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Voyage à Tokyo

Titre original : Tôkyô monogatari
  • 1953
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 17min
NOTE IMDb
8,1/10
74 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
3 248
109
Setsuko Hara and Chishû Ryû in Voyage à Tokyo (1953)
Regarder Trailer [OV]
Lire trailer4:16
1 Video
99+ photos
Psychological DramaDrama

Un vieux couple rend visite à ses enfants et petits-enfants en ville, mais ne reçoit que peu d'attention.Un vieux couple rend visite à ses enfants et petits-enfants en ville, mais ne reçoit que peu d'attention.Un vieux couple rend visite à ses enfants et petits-enfants en ville, mais ne reçoit que peu d'attention.

  • Réalisation
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Scénario
    • Kôgo Noda
    • Yasujirô Ozu
  • Casting principal
    • Chishû Ryû
    • Chieko Higashiyama
    • Sô Yamamura
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    8,1/10
    74 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    3 248
    109
    • Réalisation
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Scénario
      • Kôgo Noda
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Casting principal
      • Chishû Ryû
      • Chieko Higashiyama
      • Sô Yamamura
    • 262avis d'utilisateurs
    • 117avis des critiques
    • 100Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Film noté 214 parmi les meilleurs
    • Récompenses
      • 3 victoires au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 4:16
    Trailer [OV]

    Photos398

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 392
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    Rôles principaux30

    Modifier
    Chishû Ryû
    Chishû Ryû
    • Shukichi Hirayama
    Chieko Higashiyama
    Chieko Higashiyama
    • Tomi Hirayama
    Sô Yamamura
    Sô Yamamura
    • Koichi Hirayama
    Setsuko Hara
    Setsuko Hara
    • Noriko Hirayama
    Haruko Sugimura
    Haruko Sugimura
    • Shige Kaneko
    Kuniko Miyake
    Kuniko Miyake
    • Fumiko Hirayama - his wife
    Kyôko Kagawa
    Kyôko Kagawa
    • Kyôko Hirayama
    Eijirô Tôno
    Eijirô Tôno
    • Sanpei Numata
    Nobuo Nakamura
    Nobuo Nakamura
    • Kurazo Kaneko
    Shirô Ôsaka
    • Keizo Hirayama
    Hisao Toake
    • Osamu Hattori
    Teruko Nagaoka
    Teruko Nagaoka
    • Yone Hattori
    Mutsuko Sakura
    • Oden-ya no onna
    Toyo Takahashi
    Toyo Takahashi
    • Rinka no saikun
    • (as Toyoko Takahashi)
    Tôru Abe
    Tôru Abe
    • Tetsudou-shokuin
    Sachiko Mitani
    • Aparto no onna
    Zen Murase
    • Minoru Hirayama - Koichi's son
    Mitsuhiro Môri
    • Isamu Hirayama - Koichi's son
    • Réalisation
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Scénario
      • Kôgo Noda
      • Yasujirô Ozu
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs262

    8,174.3K
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    Résumé

    Reviewers say 'Tokyo Story' is celebrated for its deep dive into family dynamics and generational gaps. It follows an elderly couple's visit to their children in Tokyo, exploring tradition versus modernity and complex relationships. Critics laud Ozu's minimalist approach, static camera, and slow pacing for fostering intimacy. Performances by Ryu and Higashiyama are hailed for authenticity and emotional weight. Despite some finding the pace slow, the film's universal themes and execution solidify its status as a cinematic masterpiece.
    Généré par IA à partir de textes des commentaires utilisateurs

    Avis à la une

    10spqrclaudius

    Extraordinary Portrayal of Real Life

    A fantastic film that belies the simplicity of its plot, Tokyo Story is the tale of a vacation gone sadly awry, with an elderly man and woman visiting from the countryside pushed to the sidelines by their busy children in the city. The younger generation (and by extension the "new" Japan) turns its back on the family from which it arose- because of selfishness, because of necessity, or because it's simply the way of the world. The movie provides no easy answers- its melancholy ambiguity is part of its charm. Whatever the case, Ozu delights in portraying the details of everyday life. The emotional resonances of this movie are extraordinary, and some shots (a child picking flowers, an old couple framed by the sea, a woman sitting forlornly at her work desk) are enough to give a sensitive film-goer the shivers. Despite the testimony of some critics, the film is not totally devoid of melodramatic elements (some stock characters and cloying musical motifs spring readily to mind), but the film is founded upon such an obvious love and respect for the importance of real-world interactions that it's hard not to be anything other than enthralled by it.
    10EUyeshima

    Ozu's Quietly Brilliant Masterpiece Deserves Your Attention

    I think this movie is amazing for reasons I was not expecting. I had heard of Yasujiro Ozu's "Tokyo Story" for several years but never had an opportunity to see it until Criterion resuscitated it as part of their DVD collection. Over fifty years old, this wondrous 1953 film resonates just as deeply today. Those outside Japan rarely get to see a Japanese film classic that doesn't involve samurai warriors in medieval battles. This one, however, is a subtly observed family drama set in post-WWII Japan, and it is the quietude and lack of pretense of Ozu's film-making style that makes this among the most moving of films.

