Good Morning (1959 film)
Good Morning | |||||
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Japanese name | |||||
Kanji | お早よう | ||||
Literal meaning | Good Morning | ||||
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Directed by | Yasujirō Ozu | ||||
Written by | Kōgo Noda Yasujirō Ozu | ||||
Produced by | Shizuo Yamanouchi | ||||
Starring | Keiji Sada Yoshiko Kuga Chishū Ryū Kuniko Miyake | ||||
Cinematography | Yūharu Atsuta | ||||
Music by | Toshirō Mayuzumi | ||||
Distributed by | Shōchiku Films Ltd. | ||||
Release date |
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Running time | 94 minutes | ||||
Country | Japan | ||||
Language | Japanese |
Good Morning (お早よう, Ohayō) is a 1959 Japanese comedy film co-written and directed by Yasujirō Ozu. It is a loose remake of his own 1932 silent film I Was Born, But..., and is Ozu's second film in color.
Plot
[edit]The film takes place in suburban Tokyo, and begins with a group of boy students going home.
The film steers into a subplot concerning the local women's club monthly dues. Everyone in the neighborhood club believes that Mrs Hayashi, the treasurer, has given the dues to the chairwoman, Mrs Haraguchi, but Mrs Haraguchi denies it. They gossip amongst themselves who could have taken the money, and speculate that Mrs Haraguchi could have used the money to buy for herself a new washing machine. Later Mrs Haraguchi confronts Mrs Hayashi for starting the rumor and ruining her reputation, but Mrs Hayashi states that she has indeed handed the dues money to Haraguchi's mother. Only later does Mrs Haraguchi realize it was her mistake (her mother being quite senile and forgetful), and she goes to apologize.
The boys are all attracted to a neighbor's house because they have a television set, where they can watch their favorite sumo wrestling matches. (At the time of the film's release in Japan, the medium was rapidly gaining popularity.) However, their conservative parents forbid them to visit their bohemian neighbors because the wife is thought to be a cabaret singer.
As a result of this, the young boys of the Hayashi family, Minoru and Isamu, pressure their mother to buy them a television set, but their mother refuses. When their father learns of it, he asks the boys to keep quiet when they kick a tantrum. Minoru throws an anger fit, and states that adults always engage in pointless niceties like "good morning" and refuse to say exactly what they mean. Back in their room, Minoru and Isamu decide on a silence strike against all adults. The first neighbor to bear the brunt of this snub is Mrs Haraguchi.
Mrs Haraguchi, angered by this snub, speculates it is Mrs Hayashi who instigates this in revenge over their earlier misunderstanding, and tells this to busybody Mrs. Tomizawa. Soon, everybody thinks Mrs Hayashi is a petty, vengeful person, and are all queueing up to return their loaned items to her.
Minoru and Isamu continue their strike in school, and even against their English tutor. Finally, their schoolteacher visits to find the root of their silence. The two boys run off from home with a pot of rice due to hunger, but are caught by a passing policeman. They disappear for hours into the evening, until their English tutor finds them outside a station watching television.
At the end of the film, the boys find out their parents have indeed purchased a television set to support a neighbour in his new job as a salesman. Jubilant, they stop their strike at once. Their English tutor and their aunt appear to be starting a fresh romance.
Cast
[edit]- Keiji Sada as Heiichiro Fukui
- Yoshiko Kuga as Setsuko Arita
- Chishū Ryū as Keitaro Hayashi
- Kuniko Miyake as Tamiko Hayashi
- Haruko Sugimura as Kikue Haraguchi
- Shitara Koji as Minoru Hayashi
- Masahiko Shimazu as Isamu Hayashi
- Kyoko Izumi as Midori Maruyama
- Taiji Tonoyama as the door-to-door salesman
- Tsûsai Sugawara as bar patron
Style
[edit]Despite Ozu's reputation in the West as an austere and refined director, Good Morning does not shy away from depicting many of the neighborhood boys' flatulence jokes.[1]
Reception
[edit]Good Morning has an 88% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[2] Richard Brody of The New Yorker wrote about the film "Yasujiro Ozu’s poised images convey a bitterly ironic, scathingly radical rejection of Japanese codes of self-restraint and silence."[3] Jonathan Rosenbaum of Chicago Reader praised the film describing it as "Perhaps the most delightful of Yasujiro Ozu's late comedies".[4] In 2009 the film was ranked at No. 36 on the list of the Greatest Japanese Films of All Time by Japanese film magazine kinema Junpo.[5]
Home media
[edit]In 2011, the BFI released a Region 2 Dual Format Edition (Blu-ray + DVD).[6] Included with this release is a standard definition presentation of I Was Born, But....
In 2017, Criterion re-released Good Morning in a Region 1 Blu-ray.[7] The film received a 4k digital restoration for this release and is packaged alongside I Was Born, But... and a fragment of A Straightforward Boy.
References
[edit]- ^ Dessem, Matthew (28 April 2008). "#84: Good Morning". The Criterion Contraption. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
- ^ "Good Morning (1959)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
- ^ "DVD Of The Week:Good Morning". New Yorker. 13 July 2013.
- ^ "Ohayo". Chicago Reader.
- ^ "Greatest Japanese films by magazine Kinema Junpo (2009 version)". Archived from the original on July 11, 2012. Retrieved 2011-12-26.
- ^ "DVD & Blu-ray – Shop". filmstore.bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on January 7, 2011.
- ^ "Good Morning". The Criterion Collection.
External links
[edit]- Good Morning at IMDb
- Good Morning at AllMovie
- Good Morning at the TCM Movie Database
- Good Morning an essay by Rick Prelinger at the Criterion Collection
- DVD review of Good Morning
- "お早よう (Ohayō)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
- Review at The Factual Opinion
- 1959 films
- 1959 comedy-drama films
- 1950s Japanese-language films
- Japanese comedy-drama films
- Remakes of Japanese films
- Sound film remakes of silent films
- Films directed by Yasujirō Ozu
- Films with screenplays by Yasujirō Ozu
- Films with screenplays by Kogo Noda
- Shochiku films
- 1950s Japanese films
- Films scored by Toshiro Mayuzumi