER" made just after the war in 1947. This was Ozu's return to filmmaking for Shochiku after four years of military service in China. The film is the story of a simple unmarried woman who is forced, much against her will, to take in a small boy, apparently abandoned in the postwar shattered Tokyo hustle and bustle. After much hostility toward the child, she finally realizes how much he has filled the void in her life and that she in fact loves him -- but only does this realization hit her when the father reappears to repossess his lost child. A simple story so directly told that it sneaks up on you like a time-bomb and makes you realize that your heart was crying -- but only ten minutes after the film is over! An early masterpiece from the master of Zen and the Art of telling stories on film, and an incredibly subtle, yet bombshell, performance by the main actress Chôko Iida, in my book, a retroactive Best Actress Oscar for the year that was. Iida was extremely active in Japanese silent pictures from 1923 on and had already appeared in supporting roles in three prewar Ozu films; "An Inn in Tokyo", (1935) the first version of "Floating Weeds" (1934), and "Dekigoro" (A Passing Fancy, 1933), but this performance when she was already pushing fifty was her acting apotheosis. Unfortunately Ozu's uniquely stylized films were not discovered in the west until after his death in 1963 and are only now becoming recognized little by little in astute cinema circles as the quiet unhurried masterpieces which they are.
    howard.schumann

    Another Ozu masterpiece

    Record of a Tenement Gentleman by Yasujiro Ozu is a heartwarming story of the power of love to heal the hardest heart. In this case the heart belongs to Tane (Shoko Lida), a stern and unforgiving middle-aged widow whose life is turned upside down when a taciturn little boy is brought to her home by a fortuneteller, Tashiro (Chishu Ryu). The boy, Kohei (Hohi Aoki) was lost or abandoned in Chigasaki and followed Tashiro all the way home. After Kohei wets his bed, Tane scolds him in a gruff manner and tries to pass him off to her neighbors but nobody seems to want to care for him.

    Tane takes the boy back to Chigasaki to look for his father (Eitaro Ozawa) but learns that he has left for Tokyo. She returns home and reluctantly agrees to take care of the child a while longer. Shoko Lida beautifully recreates Tane's character showing her to be both tough and tender, her hangdog facial expression indicating that perhaps she is more burdened down by life than cold and rejecting. When the frightened boy runs away after being scolded one more time, Tane realizes that she has begun to have affection for him. Tane and Tashiro now belatedly discover how can children contribute to the quality of life and both develop a new understanding and compassion for the condition of children in postwar Japan. Record of a Tenement Gentleman is another small masterpiece from Ozu.
    9zetes

    Very nice

    A beautiful little film by Ozu, only 72 minutes long, about a young boy who was apparently abandoned by his father. He shacks up with Tané (exquisitely played by Choko Iida) for the first night, but when she can't find his father, he becomes a permanent fixture in her household. At first, she's bitter and mean about it. A middle-age widow, she believes, shouldn't have to deal with snotty-nosed bedwetters. But eventually her resolve weakens and she finds that she has missed a lot by never having had a child. The plotline is predictable and a little cliche (it's the kind of movie that Vittorio de Sica would be criticized relentlessly by trendy critics if he had directed it), but the breezy style of Ozu makes everything wonderful. It's really funny at times, and always very touching. I think it's the most enjoyable Ozu film, with the possible exception of I Was Born But..., that I've ever seen. 9/10.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      This was the first movie made by director Yasujirô Ozu after returning to Japan from his wartime army service abroad. After the surrender, he had been held for half a year in a British POW camp near Singapore, where he had been stationed. Legend has it that he was late in returning to Japan (in February 1946) because, although he was scheduled to be repatriated earlier, another Japanese soldier was desperate to go home, and Ozu let this other man go in his place.
    • Citations

      Tamekichi: [curious about Tashiro's work, which involves fortunetelling] Does fortunetelling work?

      Tashiro: Of course it does. Nothing works better.

      Tamekichi: Really? The other day you left home wearing rain boots, but the day turned out to be sunny.

      Tashiro: Weather isn't my specialty. The weather forecast on the radio works well for that.

    • Connexions
      Featured in The Story of Film: An Odyssey: Birth of the Cinema (2011)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Record of a Tenement Gentleman?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 20 mai 1947 (Japan)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japan
    • Langue
      • Japanese
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Record of a Tenement Gentleman
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Tokyo, Japon(setting of the action)
    • société de production
      • Shochiku
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 12 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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