    The plot centers on Shukishi and Tomi, an elderly couple, who traverse the country from their southern fishing village of Onomichi to visit their adult children, daughter Shige and son Koichi, in Tokyo. Leading their own busy lives, the children realize their obligation to entertain them and pack them off to Atami, a nearby resort targeted to weekend revelers. Returning to Tokyo unexpectedly, Tomi visits their kindly daughter-in-law, Noriko, the widow of second son Shoji, while Shukishi gets drunk with some old companions. The old couple realizes they have become a burden to their children and decide to return to Onomichi. They also have a younger daughter Kyoko, a schoolteacher who lives with them, and younger son Keizo works for the train company in Osaka. By now the children, except for Kyoko and the dutiful Noriko, have given up on their parents, even when Tomi takes ill in Osaka on the way back home. From this seemingly convoluted, trivial-sounding storyline, fraught with soap opera possibilities, Ozu has fashioned a heartfelt and ultimately ironic film that focuses on the details in people's lives rather than a single dramatic situation.

    What fascinates me about Ozu's idiosyncratic style is how he relies on insinuation to carry his story forward. In fact, some of the more critical events happen off-camera because Ozu's simple, penetrating observations of these characters' lives remain powerfully insightful without being contrived. Ozu scholar David Desser, who provides insightful commentary on the alternate audio track, explains this concept as "narrative ellipses", Ozu's singularly effective means of providing emotional continuity to a story without providing all the predictable detail in between. Ozu also positions his camera low throughout his film to replicate the perspective of someone sitting on a tatami mat. It adds significantly to the humanity he evokes. There are no melodramatic confrontations among the characters, no masochistic showboating, and the dialogue is deceptively casual, as even the most off-hand remark bears weight into the story. The film condemns no one and its sense of inevitability carries with it only certain resigned sadness. What amazes me most is how the ending is so cathartic because the characters feel so real to me, not because there are manipulative plot developments, even death, which force me to feel for them.

    I just love the performances, as they have a neo-realism that makes them all the more affecting. Chishu Ryu and Chieko Higashiyama are wonderfully authentic as Shukishi and Tomi, perfectly conveying the resignation they feel about their lives and their children without slipping into cheap sentimentality. Higashiyama effortlessly displays the sunny demeanor of a grandmother, so when sadness does take over in her life, it becomes all the more haunting. In particular, she has a beautiful scene where Tomi looks forlornly at her grandchild wondering what he will be when he grows up and whether she will live to see what happens. Even more heartbreaking is the scene where Shukishi and Tomi sit in Ueno Park realizing their children have no time for them and are resigned to the fact that they need to find a place to sleep for the night. The closest the film has to a villain is Shige, portrayed fearlessly by Haruko Sugimura, who is able to show respect, pettiness and conniving in a realistically mercurial fashion. Watch her as she complains about the expensive cakes her husband bought for her parents (as she selfishly eats them herself) or how she finagles Koichi to co-finance the trip to Atami or how she shows her frustration when her parents come home early from the spa. So Yamamura (familiar to later Western audiences as Admiral Yamamoto in "Tora! Tora! Tora!") displays the right amount of indifference as Koichi, and Kyoko Kagawa has a few sharp lines toward the end of the film as the disappointed Kyoko.

    But the best performance comes from the legendary Setsuko Hara, a luminous actress whose beauty and sensitivity remind me of Olivia de Havilland during the same era. As Noriko, she is breathtaking in showing her character's modesty, her unforced generosity in spite of her downscale status and her constant smile as a mask for her pain. She has a number of deeply affecting moments, for instance, when Noriko explains to Shukishi and Tomi how she misses her husband, even though it is implied he was a brutalizing alcoholic; or the touching goodbye to Kyoko; or her pained embarrassment over the high esteem that Shukishi holds for her kindness. Don't expect fireworks or any shocking moments, just a powerfully emotional film in spite of its seemingly modest approach. The two-disc DVD set has the commentary from Desser on the first disc, as well as the trailer. On the second disc, there are two excellent documentaries. One is a comprehensive 1983, two-hour feature focused on Ozu's life and career, and the second is a 40-minute tribute from several international movie directors.
    10Cheesedemon28

    "Isn't Life Depressing?"

