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Herbes flottantes

Titre original : Ukigusa
  • 1959
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 59m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,9/10
9,5 k
MA NOTE
Herbes flottantes (1959)
Drame

Le chef d'une troupe de théâtre japonaise retourne dans une petite ville côtière où il avait laissé son fils qui pense qu'il est son oncle. Alors qu'il tente de rattraper le temps perdu, sa ... Tout lireLe chef d'une troupe de théâtre japonaise retourne dans une petite ville côtière où il avait laissé son fils qui pense qu'il est son oncle. Alors qu'il tente de rattraper le temps perdu, sa maîtresse devient jalouse.Le chef d'une troupe de théâtre japonaise retourne dans une petite ville côtière où il avait laissé son fils qui pense qu'il est son oncle. Alors qu'il tente de rattraper le temps perdu, sa maîtresse devient jalouse.

  • Director
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Writers
    • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Kôgo Noda
    • Tadao Ikeda
  • Stars
    • Ganjirô Nakamura
    • Machiko Kyô
    • Haruko Sugimura
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,9/10
    9,5 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Writers
      • Yasujirô Ozu
      • Kôgo Noda
      • Tadao Ikeda
    • Stars
      • Ganjirô Nakamura
      • Machiko Kyô
      • Haruko Sugimura
    • 49Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 58Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Photos182

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    Rôles principaux39

    Modifier
    Ganjirô Nakamura
    Ganjirô Nakamura
    • Komajurô Arashi
    Machiko Kyô
    Machiko Kyô
    • Sumiko
    Haruko Sugimura
    Haruko Sugimura
    • Oyoshi
    Ayako Wakao
    Ayako Wakao
    • Kayo
    Hiroshi Kawaguchi
    Hiroshi Kawaguchi
    • Kiyoshi Homma
    Hitomi Nozoe
    Hitomi Nozoe
    • Aiko
    Chishû Ryû
    Chishû Ryû
    • Theatre Owner
    Kôji Mitsui
    Kôji Mitsui
    • Kichinosuke
    Haruo Tanaka
    Haruo Tanaka
    • Yatazô
    Yosuke Irie
    • Sugiyama
    Hikaru Hoshi
    • Kimura
    Mantarô Ushio
    Mantarô Ushio
    • Sentarô
    Kumeko Urabe
    Kumeko Urabe
    • Shige
    Toyo Takahashi
    Toyo Takahashi
    • Aiko's Mother
    Mutsuko Sakura
    • Okatsu
    Natsuko Kahara
    Natsuko Kahara
    • Yae
    Masahiko Shimazu
    Masahiko Shimazu
    • Masao
    Michisumi Sugawara
    • Guest
    • Director
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Writers
      • Yasujirô Ozu
      • Kôgo Noda
      • Tadao Ikeda
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs49

    7,99.4K
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    Avis en vedette

    howard.schumann

    Exquisitely restrained

    Floating Weeds by Yasujiro Ozu is an exquisitely restrained film about a failing acting troupe that travels to a small town and engenders a conflict of generations in a Japanese family. As the film opens a boat moves slowly into the harbor a Japanese coastal village. A Kabuki troupe arrives and begins to pass out leaflets announcing their opening performance. Sadly the opening crowds are small. Komajuro (Ganjiro Nakamura), the principal actor in the troupe, goes off by himself to visit Oyoshi (Haruko Sugimura), a former lover who runs a Saki bar. She has an adult son, Kiyoshi (Hiroshi Kawaguchi) who Komajuro had fathered many years ago. Komajuro has hidden his identity from the boy because of his shame at being a traveling actor and Kiyoshi only knows of him only as "uncle".

    When Sumiko (Machiko Kyo), Komajuro's mistress and leading star, finds out about this relationship she goes into a jealous rage and hires a young actress, Kayo (Ayako Wakao) to seduce Kiyoshi in order to humiliate his father. Kiyoshi, however, falls in love with Kayo. Komajuro disapproves and shows his anger but cannot exert parental authority since he has not told his son the truth about his parentage. As the troupe continues to draw small crowds, Komajuro's inner pain becomes visible and he strikes out physically against Kayo, Sumiko, and Kiyoshi. It is only in the surprising conclusion that he seems to regain some sense of acceptance of his circumstances.

