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Les enfants d'Hiroshima

Titre original : Genbaku no ko
  • 1952
  • 12
  • 1h 37min
NOTE IMDb
7,6/10
1,4 k
MA NOTE
Les enfants d'Hiroshima (1952)
DramaWar

Hiroshima d'après-guerre: Quatre ans se sont écoulés depuis sa dernière visite dans sa ville natale. Takako est confrontée aux séquelles de la bombe A lorsqu'elle parcourt la ville pour rend... Tout lireHiroshima d'après-guerre: Quatre ans se sont écoulés depuis sa dernière visite dans sa ville natale. Takako est confrontée aux séquelles de la bombe A lorsqu'elle parcourt la ville pour rendre visite à de vieux amis.Hiroshima d'après-guerre: Quatre ans se sont écoulés depuis sa dernière visite dans sa ville natale. Takako est confrontée aux séquelles de la bombe A lorsqu'elle parcourt la ville pour rendre visite à de vieux amis.

  • Réalisation
    • Kaneto Shindô
  • Scénario
    • Arata Osada
    • Kaneto Shindô
  • Casting principal
    • Nobuko Otowa
    • Osamu Takizawa
    • Masao Shimizu
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,6/10
    1,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Kaneto Shindô
    • Scénario
      • Arata Osada
      • Kaneto Shindô
    • Casting principal
      • Nobuko Otowa
      • Osamu Takizawa
      • Masao Shimizu
    • 9avis d'utilisateurs
    • 10avis des critiques
    • 86Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Victoire aux 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total

    Photos16

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    Rôles principaux42

    Modifier
    Nobuko Otowa
    Nobuko Otowa
    • Takako Ishikawa
    Osamu Takizawa
    Osamu Takizawa
    • Iwakichi
    Masao Shimizu
    Masao Shimizu
    • Toshiaki - Takako's Father
    Jûkichi Uno
    • Kôji
    • (scènes coupées)
    Akira Yamanouchi
    Akira Yamanouchi
      Takashi Itô
      Jun Tatara
      Tsutomu Shimomoto
      • Natsue's Husband
      Hideji Ôtaki
      Eiken Shôji
      Shinsuke Ashida
      Shinsuke Ashida
      Shin Date
      Chikako Hosokawa
      Chikako Hosokawa
      • Setsu - Takako's Mother
      Tanie Kitabayashi
      Tanie Kitabayashi
      • Otoyo
      Yoshiko Sakurai
      Miwa Saitô
      • Natsue Morikawa
      Tomoko Naraoka
      Tomoko Naraoka
      Yumi Takano
      • Réalisation
        • Kaneto Shindô
      • Scénario
        • Arata Osada
        • Kaneto Shindô
      • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
      • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

      Avis des utilisateurs9

      7,61.4K
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      Avis à la une

      7zetes

      Pretty good, but a tad two-dimensional

      Takako Ishikawa stars as a woman from Hiroshima who left it shortly after the bombing to live with her aunt and uncle on a nearby island. She lost the rest of her family in the disaster. Four years afterward, she returns to check up on old acquaintances. Ishikawa is basically an audience surrogate, as we see how the people of Hiroshima are doing. The answer: not that well, as you might expect. The city is still devastated, people are dying of radiation poisoning, many are horribly injured. But life goes on, represented by the children of the city, many of them orphans, but they live their lives as carefree as they can. Ishikawa feels guilty for leaving the city and not being able to help her townspeople, but she finds hope in a young boy, the grandson of one of her father's employees. Osamu Takizawa is now a blind beggar, and can't really take care of the boy himself (he lives in an orphanage). Ishikawa offers to adopt the boy, but he is understandably reluctant to leave his grandfather behind. This is a touching film, but it is pretty two dimensional. It kept reminding me of the far superior Grave of the Fireflies, and the only tears I shed during it came about because I was thinking of the Isao Takahata anime (a rare film which I just cannot recall without tearing up). Takizawa gives a pretty good performance. Ishikawa went on to star in Shindo's three most famous films, Onibaba, The Naked Island and Kuroneko. The very unsubtle score is by Akira Ifukube, who would go on to score Gojira and tons of other kaiju eiga.
      10lreynaert

      Personal responsibility

      Kaneto Shindo's movie is without any doubt one of the best ever made. It deals head-on with one of the greatest catastrophes in the history of mankind: the dropping for pure geopolitical reasons of a nuclear bomb on a city thereby killing thousands of innocents citizens in the twinkling of an eye and wreaking havoc for centuries to come on a country (and also very slightly on the whole living world) because the human genetic basic material has been damaged.

