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Forget Love For Now

Koi mo wasurete

Japan

1937

73 Min
Black and White
Japanese
  • Currently 5.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Hiroshi Shimizu

SCR Ryosuke Saito

DP Isamu Aoki

CAST Michiko Kuwano, Bakudankozo, Tomio Aoki, Shûji Sano, Setsuko Shinobu, Takatsugu Ishiyama, Fumiko Okamura

PROD DES Kotaro Inoue

MUSIC Senji Itô, Akiyasu Ozawa

SOUND Ken Moritake, Takeo Tsuchihashi

Synopsis

Yuki is a young, single mother supporting herself and her son, Haru, with a job as a bar hostess. Haru’s group of friends (which includes the always good Tomio Aoki) are told by their parents to avoid playing with Haru because of his mother’s shady job. Meanwhile, at the bar, Yuki asks for increased pay but her bosses’ refusal makes her morale lower. In addition, Yuki discovers that Haru is skipping school. She is understandably angry but her son’s reasons are logical: no one will play with him. She enrolls him at a different school the very next day where he is accepted by a group of Chinese immigrants. In a playful juxtaposition, Yuki tells her manager that she will never entertain immigrants. Haru’s new group eventually collides with his old group and he’s left to defend his mother’s honor. —Cinematalk

Director

Original

Hiroshi Shimizu

Hiroshi Shimizu was born in Shizuoka Prefecture on March 28, 1903 and passed away in Kyoto on June 23, 1966. He dropped out of his studies at Hokkaido University in order to join Shochiku’s Kamata studio as an assistant director 1922. Promoted to the director by the age of 21 with his first film, Toge no Kanata (Beyond the Pass) (1924), he enjoyed a reputation of being a skillful director, particularly for melodramas and comedies. A “trial marriage” to the actress Kinuyo Tanaka in 1927 ended in divorce two years later. Shimizu directed 140 films for Shochiku up to and throughout World War 2.

After the war he established the Hachinosu Eiga studio in collaboration with several colleagues. This allowed him to work independently of the studios, and films such as Children of the Beehive (1948), where he employed homeless children he had taken in and raised himself, resulted. He also directed films for Shin-Toho and Daiei, the last of which, Hana no Omokage (Image… read more

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