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Osaka Elegy

Original title: Naniwa erejî
  • 1936
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Osaka Elegy (1936)
JapaneseComedyDrama

A young woman becomes a mistress of her boss in order to support her family.A young woman becomes a mistress of her boss in order to support her family.A young woman becomes a mistress of her boss in order to support her family.

  • Director
    • Kenji Mizoguchi
  • Writers
    • Tadashi Fujiwara
    • Kenji Mizoguchi
    • Saburo Okada
  • Stars
    • Isuzu Yamada
    • Yôko Umemura
    • Chiyoko Ôkura
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kenji Mizoguchi
    • Writers
      • Tadashi Fujiwara
      • Kenji Mizoguchi
      • Saburo Okada
    • Stars
      • Isuzu Yamada
      • Yôko Umemura
      • Chiyoko Ôkura
    • 21User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos41

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    Top Cast14

    Edit
    Isuzu Yamada
    Isuzu Yamada
    • Ayako Murai
    Yôko Umemura
    • Sumiko Asai
    Chiyoko Ôkura
    • Sachiko Murai
    Kiyoko Ôkubo
    • Sadako Yokoo
    Shinpachirô Asaka
    • Hiroshi Murai
    Benkei Shiganoya
    • Sonosuke Asai
    Eitarô Shindô
    Eitarô Shindô
    • Yoshizo Fujino
    Kunio Tamura
    • Dr. Yu Yoko
    Seiichi Takegawa
    • Junzo Murai
    Kensaku Hara
    • Susumu Nishimura
    Shizuko Takizawa
    • Mine Fukuda
    Mitsuzo Tachibana
    • Bunzaburo Matsushita
    Takashi Shimura
    Takashi Shimura
    • Detective Goro Minegishi
    Kasuke Koizumi
      • Director
        • Kenji Mizoguchi
      • Writers
        • Tadashi Fujiwara
        • Kenji Mizoguchi
        • Saburo Okada
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews21

      7.22.7K
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      Featured reviews

      chaos-rampant

      Bunraku

      I believe the challenge here was to conceive of a film in terms of bunraku - the traditional Japanese puppet theater - and extrapolate from the environment a structure, so one stage where heightened drama unfolds, controlled, with a view of the mechanisms handling the illusion, and then a second stage on the side to supply a rotation of music and voice expressing emotion. This is very well thought out, something to keep in mind when viewing later Mizoguchi where melodrama lacks annotation.

      This translates in our film as melodrama about a bold young woman who gambles away on her dignity and reputation because the world around her is desperate for either money or sex, the controlling mechanism is that only the viewer is in possession of all the facts and so is able to read tragic fate in every exchange. This has been noted by some viewers as film noir, because the woman appears to function as a femme fatale, but the Japanese have no affinity for this sort of trope.

      So of course, in accordance with bunraku, the woman is a puppeteer but also herself a puppet, a figure on the same stage as the play she enacts, her movements subject to our scrutiny. You will note this in tandem with, and reversing, an earlier Mizoguchi - The Water Magician - about a water artist whose life is merged with the transitory flows she used to control.

      This is beautifully rendered in a scene where she is caught with her boss on a night out to watch a bunraku play. She has set a plot in motion, attempting control, an active role, but unpredictable life foils her. The wife demands explanations but seems the most irate for noticing the hairstyle on the girl, signifying a married woman, her role on the stage being supplanted even though it's a loveless marriage and thankless role. Moments before, however, we have seen an excerpt from the play, where inside the artifice, the controlled fiction, it was the suspicious husband accusing the woman of adultery.

      This would have an ordinary ironic effect if mapped cleanly to the situation outside the stage, but it doesn't, it's wholly asymmetrical, the tension all in the imbalance of familiar elements framed askew. You have to puzzle about assigning to the players the puppet-master's controls. This is the touch lacking in Ozu's Floating Weeds.

      The music is not in the emotional after-effects of storytelling, this too part of the heightened artifice. The music is in the camera, caressing day from night.
      treywillwest

      Ayako becomes the mistress of her boss, Mr. Asai, so she can pay her father's debt, and prevent him from going to prison for embezzlement.