      Kaneto Shindo's movie shows preeminently that the fate of the world and the human species depends solely on the responsible or irresponsible behavior of every single person on earth. In this movie, a teacher is looking for survivors among the children of her kindergarten class. There are only three. On her own initiative, she tries to secure a more hopeful future for one of those.

      This impeccably played movie (also by the children) is simply unforgettable. A must see. For a geopolitical interpretation of the dropping of the atomic bomb I highly recommend the book 'The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb' by Gar Alperovitz.
      10jamesrupert2014

      Poignant reminder of the consequences of nuclear war

      Takako Ishikawa (Nobuko Otowa), a young kindergarten teacher, reconnects with pupils and friends in Hiroshima four years after the city was demolished by an atomic bomb*. The film is a moving commentary of the consequences of nuclear weapons, especially on children, and wisely that is where the emphasis lies - not on the moral and strategic debates pertaining to their use in 1945. There is a brief recreation of the detonation of the bomb, with searing images of people and animals dying, but most of the film is about the people Ishikawa visits as she wanders through the slowly rebuilding city, such as an scarred and blind beggar who was a former employee of her father, a former pupil dying of radiation-induced illness, a young woman crippled in the explosion, and another young woman sterilized by ionizing radiation. Directed by Kaneto Shindo (who would later direct the creepy 'Onibaba' (1964)) with music by Akira Ifukube (of 'Gojira' (1954) fame), the film is touching and tragic. Otowa is excellent as the sweet, soft-spoken young teacher who serves to connect the stories. 'Children of Hiroshima' was the first of two 'anti-war' films sponsored by The Japan Teachers Union. Apparently not satisfied with the product, the union commissioned the second film, simply entitled 'Hiroshima' (1953) and directed by Hideo Sekigawa, which is much more epic, with many scenes of crowds of badly burned survivors stumbling through devastated streets to the river and the final shots of tens of thousands of people congregating in The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park. Shindo's film is much more low-key and personal, as the camera follows the young teacher as she vicariously experiences the suffering of the survivors. Both are excellent 'docu-dramas' but I found Shindo's film to be more affecting, perhaps because the interactions between Ishikawa and the piteous survivors were so well done. Like most films intended to deliver a message, 'Children of Hiroshima' is not subtle, but it is beautifully made, memorable, and well worth watching. Perhaps films like this contributed to the fact that, despite their proliferation, nuclear weapons have never again been used in a military conflict. *Comments pertain to the English-subtitled version shown on TCM in 2020 (the 75th anniversary of the bombing).
      7boblipton

      Downfall

      Nobuko Otowa lives on a small, beautiful island in the house of her uncle, but she grew up in Hiroshima and taught kindergarten there. She returns to her home town to lay flowers on the graves of her parents in the blasted cemetery and see the children she taught. She encounters Osamu Takizawa. Once he was her father's employee. Now, scarred and blinded by the A-Bomb, he ekes out a living, caring only about his parentless grandson.

      Confronted with a movie about the consequences of the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima, my urge is to write about Operation Downfall, its US armed forces casualties estimated at between half a million and a million dead, and two to four million wounded; Japan's Operation Ketsugo, its propaganda campaign of "One Hundred Million Deaths For The Emperor!"; and other factors that made dropping the Bomb not just a political necessity, but an issue of saving lives.

