Film Review
That Night's Wife was
Yasujirô Ozu's 16th film and is unlike any other film he made,
the one occasion on which he combined the distinctive trappings of the
American gangster film with his 'home drama' or 'shomin-geki', the
genre that would come to dominate most of his output from the
mid-1940s. Ozu had been a devoted aficionado of American cinema
since his early teens, so it is hardly surprising that when he started
making films in the late 1920s he would be strongly influenced by the
American film directors he had come to idolise. The impact of the early
film noir directors, in particular Josef von Sternberg, can be felt in
the three gangster-styled films that Ozu made in the early 1930s, none
more so than the haunting nocturnal poem that is
That Night's Wife.
The film is based on a short story
Nine
to Nine by the American writer Oscar Shisgall, who was best
known as a corporate historian. The story had first appeared in a
1927 edition of
Detective Story
Magazine, and was subsequently published in Japan in 1930 in the
magazine
Shin Seinen (
New Young Men). Once he had
read the story, the head of Shôchiku studio, Shiro Kido,
immediately requested screenwriter Kôgo Noda (a frequent
collaborator of Ozu) to adapt it for cinema. The film's original
title
Sono yo no tsuma
translates better as
The Wife, On
That Night. Kido was so impressed by Ozu's rendering of
Shisgall's pulp fiction story that he rewarded the director with an
expenses paid holiday to a hot spring.
That Night's Wife is one of
only three films made by Ozu which takes place almost entirely at night
time, the other two being
Woman of
Tokyo (1933) and
Tokyo Twilight (1957).
The vast majority of Ozu's films are shot during daytime, and any
nocturnal scenes that appear in these films are usually happy
interludes in which characters are seen amusing themselves, enjoying
the Tokyo night life.
That
Night's Wife,
Woman of Tokyo
and
Tokyo Twilight stand
apart from Ozu's work and reveal a much darker, more pessimistic side
to the director, a side that his admirers will find hard to recognise.
The one aspect of Ozu's character that the film reveals most strongly
is his close affinity with the problems of ordinary people, which
informs much of his later work and gave those celebrated masterpieces of
his mature years such power and immediacy. Not only was Ozu
intensely concerned with the tribulations of Mr and Mrs Average, he was
also an astute critic of Japanese society and in
That Night's Wife he presents us
with a highly pertinent moral dilemma: can it ever be right for someone
to step outside the law for the good of his family? At a time of
immense economic hardship, when the state made no provision for those
in dire straits, it may seem reasonable for a father to steal money to
pay for medicine that would save his child's life. Such an act
may be forgiven on humane grounds but is it morally valid? If
individuals are permitted to break the law out of dire necessity what
then is the point of having laws in the first place? These are
the conundrums that Ozu invites us to ponder in a work that is mired in
moral complexity.
The moral dilemma is one that torments not only the desperate father
who was driven to crime but also the thick-skinned detective who has
come to arrest him and his devoted wife. The cop knows that if he
fulfils his professional duty and takes the father away he risks
killing an innocent child. The wife is herself driven to an act
of desperation to save her daughter and the man she loves. The
second half of the film becomes nothing more than a stand-off between
the three main characters who are paralysed by their moral
confusion. The cop is at first taken prisoner by the wife (who
somehow manages to lay her hand on a gun - just one of many implausible
plot contrivances) but is later taken hostage by his own
conscience.
Ozu emphasises the moral conflict by cross-cutting between the
characters (something he rarely does in his later films). In the
background, the name 'Walter Huston' blares out from an American film
poster, like the nagging voice of conscience (at the time, Huston was
strongly identified with playing morally upright characters).
Near the end of this remarkable sequence, the camera zooms towards the
cop as it becomes clear he has made the decision to let the father
escape justice. But then, in an astonishing volte-face, the
camera pulls back as the moral pendulum swings the other way, towards
the father, who realises that he must give himself up. As dawn
breaks, the moral uncertainty dissipates and order is restored to a troubled
universe.
That Night's Wife has an
intensity and focus that is rare even in Ozu's oeuvre. Not only
do the events of the film take place in a limited time interval (one
night), much of the drama (six reels out of seven) is confined to one
set, the cramped one-room apartment of the central protagonist and his
wife. The lighting throughout is broodingly atmospheric, styled
on the sinister expressionism of early American film noir, with the
sets draped in shadows so tangible that you can almost feel them.
The camerawork has (for Ozu) an unusual fluidity, the repeated use of
slow tracking shots adding to the claustrophobic tension and sense of
urgency. Throughout the film, you feel that time is running out,
that the spectre of death may appear at any moment. Each
character is driven to the limits of what he or she can endure, torn by
a personal inner struggle that intensifies as, minute by precious
minute, the dark night slowly ebbs away.
And how can we not identify with the tormented father, admirably well
played by Tokihiko Okada in his first Ozu film? Okada derived his
popularity from his astonishing good looks but he was also a formidable
actor, capable of investing any of his screen portrayals with
seemingly limitless reserves of energy, humour, humanity and
pathos. When we first see Okada in this film, he appears to be
the archetypal hoodlum, prosecuting his crime with steely
resolve. Soon it becomes apparent that he is a reluctant
criminal, and then an ordinary man driven to crime by desperate
circumstances. As he weeps over his stricken child, we see a
loving father who is overwhelmed with guilt and an awareness of his own
failure. Few other Japanese actors of this era could have made
this series of transitions as convincingly as Okada, who went onto to
deliver some equally memorable performances in other Ozu films:
Young Miss (1930),
The Lady and the Beard (1931)
and
Tokyo Chorus
(1931). When he died from tuberculosis, tragically young in 1934,
Japan was robbed of one its greatest acting talents.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Yasujirô Ozu film:
Walk Cheerfully (1930)