Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: A Filmmaker for All Seasons
- 1 Ozu's Tokyo Story and the “Recasting” of McCarey's Make Way for Tomorrow
- 2 Travel Toward and Away: Furusato and Journey in Tokyo Story
- 3 Ozu's Mother
- 4 Buddhism in Tokyo Story
- 5 Sunny Skies
- Filmography
- Reviews of “Tokyo Story”
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Introduction: A Filmmaker for All Seasons
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: A Filmmaker for All Seasons
- 1 Ozu's Tokyo Story and the “Recasting” of McCarey's Make Way for Tomorrow
- 2 Travel Toward and Away: Furusato and Journey in Tokyo Story
- 3 Ozu's Mother
- 4 Buddhism in Tokyo Story
- 5 Sunny Skies
- Filmography
- Reviews of “Tokyo Story”
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
An aging couple, Hirayama Shukichi and his wife, Tomi, living in retirement in the port city of Onomichi, prepare for a train trip to Tokyo to visit their children. A stopover to see a son in Osaka is to be followed by a stay with their eldest son, Koichi, a doctor. Their quiet preparations and gentle banter set a tone of contemplation and nostalgia. Once in Tokyo, however, they realize that Koichi, living in a poor suburb and with a small pediatric practice, is hardly the success they thought he was and seems barely to have time for them. Their daughter Shige, owner of a beauty salon, seems even less interested in their company; indeed, she appears to be outright resentful of their presence.
Koichi and Shige send their parents to Atami, a hot springs resort highly unsuitable for this elderly couple. When they return early to Tokyo, neither Koichi nor Shige is willing to take them in. Only their daughter-in-law, Noriko, a war widow, seems genuinely loving and kind to them; she invites Tomi to stay at her small apartment, while Shukichi must stay at an old friend's. When a drunken Shukichi and his friend are brought to Stage's home by the police, the anger and disappointment the parents feel toward their children and the children toward their parents send the old Hirayamas back home.
On the way home, Tomi is taken ill.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ozu's Tokyo Story , pp. 1 - 24Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997