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Synopsis

Daiei Studios, angered over Ichikawa’s overbudgeted and controversial The Outcast, punished him with a project about a young couple and their cute little baby. Ichikawa, however, remade it as a satire on family life and a personal reflection on his own confessed ambivalence towards its values. Little Baby Taro (armed with phenomenally cute cheeks) narrates the film, realizing from the start that his existence owes more to his parents’ desires than his own, with both his insecure father and his overworked mother reinterpreting his every expression or movement for their own means. Certainly lightweight when compared to Ichikawa’s other films of the period, I Am Two still has more on its mind than just putting a remarkably cute two-year-old on camera for an hour or so (though, actually, that could be enough), as witnessed by its topping the Kinema Jumpo poll for best film of 1962, beating out such classics as Inagaki’s Chushingura and Ozu’s An Autumn Afternoon. —Berkeley Art Museum / Pacific Film Archive

Director

Original

Kon Ichikawa

Kon Ichikawa was considered one of the masters of the immediate postwar generation of Japanese filmmakers, a generation often overshadowed by the titanic presence of Akira Kurosawa. Unlike Kurosawa, Ichikawa imbued his films with a sense of irony that swings from the sardonic to the compassionate. Born in 1915 in southern Mie Prefecture, Ichikawa grew up a sickly child and spent much of his childhood drawing. Like Kurosawa, he aspired to be a painter. He also grew to be an enthusiastic movie fan, seeing most of the early samurai epics by Daisuke Ito and Masahiro Makino while marveling at Charles Chaplin films. Yet it was Walt Disney’s Silly Symphonies series that proved to be a revelation for Ichikawa, as he realized that animation could combine his passions for art and for movies. After finishing technical school in Osaka in the 1930s, he got a job at the animation department of J.O. studios just as it was expanding from a rental film house to a full-fledged production company. As… read more

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