      An exceptional film in that it redefines that cinematic, to a degree literary, trope, the femme-fatal. In this film we watch from her perspective. Her transgressions seem themselves a kind of victimization. Not only is sexuality the only tool a woman is given to empower herself in society, but her dignity and her sexuality are therefor put in an antagonistic relation to each other. Sexuality and sincerity become mutually exclusive in the world Mizoguchi paints. The cinematography is magnificent. Everyone looks compromised. But the last shot lets us know which victim's compromise cuts the deepest and. A feminist work in the most profound sense.
      emilyelizabeth1283

      Osaka Elegy

      There are so many interesting things going on in this film, and several of them surprised me. I loved Ayake (played by Isuzu Yamada) and the voices of the women in general. I couldn't help but contrast Ayake's headstrong will and fierceness to Yasujiro Ozu's Noriko in Tokyo Story (played by Setsuko Hara). Noriko was the perfect picture of traditional grace and dedication in a Japanese woman and she fit in perfectly with Ozu's straight lines and symmetrical framing. Ayake, on the other hand, is shadowed by an almost conspiratorial camera which cleverly spies on the fore and background simultaneously, and creeps behind walls and curtains to follow the characters and listen in on their conversations, amplifying the sense of daring and defiance of Ayake's character. The inventiveness of so many varying shots stole my attention more than anything else, though I also appreciated the quick and steady pacing of the story as it unfolded, predominantly led by Ayake.

      http://funkyforestfirstcontact.wordpress.com/i-just-saw/
      7Uriah43

      A Good Japanese Pre-World War 2 Movie

      This film begins with a relatively wealthy--but extremely grouchy--old man by the name of "Sonosuke Asai" (Benkei Shiganoya) harping on all those around him for very minor issues. It's during this time that his wife "Sumiko" (Yôko Umemura) sarcastically recommends that he gets himself a young mistress since he no longer finds her appealing. That being said, it just so happens that there is a young employee at his office named "Ayako Murai" (Isuzu Yamada) that he finds quite attractive and knowing that she is in desperate need of money due to a family matter offers her the unenviable position. In any case, faced with very little choice she reluctantly accepts his offer. Unfortunately, even though she tries to do what is best for her family, she soon discovers that she has lost the respect of everyone of any consequence to her. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that I initially thought that this was a comedy as the first few scenes seemed rather light-hearted. But things change rather remarkably later on. On another note, it should be mentioned that silent films lasted a bit longer in Japan than most other industrialized nations and that this was one of the first pictures to utilize sound. Be that as it may, I thought that this was a pretty good movie and I have rated it accordingly. Above average.
      9crossbow0106

      A Great Early Mizoguchi Film

      The first film included in the Criterion Collewction's "Mizoguchi's Fallen Women", this is the story of Ayako (a pretty great Isuzu Yamada who, according to this website, is still wonderfully with us), who is a switchboard operator who needs 300 yen to prevent her father getting in major trouble. To get the money, she spends time with her boss. This is, of course, little more than being a companion. One of Mizoguchi's gifts as a director (he also wrote the story) is that in many of his films his characters were not sympathetic yet he does not wholly judge the. The key is, what would you do? The film could never be in color, it is a noirish, gray film. The story is compelling, the acting is uniformly good, with Ms. Yamada really standing out, and the direction is, of course, flawless. I've also seen "Sisters Of The Gion" and "Streets Of Shame" from this collection. Buy it! Mizoguchi was one of the giants of 20th century cinema from any country. This film is highly recommended.

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      Related interests

      Hidetoshi Nishijima and Tôko Miura in Drive My Car (2021)
      Japanese
      Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
      Comedy
      Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Quotes

        Junzo Murai: You're a woman... Being taken to the police station... Getting thrown into jail... You've done shameful things. You ungrateful child!

        Ayako Murai: How could you say that? I never expected that I'd be treated like this when I came home. This is ridiculous! I thought you would welcome me with open arms. If I'd have known this, I never would have come back.

      • Connections
        Featured in Century of Cinema: Nihon eiga no hyaku nen (1995)

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      FAQ12

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • January 31, 1979 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • Japan
      • Language
        • Japanese
      • Also known as
        • Naniwa Elegy
      • Production company
        • Daiichi Eiga
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 30m(90 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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