Film Review
The Only Son, Yasujirô
Ozu's first sound feature, is often overlooked but it surely deserves
to be considered one of the director's more important
works.
The story it tells could hardly be simpler, yet it is a beguiling
piece of cinema with immense charm and a universal appeal.
You would think that, since Ozu had been a master of silent Japanese
cinema for a decade, sound would add little to his films. In
fact, Ozu uses sound as imaginatively and deliberately as he uses the
camera, as this film bears out. The soundtrack not only brings
added reality to what see on the screen but it also amplifies the
poetry of Ozu's art.
The Only Son has a subtle
complexity that belies its narrative simplicity. In common with
much Japanese cinema, the characters rarely show their emotions, but
beneath the placid calm we can easily sense the maelstrom of feelings
that are in play. How easily we identify with Otsune's sense of
betrayal when she learns that her son has failed to make anything of
his life.
And how easy it is to sympathise with Ryosuke's shame
when he realises what his mother has had to sacrifice to pay for his
education. But there is also a certain amount of ambiguity.
Even when the drama has played itself out, we cannot
be sure whether Ryosuke has managed to redeem himself in his mother's
eyes, or whether she still regards him as a failure. Who knows
what conflicting emotions assail a mother's heart?
In common with much of Ozu's work, the landscape is an essential
element of this film.
The keenly felt feelings of regret and disillusionment that ripple
through the narrative are somehow heightened by the grim desolation of
the slum setting. This is not the Tokyo that immediately comes to
mind. It more closely resembles the bleak location of an Italian
neo-realist drama, with poverty and deprivation etched deeply into
every shot.
Yet, as stark as this setting is, there is also a
poetic resonance, a suggestion perhaps that the situation is not as
hopeless as it may seem. As his mother acknowledges, Ryosuke is
still a young man, he has his whole life in front of him.
Whilst an air of tragedy pervades the last few lingering shots, we can be sure
that everything will come right in the end. Ryosuke will learn
from Otsune's example of self-sacrifice and will work hard to fulfil
his own sacred duty as a parent.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Yasujirô Ozu film:
What Did the Lady Forget? (1937)
Film Synopsis
Japan, 1923. Otsune is a poor widow who struggles to bring up her
only son Ryosuke in the rural town of Shinshu. One day, Ryosuke's
teacher Ookubo visits Otsune and persuades her to allow her son to
continue his studies after he leaves elementary school. Otsune
knows that she will have to make many sacrifices to pay for her son's
education, but she agrees to do so on the understanding that her son
will work hard to become a great man. Thirteen years later,
Otsune travels to Tokyo to visit her son and is disappointed to learn
that, far from being a great man, he is merely a night school
teacher. He lives on the brink of poverty, in a crowded slum with
his wife and newborn baby. Is this what Otsune sold her
house and land for? Is this what she has spent years toiling in a
silk factory for? Her son, the educated man, now a penniless
teacher...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.