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Ventiquattro occhi

Titolo originale: Nijûshi no hitomi
  • 1954
  • T
  • 2h 36min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,0/10
3117
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Ventiquattro occhi (1954)
Dramma

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaSchoolteacher Hisako Oishi forms an emotional bond with her pupils and teaches them various virtues, while at the same time worrying about their future.Schoolteacher Hisako Oishi forms an emotional bond with her pupils and teaches them various virtues, while at the same time worrying about their future.Schoolteacher Hisako Oishi forms an emotional bond with her pupils and teaches them various virtues, while at the same time worrying about their future.

  • Regia
    • Keisuke Kinoshita
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Keisuke Kinoshita
    • Sakae Tsuboi
  • Star
    • Hideko Takamine
    • Itsuo Watanabe
    • Makoto Miyagawa
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    8,0/10
    3117
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Keisuke Kinoshita
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Keisuke Kinoshita
      • Sakae Tsuboi
    • Star
      • Hideko Takamine
      • Itsuo Watanabe
      • Makoto Miyagawa
    • 33Recensioni degli utenti
    • 36Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 10 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Foto40

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    + 33
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    Interpreti principali59

    Modifica
    Hideko Takamine
    Hideko Takamine
    • Ôishi Sensei
    Itsuo Watanabe
    • Takeichi Takeshita - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Makoto Miyagawa
    • Kichiji Tokuda - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Takeo Terashita
    • Tadashi Morioka - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Kunio Satô
    • Nita Aizawa - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Hiroko Ishii
    • Masuno Kagawa - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Yasuko Koike
    • Misako Nishiguchi - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Setsuko Kusano
    Setsuko Kusano
    • Matsue Kawamoto - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Kaoko Kase
    • Sanae Yamaishi - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Yumiko Tanabe
    • Kotsuru Kabe - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Ikuko Kanbara
    • Fujiko Kinoshita - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Hiroko Uehara
    • Kotoe Katagiri - Bunkyôjô Jidai
    Hitoshi Gôko
    • Isokichi Okada - Honkô Jidai
    Shirô Watanabe
    • Takeichi Takeshita - Honkô Jidai
    Jun'ichi Miyagawa
    • Kichiji Tokuda - Honkô Jidai
    Takeaki Terashita
    • Tadashi Morioka - Honkô Jidai
    Takeshi Satô
    • Nita Aizawa - Honkô Jidai
    Shisako Ishii
    • Masuno Kagawa - Honkô Jidai
    • Regia
      • Keisuke Kinoshita
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Keisuke Kinoshita
      • Sakae Tsuboi
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti33

    8,03.1K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    9thomaskasaki

    The truth about being Japanese.

    25 years ago I made up my mind I would move to Japan. So I wrote to people in Japan who had lived there for over thirty years, and asked them what would be the #1 movie I should watch that encapsulated the spirit of the Japanese.

    They all suggested "24 Eyes".

    Now, after having lived in a strictly Japanese environment for five years, and having seen well over thirty Japanese movies, not to mention over a thousand hours of TV shows and animae, it is still the #1 to me.

    By today's standards it will seem extremely "G" rated, a little too slow and a bit too long. But for those who want to really understand people, and where they are coming from, I can't think of a better movie to recommend. I wish every culture, particularly those that may be going extinct, would use this movie as a guideline to tell their story.
    9guardian-genghis

    Masterpiece of storytelling...

    People who view this film would do well to consider the sentiment of post-war Japan in the mid-50s, when the future was still uncertain and the vast devastation and shame caused by the war were prevalent in the mindset of its citizens.

    The timing for this film's release was significant, because perhaps for the first time, it permitted the people of Japan to cry unabashedly for themselves, far removed from any political statement so frequent in Shochiku films such as with many of Kurosawa's classics. Movies at the time tended to have positive, uplifting themes that motivated the populous to help rebuild the country into a modern democratic nation. You can thank Douglas MacArthur for that.

    The post-war generation was now almost 10 years old, and in the Japanese psyche was the need for justification for its darkest period in history.

    This film served as a reminder of the horrors of war, not from the battlefields, but from the emotional scars left on its children who lived and died during it.

    Hideko Takamine brilliantly played the role of a school teacher on a typical remote island community in south Japan during an increasingly militarist government. As was customary at the time, the same teacher saw to their students' education from primary to high school, forming a lifetime bond.

    Director Keisuke Kinoshita's camera work is nothing less than genius, beautifully portraying the transitions of seasons from year to year. The water, sand, and dust textures are so distinct that you almost forget that it was filmed in black and white.

    The character closeups are never exaggerated and the 12 children actors (hence "24 Eyes") do an outstanding job portraying how they end up sacrificing their childhood dreams due to poverty and for national duty.

    Of symbolic note is the appearance of the Island bus, which is seen at first with Japanese kanji characters painted on the side. Later in the film, it's written in English as "Shima Bus", signifying how modernization has reached the island after the war.

    From cast, location and cinematography, Nijushi no Hitomi is a masterpiece of emotional storytelling.
    10bret_hart

    An incredible tour through Japanese history.

    "Years might go by, but the mountain colour never change."

    This movie is an excellent work of art by Keisuke Kinoshita.

    It starts off with a new teacher being assigned to teach the first grade in a poor village. She is initially rejected from the community, and is gossiped about constantly. However the students she teaches fall in love with her style. One of her tasks is to teach the children to sing. However, instead of teaching school songs or patriotic songs, she teaches them folk songs. Misfortune strikes and she is forced to leave the school, but not before she makes a lasting impression on the children. They will see her again, as a teacher, but not for another five years.