    Two women are sitting on tatami mats. They are smiling and talking. One of

    them says, "Isn't life depressing?" Wow... that pretty much says it.

    Tokyo Story is defenitely one of the finest movies ever made. Easy. I don't care what anyone says: slow or not, this is one of Ozu's finest films. Very few movies have made my cry, but I did indeed weep at this movie. All of the acting

    performances are very believeable, especially Hara's. The interesting knee- level tatami cinematography suits the film perfectly. Even the music is

    impeccable.

    What really gets me with Tokyo Story is how stunningly realistic it is. From the dialogue to the story, everything feels like real life. No matter what language you speak, what culture or country you hail from, this element is universal.

    It's pretty much perfect... every character is fleshed out, there are no plot holes left open... I can't find anything to complain about it! 50 years after its release and it's still very contemporary... damn.

    I give it **** out of ****.
    9Farzad-Doosti

    Now that I am alone, I feel that the days are too long.

    Japanese cinema is full of great and creative directors. From Kurosawa and Mizugochi to more modern filmmakers like Kobayashi and Nagisa Oshima and Shishihara. Yet Ozu, like a detached taffeta of them all, deserves the title of the most Japanese filmmaker in the history of cinema. A filmmaker who, if they show you a shot of a film you have not seen before, you will immediately know that it was made by artist Yasujiro Ozu.

    The Tokyo Story is one of the best films ever made and one of the most important works of art of the twentieth century. As an artist and, of course, a great teacher, Ozu slowly creates the structure of his masterpiece with his inherent camera and inherent calmness, so that the viewer suddenly finds himself in the middle of it without realizing it.

    "The passage of irreversible moments" Life is the field of our right and wrong choices, and the Tokyo Story is a small corner of this life and choices, and with all its beauties and ugliness, it is full of flips and lessons. Look at the Tokyo Story movie not as a fun movie but as a lasting impact on your life forever, so that we may pay a little more attention to what we have today that may not be tomorrow.
    10Stroheim-3

    FANTASTIC

    I need to say this: THIS MOVIE IS ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC!!! Sure it starts off slowly, but the fact of the matter is the film is a great story of a family and the alienation associated with aging. This is the kind of movie that will make you reflect upon your own family and how you treat them.

    I had never seen an Ozu film before, but now I feel as if I must see them all. His use of cinematic space is incredible. He breaks all sorts of conventions with his cinematography such as violating the axis of action. This gives the viewer the sense of a large, open, unrestricted world.

    Going with this realism, the characters seem real; not for a moment did I see the people on the screen as actors. They were the family, and you as the viewer feels what they feel. Part of this comes from the use of head-on-shots such that the characters are speaking TO you.

    It is a fantastic, moving piece of work and arguably one of the best films ever made.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The film is notable for its use of the "tatami-mat" shot, in which the camera height is low and remains largely static throughout.
    • Gaffes
      (At around 1hr 45 mins) When the children are visiting their mother at home and leave the room to talk with the father in an adjoining room, just as they sit on the floor, the shadow of the boom-mic can be seen to drop into the scene and back out again, just over the son's head on the top right of the screen. This shadow is well into the frame against the edge of what appears to be a bookshelf and should not be considered a masking mistake of the projectionist.
    • Citations

      Kyoko: [after the rest of the family had left] I think they should have stayed a bit longer.

      Noriko: But they're busy.

      Kyoko: They're selfish. Demanding things and leaving like this.

      Noriko: They have their own affairs.

      Kyoko: But you have yours too. They're selfish.

      Noriko: But Kyoko...

      Kyoko: Wanting her clothes right after her death. I felt so sorry for poor mother. Even strangers would have been more considerate!

      Noriko: But look Kyoko. At your age I thought so too. But children do drift away from their parents. A woman has her own life, apart from her parents, when she becomes Shige's age. She meant no harm I'm sure. They have to look after their own lives.

      Kyoko: I wonder: I won't ever be like that. Then what's the point of family?

      Noriko: But children become like that, gradually.

      Kyoko: Then... you, too?

      Noriko: I may become like that in spite of myself.

      Kyoko: Isn't life disappointing?

      Noriko: Yes, it is.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Tokyo-Ga (1985)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Tokyo Story?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 8 février 1978 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
    • Langues
      • Japonais
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Conte de Tokyo
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Tokyo, Japon
    • Sociétés de production
      • Shochiku
      • Entertain Me Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Montant brut mondial
      • 93 091 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      2 heures 17 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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