      However, Kaneto Shindô's film isn't about the big picture. It's about the tragedy of a small boy who refuses to leave his grandfather. The A-bomb isn't a racist plot by Americans to kill Japanese. It, like war, are monsters that kill people for no reason whatsoever. Blinded old men, fatherless children, women rendered sterile are the lucky ones.
      7CinemaSerf

      Children of Hiroshima

      It's been six years since teacher "Takako Ishiwaka" (Nobuko Otowa) lost her parents in the Hiroshima blast and she is now planning on returning to the city to visit friends and to remember her family. On arrival, she stays with "Natsue Morikawa" (Miwa Saitô) who has been rendered infertile by the toxic after-effects of the explosion. This is where this emotionally heart-rending story starts. She explores what's left of the city only to discover that in many areas, a remarkable regeneration has occurred. In others, though, people are living an hand-to-mouth existence and that includes her father's former colleague "Iwakichi" (Osamu Takizawa) who is all but blind and living amongst the ruins whilst his grandchild lives in a nearby orphanage. She is informed that a few of her own fellow school pupils have also survived and so visits them - providing director Kaneto Shindô with an opportunity to present us with three different examples of post-war life and of the resignation, stoicism and maybe even slight optimism of those starting to rebuild - whilst they all turn nervously to the sky when they hear an aircraft overhead. Accompanied by some flashbacks to happier times, this tells a touching story of people whose lives, and in many cases beliefs, have been utterly destroyed. Their infrastructure is gone - physically and psychologically, yet she epitomises a decency and the imagery cannot help but engender a sense of pity from anyone watching. No, it doesn't put this into any form of context with the abhorrent behaviour of the troops who fought in their name elsewhere, so no real attempt is made to politicise the situation. It's more a series of personal tales that do quite succinctly bring home the true horrors of the original weapon of mass destruction and of human resilience.

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      Histoire

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      Le saviez-vous

      Modifier
      • Anecdotes
        The film was sponsored by Japan Teachers' Union.
      • Citations

        Toshiko, former pupil: [Takako is visiting her in a church, where she lies critically ill with radiation sickness] Ah, Teacher.

        Takako Ishikawa: You still remember me.

        Toshiko, former pupil: I didn't at first but it came to me.

        Takako Ishikawa: Have you live here all this time?

        Toshiko, former pupil: Yes, for six years. The priest saved me the day of the bomb. I've been here ever since.

        Takako Ishikawa: And your mother and father?

        Toshiko, former pupil: Everyone was killed. And I decided to stay here. Here I can say prayers for them. I ask God to grant us peace forever.

        Takako Ishikawa: That is a very good thing to do.

        Toshiko, former pupil: Now I understand that war is the greatest evil. War is hell.

        Toshiko, former pupil: [continues] Teacher, will you sing for me?

        Takako Ishikawa: What shall I sing?

        Toshiko, former pupil: The one you always sang at lunch. About the red ship.

        Takako Ishikawa: You remember very well!

        Toshiko, former pupil: I want to hear it just once more.

        Takako Ishikawa: Alright, then...

        Takako Ishikawa: [starts to sing] Dear Mother, go to sleep and don't cry. Father will come home tomorrow in a red boat.

        Toshiko, former pupil: Is it nice on your island?

        Takako Ishikawa: Beautiful. I wish you could visit me. The sun rises out of the eastern sea, and sets in the west.

        Toshiko, former pupil: I'd love to, but I don't think I will. I'm going to die. But I don't mind because I'll go and join my mother and father.

        [turns away, folds her hands on her chest in prayer]

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      FAQ16

      • How long is Children of Hiroshima?Alimenté par Alexa

      Détails

      Modifier
      • Date de sortie
        • 3 mars 1954 (France)
      • Pays d’origine
        • Japon
      • Langue
        • Japonais
      • Aussi connu sous le nom de
        • Children of Hiroshima
      • Lieux de tournage
        • Hiroshima City, Hiroshima, Japon
      • Sociétés de production
        • Hiroshima City
        • Hiroshima Peace Cultural Center
        • Japan Teachers Union
      • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

      Spécifications techniques

      Modifier
      • Durée
        1 heure 37 minutes
      • Couleur
        • Black and White
      • Mixage
        • Mono
      • Rapport de forme
        • 1.37 : 1

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