    Floating Weeds is a very intimate experience. The camera does not move but remains focused on the characters as they engage in discussions about commonplace events. As in Bresson, the actors show little emotion and speak in a monotone with long silences between questions and answers. The overall effect, however, is not banality but a sense of the natural rhythm of life. Ozu is a loving observer of human nature not a moralist. There are no saints in this film and each character is vulnerable and deeply human. Komajuro has been stripped of his career, his relationship with his son, and his female companions who still beg him for forgiveness. He is alone but he has retained his humanity and we feel only compassion for him. The ending is, in the phrase of Donald Richie, "a kind of resigned sadness, a calm and knowing serenity which maintains despite the uncertainty of life and things of this world". Floating Weeds is a masterful film from a director who truly respects his audience.
    8jamesrupert2014

    Excellent colour 'remake' of Ozu's black and white silent classic

    An itinerant troupe of Kabuki players bring their shows to the small town in which their leader Komajuro (Nakamura Ganjiro II) sired a son (Kiyoshi, Hiroshi Kawaguchi) from whom he has hidden his parentage. This beautifully made film is Yasujiro Ozu's 'remake' of his 1934 silent (A Story of Floating Weeds). Like all of Ozu's films, little happens as his static camera catches vignettes of the various shabby players as they try to hustle up an audience for their dated show, hit on the local girls (in several amusing scenes), and drink. Much of the story is about Komajuro's reconnecting with Oyoshi (Haruko Sugimura), the mother of his son and the jealous reactions of Sumiko, Machiko Kyo, his current mistress. Like all of Ozu's films, the drifting apart of generations is a focus as Komajuro struggles to ensure that Kiyoshi will go to university and not be destined to live the same life as his parents or the members of the troupe. Like the original, the story and the 'feel' is poignant and melancholy (although there are some comical moments, I missed the scenes in the silent version in which the little boy with the errant bladder plays a dog when the troupe is on stage). Watched with English subtitles.
    10Galina_movie_fan

    Perfect Balance of Comedy and Moving Drama

    I wrote this after I saw my first Ozu's film, "Tokyo Story" about a year ago: "As with every great work, the film has its own unique perfection in style, rhythm, details, and artist's vision - but Tokyo Story is very universal in its appeal, simply put, it is for every parent, every son or daughter - for everyone. It was made 50 years ago in Japan, about people who lived far away, but it is also about all of us, our families, our problems, our guilt and our search for love and meaning. Ozu's film does not require one to be a movie buff or to try to solve complex symbolism to appreciate and love it. It brings smiles because it is a comedy (for at least the first 2/3) and sadness with a high drama of the last 1/3 of the film."

    I feel absolutely the same about "Floating Weeds". The film is quiet and deceptively simple but its simplicity reminded me the words of Michelangelo Buanorotti. When asked how he created the perfect statues from the shapeless marble lumps, he answered, "It is very simple, you just cut off all unnecessary pieces".

    Ozu's films are perfect - they touch us with rare warmth, soft enveloping tenderness and power of human emotions not necessarily with striking visual or sound effects. "Floating Weeds" is a remake of earlier silent black and white Ozu's film "The Story of Floating Weeds". The story is simple: an aging, traveling actor who is the manager of a kabuki troupe returns to a remote village where he secretly meets his former lover and her 19 year old illegitimate son, to whom he is known as "uncle." The older man finds happiness in communicating with his son who turned to be a fine young man. His current mistress, filled with jealousy because of his attachment to his secret family, hires a young beautiful girl, the member of a troupe to seduce a boy. Something in this story attracted Ozu so much that he remade the film twenty five years later.

    "Floating Weeds" is a beautiful color film and it is the first color Ozu's film for me. The colors are bright and fresh, tender and kind - they match the director's style perfectly. The delightful music by Kojun Saito reminds me of Nina Rota music in Fellini's films - nostalgic, innocent and rhythmic.
    SanTropez_Couch

    Simple never felt so good

    Komajuro Arashi and his acting troupe arrive in a small fishing village on the coast of Japan. Komanjuro goes to visit a woman who runs a sake bar, and who, we learn, is a former lover, and with whom he fathered a child, though the child is unaware of this fact and believes him to be his uncle

    Their son, Kiyoshi, has just finished high school, and Komanju comes to see him as much as his former lover. He hopes that Kiyoshi will be able to become something in his life and not end up like Komanju himself, a washed-up actor drawing small crowds for his failing samurai productions.

    When Komajuro talks with his gorgeous young son, we can see the excitement in his eyes, in his face. The acting here is all rather flat, or better, it's reserved. (Ozu adds a little joke to this later in the film, when on a fishing boat Kiyoshi accuses his father of being "too muggy" in his performance.) This adds to the impact of the few emotional (and physical) outbursts later in the film.

