Kohayagawa-ke No Aki - The End of Summer (1961)
Box set: Eclipse Series 3: Late Ozu (Disk 5/5)

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http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072656/combined
User Rating:       7.9/10   1,251 votes

http://www.criterion.com/films/801

DVD Studio: Criterion (Eclipse Series)

DVD Release Date: June 12, 2007

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Director: Yasujiro Ozu


Description
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The Kohayakawa family is thrown into distress when childlike father Manbei takes
up with his old mistress, in one of Ozu?s most deftly modulated blendings of
comedy and tragedy.
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Format: NTSC

DVD Size: 6.26 GB -- 1:1 DVD Rip

Runtime (main feature): 1:42:59

Type: Colour

Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1

Sound (main feature): Japanese DD1.0/192 Kbps                                       

Optional Subtitles:   English

Menu Language: English

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DISC FEATURES:

# None.

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Posted in: a.b.dvd.classics as:

Yasujiro.Ozu.Kohayagawa-ke.No.Aki.1961.NTSC.CC.EC.03.05.DVD9

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Notes from poster:

In a review by Sarah Artt (EUFS):

This film tells the story of the Kohayagawa family, focusing predominantly on
two unmarried sisters as the symbolic representation of new and old Japan.
Noriko, the youngest sister is unmarried, works in an office and adopts western
dress. Akiko, the elder sister is widowed, works as an art gallery attendant and
dresses in traditional kimono. Both sisters are considering marriage to please
their elderly father. When he falls ill, the sisters begin to consider the place
of marriage in their lives.

The plot's quiet family drama is almost secondary to Ozu's breathtaking visual
contemplation of the landscape, a landscape that reflects the changing culture
of Japan in the 1960s. Admirers of Alfred Hitchcock and Wong Kar-Wai will take
pleasure in the opening bar scene in Osaka where a businessman chats to a
waitress. She wears the kind of dress my mother wore as a girl: a pink and white
floral print, with a boat neckline and a crinoline skirt, paired with pearls and
higheels. When Akiko enters the bar a short time later, her sleek summer kimono
forms a subtle contrast the waitress's dress.In another scene in a cafe, the
pale walls and tatami floors are underscored by the presence of a bright red
Coke sign in the far left corner. What Ozu shows us is the slow inflitration of
the West, inflected through the careful selection of objects and backdrop.

This film also brilliantly evokes the season of its title. Shots absent of
people, but filled with the humming of cicadas, evoke the scent of apple blossom
and lilac, the taste of iced green tea, and the texture of bamboo, paper and
cotton. This is a film where lives are filled with simple pleasures, and the
quality and satisfaction of these pleasures is so palpable that we almost don't
even notice that underneathe the surface, Akiko and Noriko are contemplating
rather serious breaks with tradition.

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