Browse: Home / A Father And Child Reunion Is More Than A Motion Away In Late Spring (Sight & Sound Voyage)

Menu

Skip to content
  • Home
  • Who We Are
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact Us
  • Login

The-SoluteLogo

A Film Site By Lovers of Film

Menu

Skip to content
  • Features
  • Reviews
  • Long Reviews
  • News
  • Articles and Opinions
  • Other Media
  • The Friday Article Roundup: The Truth is In Here
  • Lunch Links: Schwarzfahrer
  • Websites on the Internet: THE SOLUTE
  • New on DVD and Blu-Ray
  • Movie Gifts Holidays 2024

A Father And Child Reunion Is More Than A Motion Away In Late Spring (Sight & Sound Voyage)

Posted By NerdInTheBasement on April 4, 2017 in Reviews | Leave a response

Douglas Laman is looking at all the movies on the Sight & Sound’s 50 Greatest Move lists that he has never seen before!

Sight & Sound Voyage Entry #10
Placement On Sight & Sound 50 Best Movies List: #15

Both Late Spring and Tokyo Story are the first Yasujiro Ozu movies I’ve ever seen, and if they’re any indication, the concepts of family and mortality loom large in his productions. Ozu seems quite fascinated at contemplating how the finite time we have on this Earth impacts the way we interact with our loved ones, especially since the realization of us all having only so much time to live is likely to be more prevalent on the minds of older individuals compared to their younger relatives. Whereas Tokyo Story was about coming to terms with death as it occurs, the story of Late Spring is more concerned with preparing for that kind of possibility.

One of the two lead characters of Late Spring, Shukichi Somiya (Chischu Ryu) isn’t as overtly elderly as the leading duo of Tokyo Story, but he is getting up there in years and yearns for his only daughter, Noriko (Setsuko Hara) to get married so that she can have some form of companionship when he inevitably passes away. Noriko isn’t fond of the idea of an arranged marriage and abandoning the day-to-day routine she and her father have created. The two’s quarreling ideas over the concept of this union make up the bulk of the movie, with their dissenting opinions shedding light on their individual personalities and psyches.

It is near impossible to talk about this movie without discussing how quickly Late Spring came after World War II, a war that greatly involved Japan and had the country both delivering and receiving terrorist attacks. After that war ceased, the everyday individuals of that country were looking for some sense of normalcy to return to and it’s easy to see how the story of Late Spring can be seen as Shukichi wanting to make sure his daughter is taken care of in the possibility of some other big event like World War II occurring again. The unpredictable nature of that elongated worldwide conflict has him yearning to create a sense of stability for his daughter in what little time he still has left in his life.

The presence of that recently finished war looms over the entire movie, even if it’s only explicitly referenced in brief bits of off-hand dialogue. Having that gargantuan real-life event cast such a large shadow upon this intimate proceedings allows a darker undercurrent to flow beneath the characters actions, informing both the father’s realization of his own mortality (since he’s seen so much bloodshed and horror in recent years) and the daughter’s desire to live her life in her own way. Kogo Noda and Yasujiro Ozu’s screenplay is truly adept at creating character motivation stemming from actual events in a subtle way that don’t distract from the fictitious story at hand.

There’s plenty to praise about Late Spring, but particular kudos need to be doled out to the two lead actor, who were always gonna be a crucial part of this movie working in any way shape or form. Chischu Ryu, for his own part, makes for a fine father figure to headline the movie, you can see the sternly delivered fear that informs his decision to get his daughter married swirling around in his head, but he also has an easygoing dynamic with his daughter that makes it readily apparent why the two would have such a good relationship. Setsuko Hara, meanwhile, may be the best part of the movie, her portrayal of the characters default buoyant personality is infectious and the way she contrasts that with the skillful way she pulls off her characters more morose moments only makes those somber part of the characters arc all the more devastating.

Speaking of devastating, another recurring element of Yosujiro Ozu’s work appears to be ending on shots that really let the morose elements of the story sink in, allowing a simple visual to hit the audience with tons of melancholy poignancy. The final shot of Shukichi in this movie will most certainly stick with me for a while as will quite a bit of Late Spring, a strongly made melancholy ode to a father/daughter relationship that gets fractured by the ever growing presence of mortality whose emotional power comes from looking at the intimate repercussions (like World War II or an arranged wedding) of larger events.

Posted in Reviews | Tagged Sight & Sound Voyage

About the Author

NerdInTheBasement

NerdInTheBasement (A.K.A. Douglas Laman) is a man of cinema, pure and simple. He loves good music, good food, good friends and the vocals of Idina Menzel. He does movie reviews, news pieces, editorials, occasional TV coverage and is well-known for writing like he’s running out of time. Douglas Laman also has a Patreon, where you can donate to support his crippling movie-watching habit: https://www.patreon.com/DouglasLaman

Related Posts

RIPThe Friday Article Roundup: This World and The Next→

Few Sequels Are As Amazing As The Captivating The Godfather: Part II (Sight & Sound Voyage)→

The Godfather Doesn’t Just Live Up To 45 Years Worth Of Hype, It Exceeds It (Sight & Sound Voyage)→

Go Down The Scenic Route In The Enchantingly Unique And Abstract Mulholland Drive→

  • Comments
  • Popular
  • Most Recent
  • j*****@yahoo.com'
    mr_apollo on Year of the Month: Mon OncleWonderful piece, Sam. It's made…
  • j*****@yahoo.com'
    mr_apollo on Year of the Month: Mon OncleFellow heretic here. I've never…
  • n***********@gmail.com'
    Ruck Cohlchez on Film on the Internet: AN AMERICAN CRIMEI wouldn't have called it…
  • j***********@gmail.com'
    Son of Griff on LIFE ITSELFGlad to hear back from…
  • n*********@gmail.com'
    Jake Gittes on Film on the Internet: AN AMERICAN CRIMEThis is the single most…
  • “The End” of SAVAGES

    39001 views / Posted November 10, 2014
  • The Untalented Mr. Ripley: The Craft of Standup Comedy and the Non-Comedy of TOM MYERS

    32514 views / Posted June 26, 2018
  • What the fuck did I just watch? SPHERE

    31276 views / Posted March 19, 2015
  • Gordon with Mr. Looper

    Attention Must Be Paid: Will Lee

    28027 views / Posted January 7, 2023
  • Scenic Routes: SHOWGIRLS (1995)

    24794 views / Posted November 20, 2014
  • The truth is FAR out there.

    The Friday Article Roundup: The Truth is In Here

    December 6, 2024 / The Ploughman
  • This is a way lower res image than I will be allowed to get away with at the new site.

    Lunch Links: Schwarzfahrer

    December 5, 2024 / The Ploughman
  • Websites on the Internet: THE SOLUTE

    December 4, 2024 / ZoeZ
  • New on DVD and Blu-Ray

    December 3, 2024 / Greta Taylor
  • Movie Gifts Holidays 2024

    December 2, 2024 / The Ploughman

©2014 - 2016 The-Solute | Hosted, Developed and Maintained by Bellingham WP LogoBellinghamWP.com.

Menu

  • Home
  • Who We Are
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact Us
  • Login
Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!