    The conflict in the film is that of Komajuro's double lives. When his current mistress, Miss Sumiko -- a jealous and conniving witch of a woman -- discovers that he's been seeing some other woman, she's enraged, and plots what she believes will be his sort of downfall. By hiring a young woman, Kayo, to seduce Kiyoshi and embarrass Komajuro, she plans on making the two seem like different generations of the same person, both relating with unimportant actresses, thereby ruining Komajuro's hopes of his son becoming somebody important.

    Unlike most, Ozu is an auteur because of what he doesn't do. His unmoving camera, which is famous, sits placidly, observing the characters with interest. I do sometimes wish that the camera would move around curiously, interested in the conversations of the characters, but maybe Ozu's point was that his camera is (or we should be) too interested to move, and that the events of everyday life need not be jazzed up for entertainment purposes. (He seems to mock this idea when he has Komajuro say to Kiyoshi about his plays that, basically, modern audiences can't appreciate good drama.) The entire film is restrained; on the rare occasion when people cry, they cover their faces and softly whimper.

    The ending shot of a dark blue sky, with red lights from a rolling train, reminds us that whether it's 2003 in North America or 1959 in a small Japanese fishing village, we're all the same people with the same problems.

    In and of itself, the film is terrifically simple: a simple story, with simple acting, simple music, and made even more simple by the simplicity of the static camera. But what makes the film something special, rather than just some family drama, is the honesty. Ozu isn't after anything big here. Any enlightenment comes from Ozu's realization that the most important conflicts are in the home, the ones no one sees, the ones we all feel.

    ****
    tedg

    Sliding Slide Show

    Ozu is a wonderful experience just to watch the musical formations. Each shot is composed in the most careful way so that the assembly has a geometric rhythm. It is soft and melodic, this visual overlay, painting in motion. No one does it better that I know.

    There's a talk between two troubled lovers in the rain, then in opposing shelters, that is especially noteworthy, but it is all so cinematically lovely...

    The way he's put this together is very Japanese. Each shot length is nearly precisely the length of the one before. Each employs a stationary camera only, but the positioning of the camera only sometimes is where a human eye would be. As I've mentioned, The composition in terms of elements, space and color is perfect in each shot and follows in a deliberate, engineered pattern from the previous shots.

    The narrative isn't integrated in the way Kurosawa would do — and be considered un-Japanese for. But the story does much of that for us.

    It is a story about pretense and staging, with most of the actors playing characters who are actors and have trouble in being an actor.

    You'll have to work to be engaged in the story. But its rather easy to just sit back and admire the loveliness. Ozu is always worth it for this. I don't know many of his films, but this is the most formal of those I know.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Stated by cinematographer Kazuo Miyagawa about director Yasujirô Ozu: "I'll never forget that, from the first day on, he knew the names of everybody on the set, fifty people in the crew, people he'd never worked with. He'd written their names down, I learned later. But everyone was impressed and became devoted to him. Every single day working on this film was extremely pleasurable and enriching. In each of Ozu's films you can sniff his personality. He was pure, gentle, light-hearted, a fine individual."
    • Gaffes
      Near the end, sandals disappear or move around: after Kiyoshi argues with his father, he runs upstairs, first slipping out of his sandals and leaving them at the bottom (center) of the stairs. Moments later, Kayo goes up to him. We see that she, too, removes her sandals at the bottom of the stairs. But Kiyoshi's sandals have now suddenly disappeared: we see only Kayo's sandals at the bottom of the stairs. Moments later, Kiyoshi comes back downstairs to go after his father. He goes to put on his sandals, which have now suddenly reappeared, but in a different location from where he took them off. A moment later, Kayo also comes down the stairs and puts on her sandals, which are approximately where she had removed them and placed them, moments earlier.
    • Citations

      Komajuro Arashi: You can't help an empty house, when it's empty.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert Holiday Gift Guide (1989)
    • Bandes originales
      Wasurecha iyayo (aka: Don't forget me)
      Composed by Yoshikatsu Hoshoda

      Sang by the play troupe on a ship

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    FAQ

    • How long is Floating Weeds?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 17 novembre 1959 (Japan)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japan
    • Langue
      • Japanese
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Floating Weeds
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Kii Peninsula, Honshu, Japon
    • société de production
      • Daiei Studios
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 59 minutes
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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