    From these humble beginnings a rich story about the poor in Japan before, during, and after World War 2 is shown. We get to know all twelve children ("24 eyes") in the movie, and eventually learn about their fates as adults. We see the equivalent of the "Red Scare" in Japan, and the saddening events caused by World War 2. Although overdramatic, the feelings still feel genuine and even the hardest of people will not be able to resist shedding a tear or two over the fates of the children you grow to love.

    I can only ask you to watch the full 3 hours. That is the only way one can truly appreciate the beauty of this film. There is nothing else to be said.
    9zetes

    An incredibly moving film

    Mostly unknown and frequently dismissed in the West, this film is often considered by the Japanese to be one of their very best films, if not their best. I concur with the Japanese. I can understand the issues people have with it, namely that it is overly sentimental, but I think it mostly earns the tears that are shed over it. It's a film in the classic teacher genre, like Goodbye Mr. Chips. Hideko Takamine plays Hisako Oishi, a young woman who begins the movie as a first grade teacher on a small island in 1928. Being a small population, she ends up staying with the same students for several years. The film ends in the 1950s, so you kind of know what will probably happen to her male students, and what she and her female students will have to experience. It may be somewhat predictable, but it's incredibly heartbreaking. The film is beautifully made, and filled with Japanese folk songs (strangely, the score of the film is made up of a bunch of Western music, including "Bonnie Annie Laurie" and "There's No Place Like Home"; it's definitely a flaw). Takamine, who starred in several Mikio Naruse films around the same time, is exceptional.
    8ebiros2

    Movie Made When People Still Had Innocence

    24 eyes is based on a novel that was written in 1952 by Sakae Tsuboi. It's a story about the life of a school teacher in three different time period (1928 to 1947) of Japan, namely pre- war period, during war, and post war Japan. Sakae was also born in Shodo-shima island like the main character of this movie Ms. Ooishi (Hideko Takamine). The movie has a strong anti-war theme to it as well as showing how tough life was when Japan was still a third world country.

    In 1928 new school teacher named Ooishi (her first name is never mentioned in the movie) comes to the satellite school in Shodo-shima island, where there are 12 children. The place is a real country side and Ms Ooishi has a problem with the local customs, but she try's to be a good teacher. One day the children plays a prank and Ms. Ooishi falls into a hole dug by the students. She severs her Achilles tendon and has to take a long leave of absence. But the children wanting to see her travels a long way to see her, braving hunger and loneliness. Ms. Ooishi recovers, but soon she is assigned to the main school. Due to depression, many of her former students has to quit school and go to work. Ms. Ooishi gets married, but she quits being a teacher saying she hates the brain washing pro military education. War starts and many of her students and even her husband dies in the war. Long war ends and Ms. Ooishi returns to the satellite school. Many of her students are the children of her former students. As she gives roll calls, memory hits her hard, and she starts crying. Children not knowing the reason, call her cry baby teacher. Soon old students suggests a class reunion. Her old students, now grown adult gives Ms. Ooishi a bicycle like the one she used to ride to school. Ms. Ooishi cry's again seeing her old students once again.

    The movie won the Golden Globe award's best foreign movie, and also won the first place in Japanese movie magazine, surpassing Kurosawa's The Seven Samurai that came out the same year.

    Movie tells the life of children living in the country, but it also shows how war affected their lives. In the 1930s, Japan was trying to become one of the great nations. Their role model were United States, France, England, Dutch, and Germany. They saw that other great nations were using colonization to expand their empire, and decided to create their own empire in the name of Great Asian Co-prosperity Region. Japan won the Russo Japanese war and was big headed about their military might. All this worked for Japan to charge head in into militarism. While the Japanese navy who had their over seas envoy knew the foolishness of fighting the allied force, the army headed by Tojo insisted on taking the country to war which had deadly consequence for Japan and its people. The movie shows how very ordinary people got entangled in the tides of time, and young and impressionable people went willingly to war thinking it was patriotism. Now China who was on the receiving end during this war is only a hair trigger away from making the same mistake.

    What is most striking about the movie is the innocence people had at the time. Despite their hard life they weren't crooked, or violent. Each character in this movie had an endearing qualities. Keisuke Kinoshita who was perhaps Japan's first gay director was a master at depicting people in their family settings. Hideko Takamine marries the assistant director of this movie Zenzo Matsuyama a year after this movie was made.

    All this makes this one of a kind memorable movie of all time. Once you've seen it, you'll never forget it.

    Trama

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    • Quiz
      According to Japanese film critic and historian Tadao Satô, in casting this film about a schoolteacher and her relationships with her pupils over many years, director Keisuke Kinoshita very cleverly chose pairs of look-alike siblings to portray the students. So for those scenes set in later years, Kinoshita simply substituted the older siblings for the younger ones, so that the schoolchildren appeared to "grow" before the audience's eyes.
    • Connessioni
      Referenced in Il demone in pieno giorno (1966)
    • Colonne sonore
      Annie Laurie

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 15 settembre 1954 (Giappone)
    • Paese di origine
      • Giappone
    • Lingua
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Twenty-Four Eyes
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Shodoshima, Kagawa, Giappone
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Shochiku
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 2h 36min(156 min)
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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